Member Reviews
This is for anyone who wants to read about what happens to the Final Girl after the cameras are off and finished with her. Sacred Lamb is a compelling story with great artwork.
This concept sounded so good. But it’s such a slow burn. So slow that it was hard to read. I kept picking it up and putting it down. To say this a town with survivors of slashers it took too long to pick up.
It's about a secret town in the middle of nowhere for survivors of slashers. The victims are called Eve's and live the rest of their lives in this small walled town, away from their serial killers. Then the latest "Eve" arrives and people start dying.
This is a bit of a slow burn and the story progresses fairly slowly. The art is something that is more subjective but objectively I did find it a bit more old fashioned. Might not be for everyone but I am not too picky when it comes to the art in graphic novels as long as it has a captivating story.
All of that aside, I was intrigued enough to stay invested in the story, I enjoyed Kellyn as a main character and I always love seeing women rooting each other on, especially in the face of misogyny.
I think the premise had potential but it just didn’t work for me. I didn’t like the art, and the plot was mediocre at best. Personally I wouldn’t recommend this graphic novel.
This was a great opportunity to discovered a new author that I haven't read before for which I am grateful. I found the story to be interesting however it felt a but flat in curtain parts and I wish it would have gotten a bit deeper into the characters themselves but apart from that it was a great read
A Blood soaked and witty take on social horror.
With beautiful illustrations and the classic, but always fun trope of The Final Girl. Sacred Lamb is a graphic novel that'll keep you on your toes and flipping pages.
The idea of a 'Slasher survivors Town' is fun and unique.
This is the perfect read for fans of Final Girls by Riley Sager or The Final Girl's Support Group by Grady Hendrix
Through this enthralling tale, the author explores the blurred lines between reality and fiction while shedding light on women's indomitable strength in the face of unimaginable horrors. Sacred Lamb is a must-read for horror enthusiasts and fans of thought-provoking narratives that challenge the genre's conventions.
I wanted to like this book, I wanted to like this so much.
But the art for this graphic novel was honestly so incredibly offputting, and not enjoyable to look at, it made reading this whole thing like pulling teeth.
Paired with what ended up feeling like a dreadfully boring storyline. I at no point felt any real interest in how things were going to turn out, because things just never seemed to connect together like they were supposed too.
This did not work for me, and I had to DNF.
The idea was intriguing, but the stereotypical influencer main character and bad art ruined it.
Just a boring, boring graphic novel, about a boring utuber known for unboxing videos in skimpy clothing, who survives a killer's attack, and gets sent to a kind of rural prison of a town for people needing some kind of victim relocation. It never explains why they all need to be clumped together, but when they do – lo and behold there's evil, and eventually (oh how eventually) more death. There're also limp law enforcers just to reinforce the idea that white males are evil, in case the second issue solely consisting of women beef about while males wanting to kill them wasn't enough, and I don't know what else because I really didn't care. If this had managed to spin a proper, nuanced drama from the thought that boring, skimpily-clad utubers had it coming, then it might have been fabulous. As it was it was an unattractive snorefest. One and a half stars.
Sacred Lamb involves one of my personal favorite horror tropes: it follows "final girls" (or, in this case "Eves") after their slasher run-ins. Unfortunately, I didn't think it was executed so well in this instance! The characters all felt pretty flat and shallow, and we didn't get to see much of the trauma response that you would expect from portrayals of characters who have undergone such awful circumstances. I'm not saying I enjoy seeing final girls suffer, but it's only realistic to expect more awareness and concern from these women than what we got.
I also have to admit that the art was not my cup of tea at all, and some of the plot pieces felt like threads that never quite tied up. I was left with quite a few questions in the end, and then the abrupt cliffhanger was a bit pointless as well. There's also something to be said about the casual inclusion of a cis gay man in the "women's group" and the trope of the magical Black woman saving the day, but by now you're getting the gist.
All of that aside, I was intrigued enough to stay invested in the story, I enjoyed Kellyn as a main character (especially getting to see her delve into what led her to become an influencer in the first place), and I always love seeing women rooting each other on, especially in the face of misogyny.
Despite having a few redeeming qualities, at the end of the day, the good didn't outweigh the bad for me with Sacred Lamb, and I won't be recommending this title when there are so many other better horror graphics in the world.
Thank you to the publisher for the review copy! All thoughts are honest and my own.
This was just not great. It needed to have fewer characters and tighten up. It was a love letter to Brian Edward Hill’s Postal but didn’t really live up to it. Loved the effort though.
I enjoyed this book less than I hoped I would when I requested it, but more than I thought I was going to after the first 30 pages or so. I enjoyed the clarity of the art style (I never had trouble telling the characters apart) and the concept was phenomenal. That said, occasional beats rang awkwardly for me, and the message was a bit muddy in places. That said, if this is ever adapted for screen I'd love to see it (except, and this is very subjective, I'd skip the last page or so).
It's been a long while since i've read a graphic novel I wasn't able to put down.
Sacred Lamb is a gory thriller about slasher surivors who are taken to a secret town in a "witness protection" esque program to escape and heal from the trauma of their serial killer run ins.
The graphic novel uses so many horror elements which just brough the story together, final girls, killers who just keep comin back, suss towns + gore with added uniqueness.
Thanks NetGalley for the ARC!
Read this if you like: Meta horror, slashers, final girls
A twisted graphic novel take on the genre, centring around a supposed safe haven for survivors of deliciously
trope-y killers. But every slasher needs a sequel - can Sacred Lamb keep its final girls safe?
I moved from liking it and not liking it all throughout my reading of the graphic novel. First I though it was an interesting take on the Final Girl trope. Then it’s giving too much of the trope. One time it says what I feel about the horror genres, next I could tell so much that it was written by a man.
I first gave it a higher rating and now I’m thinking just a solid 3 star rating. Middle of the road, average etc. The 3-star rating is honestly very versatile so with Sacred Lamb because while I was reading I thought 3 star but more towards 4. Then when I finished it I thought “Nope, this is definitely closer to the early stages of 3 stars. Or like 2.5 to 3 stars.” I decided to just give it 3 because in the end it did focus on horror, the different aspects and elements of it, which I did like.
What I really liked was the different “eras” shown amongst all the Final Girls – the babysitter – though I guess it’s also the “home invasion” horror genre as a whole? I was waiting for a Haunted House or Exorcism Final Girl but oh well. Can’t have everything. I did want some type of Final Girl from a Final Destination/Wrong Turn/I Know What You Did Last Summer genre – which would fall under the slasher sub-genre, I suppose? I love all three of those movie franchises) and was waiting for one of those (the Final Girl) to show up.
I liked the illustrations and way they were shown – I did like that they weren’t visibly perfect. I think a lot of the times in horror movies the female characters are always in tight clothing, hair’s messed up but still looks great. Even when they’re running away from the murderer they look super perfect. And I don’t want that! I want messy protagonists – like physically messy – because looking super hot is a thing in horror movies. Either the Final Girl is a virgin and innocent or she’s sexy even when she’s in danger. I just want messiness!
I didn’t really connect much with the main character? I think her whole thing about being an Influencer is fine, but she was… famous for just unboxing things? That just sounds like Brooklyn from Camp Cretaceous for me and I’d much rather watch that. I liked “The Babysitter” much more and would’ve preferred her to be the main character – even though that would’ve changed the plot around a lot.
Sacred Lamb is a twisted, bloody, meta-horror graphic horror novel that will thrill the fans of slasher flicks and novels. The superb artwork has almost an eerie film-like feel to it and is well detailed and creative. Essentially the plot centers around a "treatment center" for the final girls (called "Eves") of real-life slasher nightmares, in order to avoid any sequels to from their real-life killers. Sacred Lamb, however, might just be the opposite of a safe haven, and no one is safe. This was a truly superb graphic novel and I highly recommend it to horror fans!
This was...something. I was intrigued by the premise, and thought I'd enjoy the book. I did finish it, but from middle to end, everything was rushed and there was a fair bit that made no sense at all. I do think it might be enjoyed by some, but overall I'm not sure I can personally recommend it.
Thank you to NetGalley for the eARC of Sacred Lamb by Tim Seely and Jelena Đorđević-Maksimović.
I enjoyed the concept of Sacred Lamb, but did at times find it a bit predictable.
The art was super spooky and reminded me of the 80s horror tape covers. A dun read for horror lovers!
Thanks Netgalley and publisher for giving me a chance to read this graphic novel. I’m going to say it…..all the characters look like the Easter Island heads with no emotion and have big heads. It was literally ugly and the story was confusing to understand.