Home » Uncategorized » Graphic Novel Review: Moonshine Volume 1 by Brian Azzarello, art by Eduardo Risso

Graphic Novel Review: Moonshine Volume 1 by Brian Azzarello, art by Eduardo Risso

Moonshine Volume 1 by Brian Azzarello, art by Eduardo Risso

Image Comics, 2017

ISBN: 9781534300644

Available: Paperback, Kindle and comiXology editions

 

Editor’s note: This volume contains racist language, which is especially jarring coming from a child character.

 

Moonshine Volume 1 is set in Appalachia during Prohibition. Lou Pirlo, a gangster from New York City, is sent to negotiate a deal with the best moonshine hustler in the region, Hiram Holt. The boss back in the big city, Joe Masseira, wants to increase supply and sales of alcohol, and needs Lou to seal the deal. Lou thinks it will be an easy in-and-out trip, believing he has more brains than the backwoods hicks he will be dealing with. Unfortunately for Lou, he underestimates the iron-fisted Holt and his family, as well as the family secret. However, Holt also underestimates most of his sons, who want to double-cross him. Then, there’s Holt’s daughter, Tempest, who has her blue eyes set on Lou, which Lou tries to keep from the overbearing father. A black man ends up dead, Lou has Joe breathing down his neck, other gangsters show up to help their “friend” out, and more people end up drunk, imprisoned, or dead.

Azzarello and Risso created 100 Bullets, a noir crime comic series that was very well executed. I was hoping for more of that with Moonshine. The first volume is a bad guys versus bad guys shoot ’em up story…werewolves. In fact, the werewolf storyline could have been left out altogether. Oh, and Lou is haunted by the ghost of his dead sister. The characters are relatively dull and I didn’t care about what happened to any of them,  with the exception of Delia, a black woman who takes care of Lou after he ends up almost drowning when his car runs off the road. She would be a great character to follow. As far as the rest, flawed characters can be done well, and I know Azzarello can deliver on that better than he did here. I did like Risso’s art throughout, and his color palette lent the proper tone to what was going on in each scene. Moonshine Volume 1 may have an audience, but it just doesn’t do it for me. Recommended with reservations.

Contains: blood, gore, nudity, racism

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

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