Jamie Poorman
APA Citation: Petty, J. (2012). Bloody Chester. New York: First Second.
Genre: Western
Format: Print (Softcover, 160 pages; graphic novel)
Awards: ---------
Selection Process: Booklist review, YALSA list of ‘Great Graphic Novels, 2013’
Reader’s beware - this is definitely not a book to judge by it’s cover. Appearing to be a western story, this work is so much more - adventure, horror, romance, and historical fiction all rolled into one short, very visually stimulating work.
Chester Kates, a young man of unspecifed age, appearing to be in his mid to late teens, is alone - penniless and miserable, taunted by others, mistaken for a girl, in the crude, rough wild west town that he is passing through. Offered a job opportunity to burn out a neighboring town to make way for the Union Pacific railroad, Chester accepts and sets off for the supposed-abandoned town of Whale.
Upon arriving at Whale, Chester is surprised to find a few residents of the town still there, among them, Caroline, a young lady who is taking care of her father who is holed up in a mine somewhere in the mountains outside of town. Horror and chaos ensue as Chester learns of a mysterious plague called ‘coyote waits’ that has killed everyone in the town. In a strange, horrifying chain of events, Chester also befriends a local boy whose father, the town priest, is dying - a lingering, terrible death from the plague. The real root of the plague, and it’s ethical repercussions, are revealed when Chester is finally able to make contact with Caroline’s father who reveals that the plague was a figment of the imagination, created when he killed some ‘animals’ and made it look as though they were the first victims of ‘coyote waits’ to protect his treasure from the gold mine. While battling together in an attack of Sioux warriors, the old man admits to Chester that the ‘animals’ he sacrificed to his imaginary plague were in fact Sioux . . .
Recommended for older teens