Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Elk's Run by Joshua Hale Fialkov Elks Run. In a quiet, isolated town deep inside West Virginia coal mining country, children watch their parents commit unspeakable acts in the name of security and the common good. Isolation from the rest of the world, they are told, is necessary to preserve peace and order in their community. Don’t question what you see us do. Believe what we tell you to believe. Fear those who aren’t from here. The town isn’t controlled by a cartel of evil overlords, only by people absolutely certain that their ways are right and just as certain that opening the table to any discussion of alternate points of view is the road to ruin. The town of Elk’s Ridge, we learn, was founded by veterans who, upon returning from the war in Vietnam, simply wanted a place to live in harmony with their families and the surrounding countryside. There is one road in and out of town and it passes through a tunnel, part of an abandoned mine. Every so often the gate is opened to the world outside to bring in a semi-trailer truck load of supplies: food, textiles, building supplies, crates full of automatic weapons and ammunition. The men of Elk’s Ridge believe in being prepared. John Kohler, the de facto leader of the town, lives with his wife, Sara, and their 16-year old son, also named John. The confrontation between father and son, between the elder John and the younger, is the heart of the tale. After a drunk-driving accident claims the life of one of the town’s children, John watches his father and the other men exact retribution on the driver. They drag him out of his house and hold an impromptu hearing in the darkness of the night. He pleads for his life. His wife recently ran off and he couldn’t take the loneliness. The decision is Biblical: an eye for an eye is cited and the man is pinned down and crushed under the wheels of a car. Life goes back to normal the next day, except that now teenage John and his friends have far more than the usual local gossip to busy themselves with. They understand that what has happened is deeply wrong but their parents are utterly complacent, unwilling to risk further disruption of their idyllic town life. The unexpected arrival of two state troopers (contacted by the wife who escaped the town) during a routine delivery of supplies shatters the illusion of normality completely. “What, exactly, would you need with a crate of M-16s, Mr. Kohler?” is the question that gets both of the officers shot. John, the son, and his friends are assigned the task of burying the bodies of the officers. The parents, as Sara announces, “have work to do.” The teenagers obediently drag the bodies into the woods. Once they are far enough away from their parents, they consider that this might be a good time to, as the saying goes, get the hell out of Dodge. That proves considerably easier said than done. Elk’s Run collects the original Harvey Award-nominated series together with brand new material into a full-length graphic novel. Though critically acclaimed, the original comic book run of the series was never finished (the small press publisher bankrupted before the final issue ran). This trade paperback marks the first time that the complete story has been available to readers. It’s a powerful work with gripping, edgy art that directly addresses the isolationism, paranoia, division, and anxiety so prevalent in the today. It is a story that asks difficult questions, rapid-fire, about the tacit social contracts we make and the ability of people to overlook what they see happening right in front of their eyes. Digital painting techniques have elevated the old four-color medium of comic book illustration to a whole new level in recent years and this is apparent throughout Elk’s Run . The predominant colors of the pages shift with the mood of each scene. The illustration style varies from stark to sketchy in more ominous scenes to cartoon-like when the teenagers fleeing the town remember scenes from their childhoods. From start to finish, though, it is both beautiful and visceral. It is worth mentioning that nobody in the story believes him- or herself to be a bad person. John, the father, sees himself as a good patriot protecting his family and his way of life. Sara sees herself as a loyal wife, allowing her husband to lead, confident that he knows what he’s doing and will handle the situation. The bad stuff — murder, lies, the stockpiling of explosive devices — just weaves through a complex fabric of mixed motivations, denial, and parent-child dynamics, leading inevitably to tragedy. Fialkov, Joshua Hale 1979– Born August 19, 1979, in Sacramento, CA; partner of Christina Rice (a historian). Education: Emerson College, bachelor's degree, 2000. ADDRESSES: CAREER: Writer. Hoarse and Buggy Productions, , CA, cofounder, 2004—. Script supervisor for the television show Easy Listening; production coordinator for television shows, including Fox's Funniest Outtakes, Life's Funniest Moments, Pet Star, and The Michael Jackson Interview: The Footage You Were Never Meant to See; cocreator of the comic "Punks the Comic." WRITINGS: (And director and actor) Real Things (screenplay), Reel Things Production (, MA), 2000. Elk's Run (graphic novel), art by Noel Tuazon, colors by Scott Keating, lettered by Jason Hanley, chapter title art by Datsun Tran, edited by Jason Rodriguez, Villard (New York, NY), 2007. (Adaptor) Yasunori Mitsunga, Princess Resurrection, translated by Satsuki Yamashita, lettered by North Market Street Graphics, Del Rey/Ballantine (New York, NY), 2007. (With Mark Wheaton) They're among Us (television screenplay), 2008. Also writer of comics, including "Vampirella," Harris Comics; "Punks the Comic"; and "The Cleaners," Dark Horse Comics. SIDELIGHTS: Joshua Hale Fialkov is a writer who has worked in a variety of media. As a child Fialkov read voraciously, often frustrating his teachers with his desire to go beyond the reading limits for his grade level. In a Pop Thought Web site interview with Alex Ness, Fialkov explained: "I read at least a novel a week still, sometimes more. I was also, and still am, a huge fan of episodic TV, which led me to comics, and so on." Fialkov eventually worked for television after graduating from Emerson College in 2000 with a bachelor's degree in theater and film. He wrote, directed, and even acted in the independent film Real Things, a movie that challenged the concept of reality and the sanity of the lead character. Over the next few years, Fialkov worked as a script supervisor for the television show Easy Listening, and as a production coordinator for various television shows, including Fox's Funniest Outtakes, Life's Funniest Moments, Pet Star, and The Michael Jackson Interview: The Footage You Were Never Meant to See. After several years of problems with various publishers, Fialkov published his first graphic novel, Elk's Run, in 2007. The setting of the book is an isolated community that never allows anyone in or out. Elk's Run, West Virginia, was founded by Vietnam War veterans who made a pact to keep their children free from the dangers and influences of the outside world by completely removing themselves from any contacts outside of the close- knit community. When a fatal car accident incites mob justice in the town, the situation escalates as townsmen go on a murderous rampage to protect their exclusivity and to prevent their children from leaving. Reviews for Elk's Run were mixed. A contributor to Publishers Weekly wrote that "Fialkov builds the suspense incrementally until the cycle of violence becomes a wave of disasters." Marc Bernardin found the story "compelling" in an Entertainment Weekly review. Carl Hays, writing in Booklist, found the "engrossing and ultimately moving" narrative "more powerful" than the drawing style. A contributor to Kirkus Reviews described the graphic novel as "a potentially fantastic piece of work, marred by flawed execution." While interviewing Fialkov on the Pop Thought Web site, Ness described the story as "a dark, emotive work, that gives me substantial chills." In a School Library Journal review, Robert Saunderson thought that the book "is precisely and cleverly rendered with believable dialogue, expressive facial and body language, and captivating childhood flashbacks." Fialkov told CA: "From the time I was a kid, I have been obsessed with storytelling. I would do radio serials on my Fisher Price tape recorder with long continuing plots and recurring characters (very much in the vein of the television show ‘The Goon Show,’ which I was a big fan of as a tyke). It just seemed to me that writing was as essential to living as breathing. "In addition to ‘The Goon Show,’ which had a huge influence over my use of humor and sense of storytelling, I have also been a hopeless devotee of the film directors Frederico Fellini, Ingmar Bergman, and François Truffaut as storytellers. The writer Russell Banks has also influenced me. He writes the way I always hoped I would be able to one day. All of the aforementioned writers and directors use style and technique to guide what may seem to be mundane stories into something epic and meaningful. I think that is a skill set missing from most artists, and it is something I have desperately tried to cultivate in myself. "I tend to write in bursts. I will get very hot on an idea, and will spend weeks fleshing it out to see if it is something real and worth pursuing. I have a very addictive personality, and it is pretty obvious both in my work and my work habits that I get fixated on things and they just creep into everything I am doing. "I don't know if there is a profession other than writing that is so clearly based on ‘just showing up.’ You can be the best writer in the world, but if you don't just sit down and do the work, it's worthless. I think over the past few years of fully committing myself to writing, I'm constantly amazed at how much I improve the more I do. So much of a writer's day is filled with idle daydreaming, and yet forcing yourself to use that material and do the work really does have a huge benefit. "The high-minded artist in me says that Elk's Run is my favorite of my works, but, realistically, it's ‘Punks the Comic.’ It's a down and dirty burst of what's going on inside my head, and I think it represents something that's just not seen in literature (especially in comics) these days." BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES: PERIODICALS. Booklist, March 15, 2007, Carl Hays, review of Elk's Run, p. 35. Entertainment Weekly, June 3, 2005, Marc Bernardin, review of Elk's Run, p. 89. Express, May 2, 2007, Scott Rosenberg, author interview. Kirkus Reviews, January 15, 2007, review of Elk's Run, p. 51. Publishers Weekly, January 22, 2007, review of Elk's Run, p. 169. School Library Journal, May, 2007, Robert Saunderson, review of Elk's Run, p. 170. ONLINE. Hoarse and Buggy Web site, http://www.hoarseandbuggy.com (November 21, 2007), author company and Web log. Internet Movie Database, http://www.imdb.com/ (November 21, 2007), author profile. Joshua Hale Fialkov MySpace Profile, http://www.myspace.com/jhfialkov (November 21, 2007), author profile. Pop Thought, http://www.popthought.com/ (November 21, 2007), Alex Ness, author interview. Cite this article Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography. MLA Chicago APA. "Fialkov, Joshua Hale 1979– ." Contemporary Authors . . Retrieved June 01, 2021 from Encyclopedia.com: https://www.encyclopedia.com/arts/educational-magazines/fialkov-joshua-hale-1979. Citation styles. Encyclopedia.com gives you the ability to cite reference entries and articles according to common styles from the Modern Language Association (MLA), The Chicago Manual of Style, and the American Psychological Association (APA). Within the “Cite this article” tool, pick a style to see how all available information looks when formatted according to that style. Then, copy and paste the text into your bibliography or works cited list. Joshua Hale Fialkov. Joshua Hale Fialkov is a writer for the webseries LG15: The Resistance and the later portion of Lonelygirl15. He is also the creator of the critically acclaimed cult hit Elk’s Run, a graphic novel released by Random House Publishing’s Villard imprint. His other work includes the ecclectic comedy series Punks the Comic, and beloved horror anthology Western Tales of Terror. Josh was the winner of Top Cow Publishing’s inaugural program, wherein 1.5 million people voted for his refresh of Top Cow character Cyblade. A new Cyblade series following up on the pilot starts in the Fall. He’s taking part in Pilot Season 2, writing Alibi alongside artist Jeremy Haun. He has been the translator of many volumes of manga, most notably Del Rey’s Princess Resurrection. Josh also just completed an acclaimed run on Harris Comics’ iconic Vampirella. He has written for companies including Marvel, Wildstorm, IDW, Dark Horse, Image, Tor Books, Seven Seas Entertainment, Dabel Brothers Productions, and St. Martin’s Press. Josh grew up in Pittsburgh, PA, went to college in Boston, were he got a BFA in writing and directing for the stage and screen, and then worked in the New England film industry, until finally deciding to move to Los Angeles to do it properly. Josh lives with his wife, Christina, who’s a librarian and historian of both film and California. They live with their instruments (both musical and otherwise), his comics and DVDs, her books and movie memorabilia, and their two cats, Smokey and The Bandit. Ten Years Later, Joshua Hale Fialkov Returns To Elk's Run, From . In 2005, a young comic book creator Joshua Hale Fialkov wrote a comic book, drawn by Noel Tuazon , and published by Adam Fortier' s Speakeasy to what Joshua called "shitacular sales". Ten years later, it's back, collected in hardcover, for November 11th, by Oni Press. The small town of Elk's Ridge was founded as a closed haven, dreamt up by Vietnam veterans looking to create a utopia: a home without violence, chaos, or corruption. And in the beginning, it seemed like it might actually work. However, years later, the town has become a powder keg. When a desperate bid for freedom results in the accidental death of a child, the town must decide what terrible acts they are willing to commit in order to preserve their way of life. And the youth of the sleepy town—those who never chose to live that life—must forsake all they know in order to stand up for what is right. A vividly and viscerally illustrated tale of small town horror, Elk's Run takes its place among the most chilling and affecting works of graphic fiction. The debut collaboration of Eisner, Harvey, and Emmy nominated writer Joshua Hale Fialkov and Harvey and Eisner nominated artist Noel Tuazon is back a decade later and even more relevant. "Elk's Run is the book that started my career and getting a chance to revisit it for this deluxe hardcover is a real gift," says creator Joshua Hale Fialkov. "The work Noel, Scott, Jason [Rodriguez] and Jason [Hanley] did is a true inspiration to me and to see how much they taught me by our collaboration is heart-warming. Having had so much success with Oni Press on The Bunker and The Life After, it made sense to bring Elk's Run too. Plus, big secret time, it was the books Oni published that inspired me to make comics in the first place." ReadComicOnline.li. A portrait of life inside a militia, told by the people living it, Elk's Run gives readers a unique insight into what leads to a Waco, a Ruby Ridge, or a Jonestown. From writer Joshua Hale Fialkov, the critically acclaimed creator of Western Tales of Terror and illustrator Noel Tuazon, with colors by Scott A. Keating (Secret Skull), Elk's Run is a full-color eight-issue limited series shipping bi-monthly. Issue Name Day Added Elk's Run Issue #4 2/25/2017 Elk's Run Issue #3 2/25/2017 Elk's Run Issue #2 2/25/2017 Elk's Run Issue #1 2/25/2017. From 2015 ReadComicOnline.to. Copyrights and trademarks for the comic, and other promotional materials are held by their respective owners and their use is allowed under the fair use clause of the Copyright Law. Privacy Policy | DMCA | Contact us. Adblocker detected! Please consider reading this notice. We've detected that you are using AdBlock Plus or some other adblocking software which is preventing the page from fully loading. We don't have any banner, Flash, animation, obnoxious sound, or popup ad. We do not implement these annoying types of ads! 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