#CBR7 Review #13: Locke & Key, vol. 6 – Alpha & Omega by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez
The concluding volume of Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez’s comic
series Locke & Key is full of
carnage, and I didn’t expect anything different. There is resolution, and yet
so many more mysteries left to be explored in this world and with all the
magical keys and the history of key house. The only truly bad thing about this
book was that it had to end, after everything came to a head and we were left
to see where the resulting pieces would end up.
“Alpha &
Omega” takes us to the night of prom for the Locke children, as they plan to
have an after-party rave in the caverns by their the Lovecraft house. But Bode,
still possessed by the spirit of Luke/”Dodge,” has other ideas for how the
night shall end, as he appears to hold all the cards in his little game: with
almost all of the magical keys in his possession, and no one aware that he is
not in fact Bode anymore, Luke is free to play a game that results in his
ultimate quest for a world of select loyal followers and slaves. But there is
one hitch in his plan, the unlikely hero of mentally disabled, Rufus, who knows
more than he is given credit for.
I knew that things were going to come to a breaking point in
this volume, like one final showdown of the Locke’s versus the demon inside
their once friend, now family member. And it certainly didn’t disappoint, with
expressive language, engaging artwork, and somewhat devastating results. There are so many
intriguing characters in this series and some moments of real emotion that I
just can’t stop gushing. (Okay, maybe the feelings I had were slighty related to
the somewhat disheartened state my heart was already in upon learning of Zayn’s
departure from One Direction. Fight me about it). There is one scene in the
concluding little section where loose ends are being tied that I can’t fully
wrap my head around, but I enjoyed it nonetheless.
In all honesty, I would recommend this series to a lot of people, especially if
you like things that are imaginative, full of mystery, and aren’t afraid for
things to get pretty dark at times (even within the first part of the first
book in this series we experience intense scenes of blood and butchery). They
are all unique and I always ended up reading them super quickly due to how
enthralled I was. Maybe a re-read will be in order to see if I catch new things
that I didn’t the first time around?
[Be sure to visit the Cannonball Read main site!]
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