The Strange Tales of Oscar Zahn introduces us to a paranormal investigator whose very manifestation defies scientific understanding. Dressing though he might as an Edwardian gentleman, one can’t fail to notice Mr Zahn’s appearance— a jawless skull floating above an invisible skeletal body.
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Oscar seems quite at home in the dark macabre landscape where the story takes place, and we come to understand that he is a kindly and conscientious investigator of metaphysical manifestations in that shadowy domain. Taking cues from his assistant, a gnome-like witch named Agnes, he bravely ventures into foreboding sites of spectral habitation, seeking not merely to vanquish a hobgoblin, but to right a wrong or heal a broken heart.
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Toronto artist Tri Vuong renders the saga in luscious dark strokes resembling the work of Hellboy artist Mike Mignola. Like Hellboy, the series is steeped in a Lovecraftian steampunk paracosm. The writing is subtle, low-key and intriguing. Considering that the main character is incapable of facial expressions, it’s quite an achievement that he is so personable and sympathetic.
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