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Neonomicon (Em Portugues do Brasil) by Alan…
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Neonomicon (Em Portugues do Brasil) (original 2011; edition 2019)

by Alan Moore (Author)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
5413545,345 (3.38)17
"Brears and Lamper, two young and cocky FBI agents, investigate a fresh series of ritual murders somehow tied to the final undercover assignment of Aldo Sax-- the once golden boy of the Bureau, now a convicted killer and inmate of a maximum security prison. From their interrogation of Sax (where he spoke exclusively in inhuman tongues) to a related drug raid on a seedy rock club rife with arcane symbols and otherworldly lyrics, they suspect that they are on the trail of something awful-- but nothing can prepare them for the creeping insanity and unspeakable terrors they will face in the small harbor town of Innsmouth"--Page 4 of cover.… (more)
Member:NiltonSantosJr
Title:Neonomicon (Em Portugues do Brasil)
Authors:Alan Moore (Author)
Info:(2019)
Collections:Your library
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Work Information

Neonomicon by Alan Moore (Author) (2011)

  1. 10
    The Complete Fiction by H. P. Lovecraft (artturnerjr)
    artturnerjr: A familiarity with Lovecraft's work is not essential to enjoy Moore and Burrows' graphic novel; it will, however, enhance your appreciation of it immensely.
  2. 10
    Alan Moore's The Courtyard by Alan Moore (LamontCranston)
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English (34)  French (1)  All languages (35)
Showing 1-5 of 34 (next | show all)
So this collection is a weird one. Story "The Courtyard" is pretty much what you be expecting from the Lovecraft story. There is horror element, bizarre people uttering incomprehensible words and a detective hunting down mysterious murderers that seem completely unconnected, independent from each other but commencing gruesome murders in a same way. And then detective makes the mistake.

Story is full of tension, you do not see much of actual bloodshed - everything is right there but somewhere in the periphery of your vision. As I said very Lovecraftian.

Then we get to "Neonomicon" story arc. It is basically continuation of Courtyard but now detective from that story is arrested and committed to mental institution after events in "The Courtyard". Nobody knows what happened to the man - he speaks same gibberish language as those he initially hunted himself - but everything points to the same location where he sought the murderers. Two agents (male and female, where female has certain sexual addiction problems) are sent to investigate and then situation escalates rather quickly - very soon horrendous creatures start popping out. It ends on a rather strange (and rather depressing) note for the humanity itself because in the end everything hints to birth (and thus invasion or awakening) of ancient monsters bent on destroying humanity. Are we but a dream of a monster or do we all exist on separate astral planes and monsters are thinning the borders between the planes thus endangering us? Is what we see the past or the future - are the monsters yet to be born in the first place? Are Lovecraft's works basis for the strange cults or are they inspired by true stories buried down by authorities? Again, very interesting and very Lovecraftian.

And then we get to most conflicting part of this story - monster raping above mentioned female agent. Is it disturbing, oh believe me it is. Following contains spoilers so proceed at your own risk. Captured by the cult and offered to the unspeakable monstrosity of the deep as a sex toy agent barely survives and at the end is even offered help by that very same monster because it sensed something in her that makes her very special for its kind. After police rescues her and kills the monster in the process, strange language and images become more regular and soon she finds out that she is actually a portal for this horrendous creatures into our own reality. When she meets the detective from "The Courtyard" and starts talking the strange language she gets the confirmation that she is living portal that will enable monsters takeover of the planet and rise of their civilization. Crazed detective calls her a Chosen and even raises her to the level of deity - all of this just shows how dangerous she is to human civilization. That aside in regard to the topic of monster rape... As I said this is very disturbing scene and as far as I can see it is main reason why people don't like this collection. Again very understandable. With all of that keep in mind that sexual attack was always present in Lovecraft stories - never the detailed act itself but in hints and general neurosis and madness of the events. Also do note that in art first step for shock is always through sex and nudity. It must be something in us that drives us that way but I am yet to see representation of decadent society that does not include some sexual perversion or other (just look at Metabarons and latest [and even rather good [but using same approach]] Elric of Melninbone series of graphic novels).

In many aspects this story seems very much like Warhammer40k story - especially time warping and establishment of monster portals through living beings. But again W40K has many common elements with unspeakable terrors from Lovecraft.

So to sum it up - pretty much what you would expect from Lovecraft is present here: depression, madness, hints of horrors and no happy ending.

This is not for underage readers due to rather traumatic part of the story - it is prolonged sequence, that indirectly shows all the horror, fear and despair (there are no explicit scenes in here) and maybe this is what makes it more horrifying. If you cannot stomach it then I would not advise you to go through this comic collection.

Recommended to all fans of Lovecraft and horror stories.
( )
  Zare | Jan 23, 2024 |
Absolutely dreadful. Mr. Moore has written something deeply hurtful towards women in a way that is difficult to describe. I skimmed just to see how it would end. Do not recommend. ( )
  a2hudeck | Jan 9, 2024 |
Corny pastiche! Florid prose! Gratuitous sexual violence! Obviously I have a lot of affection for Alan Moore and his assorted Alan Moore-isms, but this was just too much ( )
  ethorwitz | Jan 3, 2024 |
Rapey Lovecraftian horror. This felt really rushed - the dialogue showed Moore at his most leaden, exposition-laden worst. The truly unpleasant elements may have worked better in a better Alan Moore story, but were gratuitous here. The plot felt flimsy and arbitrary. An awkward mess. Lovecraft deserves better. ( )
  thisisstephenbetts | Nov 25, 2023 |
Ganchos para futura review: referências a diversas histórias e autores do Mythos que já resenhei aqui (Lovecraft, Ambrose Bierce, Ashton Clark Smith, Ramsey Campbell, etc) e interessante ótica sobre os mitos de Chtulhu, principalmente na questão temporal e não-literal; história compassada de maneira muito semelhante à primeira temporada de True Detective, me pergunto até se não houve inspiração; cenas problemáticas relacionadas à sexo que não dá para ser breve ou falar sobre sem dar spoilers. ( )
  RolandoSMedeiros | Aug 1, 2023 |
Showing 1-5 of 34 (next | show all)
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Moore, AlanAuthorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Burrows, JacenIllustratormain authorall editionsconfirmed
Johnston, AntonyAdaptersecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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"Brears and Lamper, two young and cocky FBI agents, investigate a fresh series of ritual murders somehow tied to the final undercover assignment of Aldo Sax-- the once golden boy of the Bureau, now a convicted killer and inmate of a maximum security prison. From their interrogation of Sax (where he spoke exclusively in inhuman tongues) to a related drug raid on a seedy rock club rife with arcane symbols and otherworldly lyrics, they suspect that they are on the trail of something awful-- but nothing can prepare them for the creeping insanity and unspeakable terrors they will face in the small harbor town of Innsmouth"--Page 4 of cover.

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