Reading the first volume of Svetlana Chmakova’s Nightschool: The Weirn Books (Yen Press) is a bit like reading an interesting recipe that sounds like it will result in a tasty dish. I’m the kind of person who reads cookbooks for fun, so I mean that as a compliment. Chmakova lists a bunch of interesting ingredients and suggests promising ways they might be combined.
It’s abut a young witch (or “weirn”) named Alex. Her older sister, Sarah, works as a sort-of guidance counselor at a school for the demonically inclined. In these times of scant educational funding, the institution shares space with a garden-variety high school after the sun sets. Alex has opted for home-schooling for as-yet-undisclosed reasons, though Sarah hasn’t given up on persuading Alex to join the weirns, vampires and werewolves that form the school’s student body.
As Sarah deals with weird kids at the school, Alex encounters her own troubles on a self-directed field trip. Alex wants to practice a spell in the field, and brings her inky smudge of a demonic familiar along. They run into a group of trainee monster hunters who are more inclined to eliminate eligible night-school students than educate them. They have their own parallel subculture to the school, which itself is fraught with unexpected perils.
It’s a lot of set-up to juggle, and Chmakova does a very nice job. The sizeable cast and their respective castes get a sensible amount of introduction, and the concluding twist gives a good nudge towards forcing Alex to engage with the school. Alex herself seems reasonably formidable and a bit mysterious.
Not surprisingly, Nightschool is a great-looking book. Chmakova proved her drawing chops on Dramacon, one of a handful of hits that emerged from Tokyopop’s global manga push. I didn’t especially care for that book, but I did find the visual storytelling to be brimming with talent. Chmakova’s work stood out in the way she didn’t seem to be imitating some idea of “manga style.” She’d clearly been steeped in the stuff, but her work had a distinctive look of its own, along with plenty of energy and emotion.
Nightschool carries over the appealing illustrations while demonstrating a smarter, subtler storytelling sensibility than Dramacon. As I said, all of the ingredients are there, and I feel reasonably confident in predicting that Chmakova will whip them up into something appealing.
August 27, 2009 at 10:47 am |
[...] [Review] Nightschool Vol. 1 Link: David Welsh [...]
August 27, 2009 at 4:53 pm |
Your opening statement completely sums up my own response to “Nightschool.” Well put, sir!
Looking forward to volume 2 in a couple of months.
August 28, 2009 at 8:12 am |
[...] in Blue) Billy Aguiar on vol. 1 of Mad Love Chase (Prospero’s Manga) David Welsh on vol. 1 of Nightschool (Precocious Curmudgeon) Melinda Beasi on vol. 7 of Nora: The Last Chronicle of Devildom (There it [...]
August 28, 2009 at 4:02 pm |
[...] David Welsh takes a look a Nightschool, a title I’m currently enjoying in Yen Press. [...]
October 20, 2009 at 9:18 am |
[...] also enjoyed the first volume of Svetlana Chmakova’s Nightschool (Yen Press), collected after serialization in Yen Plus. It’s a complicated supernatural adventure about [...]
November 27, 2009 at 8:57 pm |
[...] touch. Fans of the Twilight novels may find this book enjoyable. Publisher’s catalog page David Welsh’s review Buy it on [...]