Wren Booker was three when she was found catatonic and covered in blood on the streets of New York. Since that day, she's been haunted by a childhood she can't remember. After decades of searching, Wren stumbles upon a cryptic website streaming multiple CCT feeds from strange rooms in a ruined building and something clicks, setting off hidden memories that lead her back to a place she's seen in lifelong nightmares. Hunting for answers, Wren breaks into the building, but instead finds herself entangled in the camera-filled dark mazes of a decayed social experiment known only as BLINK.
Eisner-nominated Christopher Sebela (Dirtbag Rapture), more
Blink #1 is a thoughtful and well constructed comic book that utilizes both smart writing and artwork to tell both a personal tale and intriguing mystery. Read Full Review
The videotape and the glowing screens. Its really, really difficult to translate the low-res feel of surveillance camera-style horror into a comic book format, but the feeling of the darkness and the claustrophobia of it all is lovingly transferred to the page. Sebela, Sherman, and Filardi have something intriguing. Whether or not theres enough depth to go beyond the surface of the panel will remain to be seen, but the first issue of Blink feels like something truly new. And THAT doesnt make it to the comics rack very often. Read Full Review