Jedidiah Jenkins was a simple farmer but his cash crop wasn't corn or soy. He grew fast-healing highly customizable human organs which he used to heal the world.
But it was all a lie.
What Jedidiah used for good a dark entity has used to transform humanity into something monstrous. Only Jedidiah's children stand in its way-and not all of them will survive.
Born, raised and currently based in Lafayette, Louisiana, Rob Guillory is most known for his art on Image Comics' longrunning series CHEW. Written by John Layman, the book has achieved much success, winning two Harvey Awards (including Best New Talent for Guillory) and two Eisner Awards (Best New Series in 2010 and Best Continuing Series in 2011).
The various plot points and storylines that have been slowly percolating finally come to a head in this volume. I wouldn't say the previous volumes were a slow burn but there was a lot of focus on character so once things kicked into a higher gear in this volume it helps the more fantastical elements feel more grounded.
We are really starting to cook with some gas here. The plot threads are really starting to get tied up and make sense like never before. I really like how we've progressed in the book to exploring how the plants have taken people in different ways. I think there's something there with how the plants are drawing from their traumas and making them see their dead loved ones. I'm curious to see what happens next, but I see that it is on hiatus so I'm going to have to be very patient.
Slightly interesting sci–fi comic series – quite good.
I haven’t read the first three volumes but a synopsis at the beginning put me in the picture. A manmade combination of human and plant has taken over Freetown and many people have been infected / converted. Zeke‘s family are at the centre of the struggle against it. It’s reasonably interesting but didn’t really enthrall me. I’m no great fan of the author‘s artwork, preferring more precise detailed illustrations. There’s one further volume to read. I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
Okay, to be honest i was kinda hoping this was the last volume and i understand businesses are gonna make their money. That being said, this was my favorite so far.
I don't know what caused the shift in the writing or what took it so long to get there, but i beleive it has direction and hopefully they wisely end this series in volume 5.
A lot of these series turns into jokes that were only funny the first time.
Also, why are so many full grown adults still mad at their parents? LET IT GO! And start being good to your kids and loved ones.
Rob Guillory is funny and creative but here he shows that he gets horror. The fourth volume of Farmhand gets dark as Thorne and her minions haunt, literally, the Jenkins family. The book also has a somber tone as things look bleak. I thought Guillory excelled at the horror elements here. The family drama is also excellent here. I wished we got more from Thorne's point of view. His art is, as always, phenomenal. Overall, this series doesn't get the press it should be its good every time out.
It seems like some of the revelations here should have more punch than they do. I don't know what it is--maybe the leisurely way the first volumes ladled the story out, with things becoming more frenzied and frenetic in the last two volumes, but this just isn't coming together in a satisfying manner. I'm still a fan of Guillory's artwork, but he still has some work to do with his plotting and storytelling.
This volume was a slower read for me. It felt like there was so much build up to the climax. I will say Chapter 20 was the best section of this collection for me. I thought for sure this was the end but then we got that cliffhanger that has me needing the next volume soon.
I was operating under the assumption that this was the last volume of the series, but the ending doesn’t give a sense of finality. Still, if you’ve been reading this you will like it. Not sure when we’ll get more, but I will be ready to read it.
A well written and beautifully drawn comic book. The long gap between publications made me fear that the story was not going to be complete. Hopefully the cliffhanger that the book is left on is continued in the near future.
Náhul jal debil! Tady to měl Guillory snad nejpevněji uchycené ze všech volumek kterw prisli po jednicce. Kadence humoru a napětí tu je asi nejvice vyvážená a celé to proste neskutecne šlape.
Moc mě to bavilo! Snad pohne s pokracovanim! Kresba i coloring mi tu btw taky prisli vybrousenejsi.
Full of great events that you won't see coming from the start, full of cinematic world building, great art that leaps off the page really showing what is going on and happening the characters, unbridled heroics from the start and epic genetic engineering you won't see coming! 😀
Whoa!!!!! The seeds are finally coming up to fruit (though I'm still confused by Murderface Mikhail). I'm continually impressed by the way Guillroy explores plants vs. God, pitching the natural and unnatural in the way that only makes sense if you have lived in Louisiana.
Now I get the many hiatuses of the series. Although, the half way through is still enjoyable, Guillory was struggling to find his story. The issues seem disconnected and the time jumps are awkward.
I like the series a lot, but with both Chew and Farmhand, I find it gets a little too dramatic and heavy-handed the further in it gets. Still enjoyable, but also a little more exhausting.
It has been so long since I read the previous volume. I don't want to rate it harshly because of that but I can't help but let it impact my enjoyment. Ultimately, a pretty existing volume.
I wasn't prepared for this ending AT ALL!! Volume 5 has to come out because the climax of this whole story-the family drama, the town's drama all of it needs to be told. Whewww! A wild ride
It all comes down to love. This was originally supposed to be the end of the comic, but I’ve also heard there may be more issues. I’d be happy if it ended here, but I think we’re gonna deal with the young granddaughter next.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.