The Deep Dark

15.2 x 2.6 x 21.4 cm, 480 pages

English language

Published by Scholastic Graphix.

ISBN:
978-0-7023-3767-3
Copied ISBN!
ASIN:
B0CD391XMZ
5 stars (2 reviews)

Everyone has secrets. Mags’s has teeth.

Magdalena Herrera is about to graduate high school, but she already feels like an adult with serious responsibilities: caring for her ailing grandmother; working a part-time job; clandestine makeouts with a girl who has a boyfriend. And then there’s her secret, which pulls her into the basement each night, drains her of energy, and leaves her bleeding. A secret that could hurt and even kill if it ever got out -- like it did once before.

So Mags keeps her head down, isolated in her small desert community. That is, until her childhood friend Nessa comes back to town, bringing vivid memories of the past, an intoxicating glimpse of the future, and a secret of her own. Mags won’t get attached, of course. She’s always been strong enough to survive without anyone’s help.

But when the darkness starts to close in on them both, …

2 editions

reviewed The Deep Dark by Molly Knox Ostertag

Dark, complex, beautiful

5 stars

The Deep Dark is graphic novel about secrets, suffering, fear, and a path to healing. Or maybe it's about family, love, art, and becoming who you are. About living, and joy. Or about queerness, acceptance, and generational trauma. It's moving, grounded, complex. It's fantastic.

Mild spoilers follow: Magdalena "Mags" Herrera is a butch girl living in Joshua Tree, South California. Her mother is often staying with her new boyfriend, so Mags is the main caregiver for her grandmother, while also working part-time. Her secret girlfriend has a boyfriend in public. But the bigger secret is the creature in the basement which is tied to Mags life, and needs to be fed with her blood every night. It's the reason Mags barely goes out apart from highschool and her job. Into this life bursts Mags' childhood friend, Nessa. They reconnect, and Mags is torn between wanting more and keeping Nessa at …

A quiet, excellent queer meditation on the burdens we carry

4 stars

Mags is just about grown up, but her life revolves around home by necessity. Part of that is because she needs to care for the aged abuela, but just as much is because of the thing in the basement, that she needs to feed every day. She is stoic about it, never complaining about a weight that would break most adults twice her age.

This all begins to get upended when her childhood best friend, long moved away, comes back home -- now transitioned, with the new name of Nessa. Nessa is more lively, and wants Mags to live more herself. But as far as she knows, the thing in the basement was just a childhood fantasy that they made up when they were kids.

This isn't a big loud fantasy book: aside from its one fantastical element, it is very much grounded in the here and now of small-town …