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Image Comics Teases Upcoming Horror Comic From Tananarive Due

Tananarive Due is looking to haunt readers again this year with a chilling, horror comic from Image.

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Tananarive Due is teaming up with Image Comics to scare us again this year. In a recent press release from Image, Due along with Kelsey Ramsay promises to haunt readers with horror thriller comic this November.

Thank you to Image for providing the art and covers for readers to view as they anticipate the release date.

Photo credit: Image Comics

Official statement from Image Comics

Legendary writer and the “Octavia Butler of horror” Tananarive Due (The Reformatory, The Keeper), who has earned an American Book Award, NAACP Award, Shirley Jackson Award, and Los Angeles Times Book Prize, amongst many accolades, has teamed up with rising star Kelsey Ramsay (Dark Spaces: Good Deeds)—one of the most sought-after artists in comics—to create the lycanthrope-centered thriller The Horizon Experiment: Moon Dogs. Marking Due’s first solo full-length writing project in comics, as well as Ramsay’s first Image Comics series, the horror one-shot features stunning colors by José Villarrubia and sharp letters by Jeff Powell. Hitting shelves in November, Moon Dogs is the third comic in The Horizon Experiment series of one-shots, all centering on original protagonists from marginalized backgrounds set in a popular genre, led by Eisner and Harvey Award-winning The Good Asian and Infidel creator Pornsak Pichetshote.

Co-edited by Pichetshote and award-winning editor Will Dennis (Somna, Gideon Falls), The Horizon Experiment: Moon Dogs follows a Black family of lycanthropes of East African descent—who call themselves Moon Dogs—as older sister Nala, her parents, and her boyfriend try to protect her teen brother Kai as he gets caught in the middle of a burgeoning war between a savage pack of werewolves and the Miami police force. After a violent attack, Miami locals are starting to learn that werewolves are not just a myth, and Nala’s family—who are minorities within a minority—find themselves drawn into a very dangerous situation.

About Horizon Experiment: Moon Dogs

The Horizon Experiment: Moon Dogs explores themes of privilege, power, and oppression, highlighting sharpened conflicts over identity and community in society, told through the lens of a werewolf story. Like the other titles in The Horizon Experiment, this one-shot serves as the equivalent of a pilot for a creator-owned series, with the potential of continuing should there be demand for more. Along with an original cover by Ramsay and Villarrubia, the issue will feature variant covers by Eisner Award-winning artist Tula Lotay, part of a series of connecting variant covers across all five Horizon Experiment one-shots.

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“As a writer who is known for novels and short stories—and who has written screenplays—delving into comics has been the best of both worlds: granting me the immediacy and freedom to tell stories my way, and the benefit of working with talented collaborators to bring the images to life on the page,” said Due. “Moon Dogs is an homage to my roots in Miami, where I grew up and worked as a newspaper reporter. Anyone who has been to Miami knows that its eclectic population is the perfect home for undercover werewolves—like, OF COURSE.”

Due talks comics and horror

Continued Due: “With great guidance from my editors, Pornsak and Will, I wanted to tell a story of what it feels like to feel doubly marginalized—and also how we can learn to exercise power without being corrupted by it. The great thing about comics, as in Hollywood, is that the script is only the starting point for the story, so seeing the thrilling illustrations by Kelsey Ramsay and the great artistic team is like getting a movie adaptation in record time. I’m so excited to share it!

“It wasn’t difficult deciding whether I wanted to be a part of The Horizon Experiment. An innovative and inspiring group of creators that are undertaking something original and exciting, you say? It was a fast yes for me. Tananarive’s vivid and character-rich Moon Dogs script solidified that decision too—it made me feel like I was right there in Miami hunched between the rival werewolf clans,” said Ramsay. “It was so much fun and such a pleasure to work on. I’m so happy this fresh take on lycanthrope horror was created by Tananarive and supported by powerhouse editors Pornsak and Will. It came together with incredible collaborators José doing colours and Jeff doing letters. It’s an honour to be a part of this project.”

What readers can expect

“I’m jealous of readers discovering Tananarive and Kelsey’s work for the first time. Tananarive’s latest novel was praised by no less than Stephen King and now she’s bringing her uniquely intimate mythology building skills and lyrical prose to comics,” said Pichetshote. “Meanwhile, in a very short time, Kelsey has rocketed up every comics editor’s radar to the degree you’ll be seeing her in non-stop high-profile projects soon. So, watching these two combine their awesome talents to create something distinctly unique has been an utter delight. I can’t wait for readers to discover the world of Moon Dogs.”

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The Horizon Experiment: Moon Dogs #1 will be available at comic book shops on Wednesday, November 20:
Cover A by Kelsey Ramsay and José Villarrubia – Lunar code 0924IM284
Cover B by Tula Lotay (connecting) – Lunar code 0924IM285
Cover C by Tula Lotay (1:25 foil incentive, connecting) – Lunar code 0924IM286

The Horizon Experiment: Moon Dogs #1 will also be available across many digital platforms, including Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, and Google Play.

 

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  • Photo credit: Image Comics

  • Photo credit: Image Comics

  • Photo credit: Image Comics

  • Photo credit: Image Comics

  • Photo credit: Image Comics

  • Photo credit: Image Comics

  • Photo credit: Image Comics

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