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STRING by Paul Tobin

STRING

by Paul Tobin ; illustrated by Carlos Javier Olivares

Pub Date: May 20th, 2025
ISBN: 9781960578839
Publisher: Mad Cave Studios

A woman solves crimes via psychic visions of strings connecting murderers to their victims in Tobin’s fizzy graphic novel.

The story unfolds in an unusually grungy Seattle beset by so many killings by gangs and street crazies that the police turn to clairvoyants for help. Stepping up is Yoon-Sook Namgung, a 20-something woman resplendent in long pink hair and heels who has somehow been able to see black strings coiling between the bodies of murder victims and their killers ever since her own parents were assassinated. (She also sees blue strings linking people who have had sex with each other, which furnishes many awkward revelations and blackmail opportunities.) Yoon-Sook teams up with Detective Lucas Mayfield, who takes her to the cold case morgue; there, she sees a black string trailing into the distance. It leads them to a lunatic who hurls a French bulldog at Yoon-Sook and then blows himself up with a dynamite vest. Repairing to her apartment with the orphaned bulldog, Yoon-Sook sees a black string attached to herself, suggesting that she is soon to be murdered—or commit murder herself. Yoon-Sook and Lucas start sleuthing, assisted by Litty Mondo, a porn star who hires Yoon-Sook to find out who murdered her dog. Tobin populates this straightforward paranormal private-eye yarn with lots of quirky characters, gonzo scenes with comic-book sound effects (“THAKK…unhh!” is the sound of a porn star slugging her sleazy manager with a potted plant), and hilariously off-the-wall dialogue. (“The toilet didn’t work. Sager just liked sitting on toilets. They calmed him down.”) Illustrator Olivares and colorist Colella create a slightly noirish but richly colored world with lurid highlights, muscular megaliths, and goggle-eyed banshees with gaping, sharklike maws. The result is a page-turner with plenty of hang-dog wit and pictorial pizzazz.

An entertaining suspenser with slyly funny writing, captivating visuals, and a cool, spunky hero.