With hindsight, there have been strips with folk horror elements in 2000AD before. Thistlebone, though, feels like the magazine's first conscious attempt at the subgenre since it became a buzzword. Storywise, it's a competent exercise within the field's established boundaries, rather than bringing anything novel: a woman goes back to the village near which she escaped from a cult years previously, and of course there's still something uncanny going on in the woods. But Simon Davis is an excellent choice of artist for it, especially compared to the late-period Slaine or any-period Sinister Dexter on which he's often been wasted. Those slightly off-key colours and suggestive shadows turn what could have been an unremarkable story into one which, while hardly a classic, made for a fun bit of variety in the weekly prog, and as a collection may well introduce the magazine to a new audience.