Writer: Vita Ayala/ Artist: Lisa Sterle / Vault Comics
Secure the bag because I love it when a plan comes together.
I also love it when a creative team for a comic brings me something fresh to fangirl about.
Submerged, a new comic from one of our favorite comics publishers put together by some of my favorite folks in comics including writer Vita Ayala who pens The Wilds, artist Lisa Sterle (who illustrates Long Lost) and Stelladia, a colorist who has done work on the latest issue of The Wilds. Add Rachel Derring who is a notable letterer in the comics industry.
Elysia Puente is just trying to get home on a night where the weather is getting ready to show its own entire ass. A big storm is on its way there, perhaps the biggest in such a long time and she just wants to get home to possibly Netflix and chill solo dolo. She’s a popular person because her phone keeps blowing up and she learns of a voicemail from her always-in-trouble little brother Angel that she’d rather not even get into tonight.
He’s in big trouble. BIG TROUBLE. Somebodies are out looking for him and he’s sure he’s messed up REAL BAD. So off El goes into the night, into the crappy weather and into the subways looking for the lost soul that is her kid brother as she finds she is hot on his tracks. Elysia has no idea wants she’s getting into, truly. She’s desperate, that makes he knows. The longer and longer this night carries on, the stranger thing gets and she’s just trying to right a wrong and do what shed always done: save her brother.
Initially, I had worried how accessible this comic book be in the set up of the narrative as I’m not super knowledgeable of Greek mythology outside of the little I remember learning about in school but I was fine. While the first issue is just the first toe into the pool of what’s to come, writer Ayala grounds us in establishing who El is: a young woman who is tired.
A person who is comfortable with creating distance with others. A girl who grew up into adulthood spurned on the complicated relationship of being held accountable for a brother who was raised with way less responsibilities than she ever had. The flashbacks help immensely in retelling El and Angel’s lives from mere children to young adults to start to flesh out who these two are and help explain, in the way of exposition, why Elysia is so determined to get to Angel.
Read more of @ripopentheuniverse ‘s review here. [x]