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An action-packed and artistically stunning dark fantasy story from Elephantmen creator, Richard Starkings, and breakout talent, Abigail Jill Harding.

Ask for Mercy is a World War II fantasy horror story in the tradition of John Carpenter's The Thing and Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman .

Mercy is snatched from her own place and time to join a team of monster hunters who are actually monsters themselves, and together they have to take on a pantheon of hideous creatures summoned to our world by Nazi evil!

Collects the Comixology Originals series Ask For Mercy Season 1 and 2.

312 pages, Paperback

Published May 9, 2023

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About the author

Richard Starkings

618 books29 followers
Richard Starkings is a British comics professional, known for writing the hit sci-fi series ELEPHANTMEN and specializing in lettering, thanks to his award-winning Comicraft lettering studio.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Eamonn Murphy.
Author 33 books10 followers
November 10, 2023
‘Ask for Mercy’ collects the first few stories from an ongoing fantasy series with script and lettering by Richard Starkings and art by Abigail J Harding. Mercy is the lead character, an unsuccessful estate agent with rich clients when the adventure begins. She drives a jaguar she can’t afford to impress them and rents a shed to live in. ‘Ask for Mercy’ is her catchphrase when she invites them to call her back. We meet her at a cafe in Banbury, Oxfordshire where she’s approached by Alizarine, a lean, smartly dressed gentleman with a neat beard who looks as if he might be on his way to the opera.
He takes her through a doorway opposite the cafe, one she hadn’t noticed before, and she finds herself in a field being attacked by World War II planes piloted by monsters. Another monster comes to her rescue. Budgie can take the form of a skinny, gentle looking human but quickly changes into a large terrifying creature with fangs and claws when the need arises. He’s accompanied by Ratmir, a sort of werewolf, and Kasa, a native American female with shamanic powers.

Monstrous forms do not denote monstrous natures, Mercy soon learns. Budgie, Ratmir and Kasa hunt the real monsters… Nazis. Another gateway takes her to Paris in 1942 and she learns that Heinrich Himmler’s SS are even more dangerous than they seem. I don’t want to give away the big reveals but, as with many fantasies, a larger and more dangerous universe is unveiled and Mercy is very much a part of it, though she’s forgotten. References to Himmler and the occult reminded me of James Herbert’s ‘The Spear’ which I very much enjoyed when young. A turn of the page and there’s Himmler again seeking the Spear of Destiny which pierced the side of Christ on the cross and has super magical powers. But big ideas can be used more than once and the multiverse of Mercy is a very different affair to Herbert’s take on such things.

The second adventure in this collection takes advantage of the doorways which transcend time and space to visit the wild west. In 1876, Sitting Bull and his Siouix returned to the Black Hills of Dakota. Doris Day isn’t around but General Custer is, as well as some dangerous magical beings and a nightmare version of ‘Old Hickory’ himself, Andrew Jackson, ‘the foulest U.S. President that ever lived’ says Ratmir. And that’s up against some pretty stiff competition.

Richard Starkings writes a good yarn and the colourful art by Abigail J Harding is pleasing to the eye. She seems very much inspired by Bill Seinkewitz with sketchy line drawings filled in with watercolour in a loose, flowing style. I’m not a fan of Seinkewitz on superheroes, being prejudiced by an upbringing on Kirby and Buscema, but it suits this branch of the fantasy genre just fine. Both creators are British and that gives ‘Ask for Mercy’ a 2000AD vibe in story and art, or perhaps I mean a European sensibility. There is gore and some darkness. It’s entertaining but don’t expect Spider-Man or that soft, fluffy Disney feel.



Profile Image for Rory Wilding.
826 reviews31 followers
April 20, 2023
If there’s one thing to take away from history, it’s that during times of war, humanity can show their monstrous side. While there’s been countless media that has treated this with utmost seriousness, others take artistic license with certain periods of history through a pulpy fashion, like the depiction of Nazis throughout the Indiana Jones movies. In the case of the ComiXology Original, Ask for Mercy, it somewhat falls into the latter. Beginning digital publication back in 2018, the series by Richard Starkings and Abigail Jill Harding gets the Dark Horse treatment with a collected edition that covers the first two volumes.

Please click here for my full review.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews