The first volume of the Abe Sapien: Dark and Terrible saga follows an AWOL Abe after his departure from the B.P.R.D. in the early chapters of Hell on Earth. On the run at the end of the world, Abe seeks the truth about his own connection to the plague of monsters threatening to wipe out mankind. But is Abe's real goal to uncover the truth, or to run from it? Also seeking answers is a necromancer whose deal with the Devil was forfeited when Hell collapsed in
Hellboy in Hell. Could Abe Sapien hold the key to the sorcerer's attempt to make a contract with the masters of the impending apocalypse?
Collected in paperback for the first time, revisit Abe Sapien's adventures above and below the waves with stories brought to life by the sublime art of Max and Sebastián Fiumara.
Collects
Abe Sapien Volumes 3-5.
Author: Mike Mignola, John Arcudi, Scott Allie
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Dark Horse Books
Published: 12/27/2022
Pages: 440
Weight: 2.2lbs
Size: 9.80h x 6.80w x 1.30d
ISBN: 9781506733784
About the AuthorMke Mignola began his career in 1980 by illustrating spots in the
Comic Reader. His first published piece was in the C
omic Reader #183, a spot illustration of Red Sonja (pg. 9). His first published front cover was the
Comic Reader #196;
Dominic Fortune, the Spirit, and
Doc Savage in November of 1981. Mike Mignola began inking in August of 1983 for Marvel Comics. He inked issues of comic books such as
Daredevil (#197 'Introducing' him),
Power Man & Iron Fist. Mignola is particularly noted for his highly distinctive style, which was once called "German expressionism meets Jack Kirby" by Alan Moore, in an introduction to a collection of Mignola's
Hellboy works. While Mignola has heavily influenced a new generation of comics artists since he began working on Hellboy, he was something of an odd man out in the superhero comics industry in the beginning of his career. Mignola's imagery stood in stark contrast to the style of his contemporaries. Where others would draw muscular men and slim, well-endowed women, Mignola's characters were usually bulky and rough-looking, and more often than not defined by large shadowed areas rather than fine details. Mignola often takes the same approach to architecture, particularly in
Hellboy, where he often sets the scenes in slowly dilapidating Victorian and Gothic surroundings. He also commonly draws machines that feature steampunk imagery.
Hellboy was made into a feature film in 2004 by director Guillermo del Toro. Mignola was closely involved with the movie's production and a sequel is currently in development. Recently,
Hellboy has been made into two direct-to-video animated films,
Sword of Storms and
Blood and Iron in 2007. Prior to that, Mignola worked as an illustrator for Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 movie
Bram Stoker's Dracula. He was also the production designer for the Disney feature film,
Atlantis: The Lost Empire in 2001, and was a concept artist for 2002's
Blade II, also directed by del Toro. Mignola's
The Amazing Screw-On Head debuted in 2006 on the Sci-Fi Channel, starring the voices of Paul Giamatti and David Hyde Pierce