With the premise of gentrification turning cannibalistic I was easily sold on picking up the 1st issue. Being a guro fan I had expected there to be more focus on horror and cannibalism, like we saw in the first few pages. Instead the story explored the more real every day horrors of poverty stricken communities, and their erasure by higher classes. At first I felt it was just playing out cliche trmore
An archetype lost in architecture. This is how the story ends whether you like it or not.
A gentrified city. Its homeless population restricted to six square blocks called The Dregs. When people start disappearing, a drug-addled homeless man obsessed with detective fiction becomes addicted to solving the mystery. Equal parts Raymond Chandler and Don Quixote set in a thriving metropolis that literally cannibalizes the homeless, The Dr...