E. M. Carroll | |
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Born | 1983 (age 40–41) London, Ontario |
Spouse(s) | Kate Craig |
www |
E. M. Carroll (born 1983), previously credited as Emily Carroll, is a comics author from Ontario, Canada. Carroll started making comics in 2010, and their horror webcomic His Face All Red went viral around Halloween of 2010. Since then, Carroll has published two books of their own work, created comics for various comics anthologies, and provided illustrations for other works. Carroll has won several awards, including an Ignatz and two Eisners.
Carroll is educated as an animator. They began drawing comics in 2010. [1]
Carroll drew and published their first comic on their website in May 2010. [2] Their third webcomic, His Face All Red, was released on October 31, 2010, and soon went viral. [1] [3] [4]
Carroll has continued to publish short horror comics on their website. For their 2014 webcomic The Hole the Fox Did Make, Carroll chose a limited format to see how they could create unease in a limited space. Furthermore, they created this webcomic during breaks between other work, and the format facilitated drawing in "small chunks". [5] Another webcomic, Margot's Room, presents the reader with a child's bedroom; clicking on objects in the room presents a part of the story. A poem at the start suggests a reading order, but the comic can be read in any order. [3] Their 2016 webcomic Some Other Animal's Meat was adapted as "The Outside" for the Netflix horror anthology Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities (2022). [6]
As of February 2022 [update] , the latest webcomic on their website is The Worthington, published in 2018. [7]
Carroll's work has been included in a number of comic anthologies, including "Explorer: Mystery Boxes," "Fairy Tale Comics," "Creepy" and "The Witching Hour." [5]
In 2014, Carroll published Through the Woods, an anthology book of four original stories and an adaptation of His Face All Red for print format. [5] [8] According to CBR, this was first announced in 2011 and was to be titled "His Face All Red and Other Stories". [2] When talking about adapting a webcomic to print, Carroll said, "it was difficult... I think it works pretty good, though I think it might be more successful on the screen, to be honest. Because page turns became really important. With horror comics or any sort of suspense comics, if you have a set up for a scare on the left-hand page and the scare itself on the right-hand page the effect would disappear immediately." [3] Through the Woods won Eisner, [9] Ignatz, [10] and British Fantasy [11] awards.
Carroll illustrated the 2015 graphic novel Baba Yaga's Assistant from Candlewick Press and a graphic novel adaptation of Speak . [12] In 2019, they published When I Arrived at the Castle, a graphic novel which they wrote and illustrated. [13] In 2023, they published A Guest in the House, an adult horror graphic novel, through First Second Books. [14]
Carroll created illustrations for the 2013 indie video games Gone Home [15] and The Yawhg . [16]
Articles at CBR have described Carroll as a "webcomics wunderkind" [2] and "a master of atmosphere and mood". [5] They have called Carroll's webcomics "deliciously dark", praising their "vibrant colors, exquisite pacing, and genuinely creepy, genuinely bleak stories of murder and monstrousness". [2] The magazine Room said of their work, "Beautiful, yet delicately sinister, fairy-tale comics evoke a feeling of isolation that twists into suspense as the reader clicks and scrolls through a horror story and that lingers in the mind long after the final panel." It also highlighted themes of isolation and guilt that appear throughout their work, as well as their preference for ambiguous endings. [3] Paste Magazine called their comic The Hole the Fox Did Make one of the best webcomics of 2014. [17]
The critic Joe McCulloch said of Carroll's His Face All Red, “Even in the late ’80s, guys like Stephen Bissette were developing forums like Taboo which were specifically designed to counteract the traditionalism of comics horror … ‘His Face All Red’ seemed a break from that when it hit me. And it hit a lot of people.”
Carroll's 2019 book, When I Arrived at the Castle, received positive reviews. The Comics Journal said that Carrol has an "incredible capacity to scare" and that "while there is a moral, Carroll deftly avoids moralizing. At no point does [Carroll] offer a neat resolution—the victimizer is condemned, of course, but the victim is not necessarily absolved completely." [13] A review for Women Write About Comics called it a "dark, delicious fantasy" and said, "It’s the kind of story that needs multiple readings, not because it’s confusing, but because there's so much to unravel, so much thematic detail to sift through." [18] PopMatters rated it 8 out of 10, and said that "Carroll's style remains familiar: deceptively cartoonish figures that evoke a children's picture book despite the puddles of blood oozing into the gutters. Not that there are many gutters. Carroll prefers ever-changing layouts that only rarely provide traditional panels or grids." [19]
Carroll was born in London, Ontario. Their parents divorced when Carroll was in high school. As of 2014, they are based in Stratford, Ontario. They are married to Kate Craig. [1] [3]
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