Birthright, Vol. 1: Homecoming, by Joshua Williamson
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Birthright, Vol. 1: Homecoming, by Joshua Williamson
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” If you're looking for epic fantasy in a modern setting, Birthright is for you.” -- KirkusFor the Rhodes family, losing their son was the most devastating thing that could have occurred...but it couldn't prepare them for what happened when he returned.Skybound's newest hit turns fantasy into reality in this all-new series from the creator of NAILBITER and GHOSTED. Pick up this introductory-priced collection and see what everyone's talking about!
Birthright, Vol. 1: Homecoming, by Joshua Williamson- Amazon Sales Rank: #65852 in Books
- Brand: Williamson, Joshua/ Bressan, Andrei/ Lucas, Adriano
- Published on: 2015-03-04
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 10.00" h x .50" w x 6.40" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 128 pages
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Most helpful customer reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful. A missing child comes back with quite a tale to tell By Wayne A McCoy 'Birthright' takes a family tragedy and adds a bizarre fantasy twist to it. The art is gorgeous, and it's a great setup for this ongoing series.The book starts on a beautiful fall day. Mikey and his dad are playing catch while Mikey's mom and brother are busy getting his birthday party together. When little Mike disappears into the woods, the family is set on a course of self-destruction. Mike's dad Aaron soon finds himself the prime suspect in the disappearance. The marriage breaks up and Aaron heads toward despair with only his remaining son, Brennan, to care for him.Until one day the police call with a strange break in the case. A grown man is in interrogation, and he knows about Mike. He knows quite a lot about him as it turns out because it might be him. Back from a land where time flows differently with a lot of strange weapons and stories to tell. Before long, Brennan, Aaron and this stranger are on the run searching for some folks who may be wizards in hiding that need to be destroyed. Mike learned to be a warrior and sent on a quest to kill the evil in the land he found himself in. But is he telling the truth? Is his mission for good or for evil?It's a unique twist on a fantasy plot, the child who disappears, and has a fantastic adventure and returns home a child. Except in this case, the adventure doesn't look that wonderful and the child doesn't retain his childhood. The plot and art by Joshua Williamson and Andrei Bressan are good. The color is striking in this book and I look forward to reading further adventures in this series.I received a review copy of this graphic novel from Diamond Book Distributors, Image Comics, and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you for allowing me to review this graphic novel.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful. More, please! By SMM If I'm not mistaken, this is the first five star review I've given to a graphic novel all year. I could go on and on about this one because I absolutely loved it. I'd describe it as Narnia meets Mistborn, for concept and character development.Basically, when Mikey is a little boy he goes missing. The police suspect the father of killing him and it drives the family apart. About a year later the police think they've found a lead- a man carrying an ungodly amount of weapons and traipsing through the forest. When the family convenes, they discover this man is their son, Mikey. It turns out their son was sent to another world, one where he's the destined hero, and it was there that he grew up. Now, he's returned to close the portals into the other world and see his family again.Birthright has two stories going at once. One where Mikey recounts his time in the other world (which could be a series on its own) and another that covers what is happening in real time. Both are full of interesting and complex characters, surprising twists, and neither depends upon the other to be a good story. I loved everything about the concept, too. It twists old tropes on their head, asking what happens when a chosen hero comes from our world and doesn't return right away.I absolutely cannot wait for more in this series. It ends on one heck of a cliffhanger, for sure. But beyond that, it was enticing. It had me going back to it constantly, waiting to see what happened next. It's also a story that I think would translate well onto the small screen, and if it never makes it there I'll be pretty upset.I plan to buy myself a finished copy of this one, in addition to checking out some other work by the creators. I definitely think you should pick this one up, because it grabs you and doesn't let go.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A very different approach to the high-fantasy hero genre By Whitt Patrick Pond Created and written by Joshua Williamson (Nailbiter, Ghosted), Birthright is something rather different in the high-fantasy hero genre. Volume 1: Homecoming collects the first five issues.The set-up alone will hook you to begin with: in a field near some woods, a young boy named Mikey is playing catch with his dad on his birthday while his mother and older brother, Brennan, are preparing a surprise birthday party for him back at the house. The ball goes into the woods and Mikey goes after it... and doesn't come back. A search is organized but turns up nothing. Months pass, accusations fly, suspicions about his father grow rampant, the family falls apart. And then, a year later, the family is summoned to the police station because a strange man - fully grown, powerfully built, with long dark hair and a beard and wearing tattoos and armor of all things - has turned up claiming to be their lost son. It's outrageous and impossible, but the father is immediately sure: "That's him. That's our son. Mikey." And that's just in the first 15 pages.And that's just the set-up. As things unfold, it's clear that even though it's only a year in our world, it's been many years where Mikey had been, and he has a lot of stories to tell. But lest you think you've seen this before, let me assure you that you haven't. I can't say much as I don't want to spoil anything or give anything away. As fantastic as the stories Mikey relates are, there are unexpected twists and turns ahead and it gradually becomes clear that Mikey isn't telling everything, not by a long shot. And there are some things that even Mikey doesn't know, at least one of which is going to come as a big surprise to him.It's not giving anything away though to say that the action in Birthright shifts back and forth between current-day Earth that Mikey has returned to and flashbacks to Terrenos - "the meanest land in all creation" - the place where he apparently spent the last what have been for him twenty years of his life. The place he was transported to in order to become a long prophesied hero. But what keeps everything fresh is the complexity of the characters and their situations. Things start out relatively simple but quickly grow more and more complex, with layers of subtlety revealed that leave you wondering just where the lines are _really_ drawn and how much a character can bend without breaking.The artwork by Anderi Bressan (Nailbiter, Suicide Squad, Green Lantern) is both vivid and detailed, and the expressiveness that Bressan lends to the characters' facial expressions and body language gives an added layer of depth to what is brought out in the dialogue.Highly recommended for anyone who enjoys high sword & sorcery fantasy with complex characters and something extra that lets it stand out from the rest.
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