PUBLISHERS WEEKLY --Andolfo starts slow but builds to asatisfying crescendo of Lovecraftian horror in this lavishly illustrated graphicnovel. A small 19th-century mining town is visited by the mysterious NolwennHellaine, a beautiful woman curious about local legends of the “Devil ofWoodsburgh.” Gradually, the townspeople discover that Lady Hellaine andher faithful retainer are otherworldly monsters who need to feed on human brainsto survive. The early chapters are a slow burn as Andolfo takes time tointroduce his sizable cast of characters, but once the action kicks in, itbecomes a thrill ride rife with sex, gore, and cosmic horror, not to mentionwild-card elements like an Indigenous monster-hunting squad that shows uplooking for Lady Hellaine. The art is almost too sleek and glossy for a horrorstory, but succeeds with attractive, expressive characters, detailed periodsettings, and, when the story heats up, twisted shape-shifting monsters andgruesome violence. The result is a stylish chiller sure to please genre fans.(Dec.)