Connect with us
'The Stoneshore Register' deals with the mythologizing of small towns
Dark Horse

Comic Books

‘The Stoneshore Register’ deals with the mythologizing of small towns

A remarkable look at the slow erasure not only of small towns but of peoples and their ways of life.

There’s an inexplicable stone giant looming over the small Oregon town of Stoneshore, but nobody in town is particularly interested in finding out where it came from or why: it’s always been there and, presumably, it always will be there. What’s the point of concerning themselves with it?

The Stoneshore Register

Dark Horse

Small towns the world over are filled with these sorts of quirks and features (though admittedly less spectacular), both natural and man-made, and once their initial novelty wears off they simply become part of the landscape. So, too, do aspects of the society itself – moods and ways of thinking that are particular to a certain people, a certain community spirit.

These small particularities are what journalist Fadumo Abdi finds herself facing when she arrives in town, looking for work, though of course Stoneshore’s particularities hint at the potential of the supernatural.

What The Stoneshore Register seems to be about is the mythologies that spring up around a place – and a person – when the larger truth is much more tragic. The local urban legend tells of a man who disappeared after falling in love with a woman from the sea; the sad truth is that he simply disappeared from his boat. An unseen tragedy. When a young man wanders into the woods in the winter and is found dead, a story of children going to the woods and coming back changed seems like a better reality than that of an untimely death.

The Stoneshore Register

Dark Horse

Fadumo herself carries tragic secrets – a refugee, there are parts of her history and facts of her family that she doesn’t want to share with her new neighbors. This is trauma, but it is also a form of self-mythologizing. She guards herself so that the reality of her experience becomes both less and more to those around her.

The Stoneshore Register

Dark Horse

The book tells these many small stories of the town in starkly common ways: a children’s play, childbirth, or an afternoon on a boat with a fisherman. That the book manages to feel otherworldly speaks volumes about the creators, writer G Willow Wilson, artist MK Perker, and letterer Richard Bruning, whose collaboration feels almost impossibly genuine. These people feel real, their world feels realized, and their words feel honest.

It also feels quiet in that way that small towns manage silence – even its largest emotions are muted against the banality of their everyday existence. It isn’t quite meditative, though it feels somehow peaceful even in its mysteries.

The Stoneshore Register is a remarkable look at the slow erasure not only of small towns but of peoples and their ways of life. It’s worrying, but in a way that sparks a genuine empathy of thinking; the reader might come to worry about the silent, rural spaces that are always just within reach. How are those towns doing? How are their citizens?

'The Stoneshore Register' deals with the mythologizing of small towns
‘The Stoneshore Register’ deals with the mythologizing of small towns
The Stoneshore Register
Emotionally earnest and filled with a quiet sense of mystery, The Stoneshore Register examines the mythology of a small town – and with it, the self-mythologizing of people in trouble.
Reader Rating1 Vote
8.5
Beautifully rendered and emotionally realized.
An impactful story.
Quietly mysterious.
Lacks conclusions – but demands none.
8
Good
Buy Now

In Case You Missed It

Marvel celebrates the Hellfire Gala with new costume swap variant covers for July 2026 Marvel celebrates the Hellfire Gala with new costume swap variant covers for July 2026

Marvel celebrates the Hellfire Gala with new costume swap variant covers for July 2026

Comic Books

Marvel celebrates Pixar’s 40th anniversary with new homage variant covers Marvel celebrates Pixar’s 40th anniversary with new homage variant covers

Marvel celebrates Pixar’s 40th anniversary with new homage variant covers

Comic Books

Che Grayson reveals how ‘Absolute Catwoman’ turns Selina Kyle into DC’s deadliest spy Che Grayson reveals how ‘Absolute Catwoman’ turns Selina Kyle into DC’s deadliest spy

Che Grayson reveals how ‘Absolute Catwoman’ turns Selina Kyle into DC’s deadliest spy

Comic Books

DC Preview: Batman #10 DC Preview: Batman #10

DC Preview: Batman #10

Comic Books

Connect