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Having experienced "fishflies" myself, I was instantly transported back to Lake Erie and the unsettled feeling these buggers leave you with. I can totally see where an experience with these things can spark this type of supernatural story. It wasn't anything novel or new, but it was enjoyable none-the-less. Very pretty art as well.

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My favorite thing about this was the wonderful art style, the way the colors seem to try and push against the lines, the design of the bug creature, the use of lighting, just fantastic work.

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Jeff Lemire has a distinctive style, often writing stores set in rural Canadian communities. Fishflies is one such story, that first appeared as part of Lemire's Substack. It begins with children on a walk to the convenience store while masses of the fishflies swarm on the streets, drawn by the lights. One boy enters the store only to interrupt a crime in progress and what happens next will permanently change the lives of several residents of the town and on outsider.

A small town crime drama with supernatural elements, the cover shows the main characters. Franny Fox is a lonely girl, with an abusive father, no friends, and a constantly runny nose. She finds a stranger in the family barn and decides to shelter them. The stranger undergoes a transformation at the time of year when odd events frequently occur in town. A pair of elderly twins are strangely watchful.

The sheriff is trying to find the robber, a teenage boy lies in a medically induced coma with his single mother his only companion. Other Lemire titles or characters make appearances (like the psychic from Minor Arcana).

Compared to societal wide or cosmic horrors of other series, the stakes this time seem small, a few people. But in a town the size of Bell River, it will be long remembered, at least what is believable.

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I liked Lemire's art, especially the 'Bug' design (felt like The Iron Giant filtered through District 9) - but Shawn Kuruneru’s brief cameo is gorgeous, loved these two as a team. Story's fine, a little meandering, a little seen-it-all-before, but the ending's satisfying enough.

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Everything happens in cycles.

In Belle River, Ontario, a man is on the run from the law. Franny Fox, a little girl, finds him in her barn and offers her assistance. His choices have altered him into something inhuman, a human-size fishfly. Follow this unlikely friendship as the town is in absolute upset over a child hurt and the man on the run.

Jeff Lemire has done it again. He has spun a wonderfully intriguing story with his usual, unusual twists. As is the case with any of his work, this one is worth the read.

#ThxNetGalley #JeffLemire #Fishflies

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I received this DRC from NetGalley.

I enjoyed the artwork style, and the story was interesting enough. I usually prefer comics with a faster pace, but there were several elements going on to help push the story forward. A lot of the characters aren't great people, and seems a bit depressing, but it still ends on a hopeful note. I would have liked to know a bit more of the logistics of this curse or whatever it is, but I'm glad it at least had some backstory.

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Jeff Lemire, a name that already has me reaching for my wallet, is back with Fishflies, and this time he's pulling double duty on both words and pictures. Now, let's be honest, Lemire's artwork can be... an acquired taste. But this time I dug it, because it has this eerie, unsettling vibe with a story to back it. It's echoing the raw emotion of Sweet Tooth in some ways, but I think it's actually more refined this time.

At the heart of this strange and wonderful tale are two unlikely souls: a hulking fly-creature (formerly a man haunted by a terrible mistake) and Franny, a young woman adrift in her own lonely world. Thrown together by circumstance, they find themselves on the lam, the cops are hunting the fly-man for his past, Franny is desperate for any kind of escape, and their small town is unraveling thread by fragile thread.

Make no mistake, Fishflies is a damn good read. Lemire's dialogue crackles with authenticity, and his characters breathe with a messy, relatable humanity. The weight of past actions and the yearning for redemption feel genuinely earned. Plus, the story unfolds at a solid pace, offering a satisfying blend of plot progression and intimate moments that let these characters truly shine.

While I saw a few narrative beats coming down the road, the journey was so captivating that it barely registered as a flaw. Initially, I had this pegged at a solid 3.5 out of 5, but the connection I forged with these flawed, fascinating characters nudged it up to a well deserved 4. Definitely dive into this one.

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