
Especially since all the chaos that unfolds involves teenagers, and therefore other children.

So when Dodge does start wreaking havoc, all through the body of a child, it’s just heart-rendering to see. It’s up to Tyler and Kinsey to try and stop Dodge, though they have no idea that Dodge has inhabited Bode’s body. Hill has built up to this moment, and you know that there are going to be a lot of casualties and a lot of collateral damage as Dodge makes his final moves into trying to open the Black Door, but when it centers around graduation night and a high school party in the caves, the stakes are raised to the highest point that the series has seen. I don’t even know where to begin as I review the end of this series. I found myself kind of dreading the end, as I knew that it was going to pack an emotional wallop, but once I picked up “Alpha and Omega”, I basically devoured it in a sitting, taking breaks only to weep into my hands because of said wallop. It could be because my re-read of “Sandman” was a few volumes longer, but I think that it’s also the fact that Joe Hill has created something that has depth, complexity, and some great horror and fantasy moments that is well packaged and easily digestible. Review: I feel like my re-read of “Locke & Key” went by in a flash. The final arc of New York Times bestselling Locke & Key comes to a thunderous and compelling conclusion. Turn the key and open the last door it’s time to say goodbye. Where Can You Get this Book: Amazon | IndieBound | WorldCatīook Description: The shadows have never been darker and the end has never been closer. Publishing Info: IDW Publishing, January 2014


6): Alpha & Omega” by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodríguez (Ill.)
