Hologram, issues one and two

Tom Fellrath and William Henry Caddell’s comix series “Hologram” contain snapshots in the life of an everyday man bestowed with super powers. The writing in the first two issues is reminiscent of the Dr. Manhattan scenes in Alan Moore’s Watchmen, while the art is distinctly digital. Instead of focusing on heroic acts, the zine turns an eye inward, to the fractured memories of a sci-fi oddity. Each panel is a memory of a day: on July 1, 1988 “a device explodes” and he “becomes transparent”, on October 12, 1990, he slips into a void, floating in space. He muses on a failed/failing relationship, and on the mysterious accident that gave him his powers. Occasionally, he stops a robbery or saves a child from a speeding car, but mostly he just examines the ways his life has changed since the fateful day he became transparent.

📓 Details: quarter-size, b&w, 8 pages
🛒 : 50¢
🔗 : websitefacebookinstagram

Hologram, issues one and two

Tom Fellrath and William Henry Caddell’s comix series “Hologram” contain snapshots in the life of an everyday man bestowed with super powers. The writing in the first two issues is reminiscent of the Dr. Manhattan scenes in Alan Moore’s Watchmen, while the art is distinctly digital. Instead of focusing on heroic acts, the zine turns an eye inward, to the fractured memories of a sci-fi oddity. Each panel is a memory of a day: on July 1, 1988 “a device explodes” and he “becomes transparent”, on October 12, 1990, he slips into a void, floating in space. He muses on a failed/failing relationship, and on the mysterious accident that gave him his powers. Occasionally, he stops a robbery or saves a child from a speeding car, but mostly he just examines the ways his life has changed since the fateful day he became transparent.

📓 Details: quarter-size, b&w, 8 pages
🛒 : 50¢
🔗 : websitefacebookinstagram