Motor Girl

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Motor Girl
Motor Girl ish 1 cover.jpg
Cover to issue #1, art by Terry Moore.
Publication information
Publisher Abstract Studio
ScheduleMonthly
FormatOngoing
Genre Science fiction
Publication dateNovember 2016 – November 2017
No. of issues10
Main character(s)Samantha "Sam" Lockyear
Creative team
Written by Terry Moore
Artist(s)Terry Moore
Collected editions
Real Life (#1-5) ISBN   9781892597632
No Man Left Behind (#6-10) ISBN   1892597659
Omnibus HC ISBN   1892597683

Motor Girl is an American comic book series created by Terry Moore and published through Abstract Studio. It was initially serialized in ten issues between November 2016 and November 2017 with new installments approximately six weeks apart. It has since been collected into two softcover volumes containing five issues each, released in May and December 2017, and a single omnibus edition in March 2018.

Contents

The story is about Sam, an Iraq War veteran with posttraumatic stress disorder. She works alone in a junkyard and talks to her imaginary friend Mike, who is a gorilla. When she learns the junkyard's owner might sell it, she begins to see friendly aliens visiting the junkyard. When the prospective buyer threatens the aliens, Sam resists him.

The series received generally positive reviews. Critics noted how different the tone in Motor Girl is from Moore's other comic work. The ending was praised for being well-planned.

Publication history

Terry Moore began developing the concept as early as 2007, when he completed work on his series Echo . [1] The concept developed from a sketch Moore made showing a female mechanic and a gorilla riding a motorcycle in the background. [2] Moore wanted to do a Calvin and Hobbes type story that involved an invisible friend. [3] When another creator told him they were already doing something with a similar premise, Moore chose to work on Rachel Rising instead and included some elements of the original Motor Girl character in a supporting character for that comic. [4] When Rachel Rising concluded in 2016, the other creator had not followed through with the idea, so Moore decided to move forward with it. [4] The first issue was released on November 2, 2016. [5] New issues were released approximately six weeks apart. [6] The series concluded with issue 10 in November 2017. [7]

The series was reprinted in two paperback volumes that collected five issues each. The first was released in March 2017, [8] followed the second in December. A single-volume omnibus was released in soft and hardcover in March 2018 along with a special edition hardcover version limited to 1000 copies that was only available directly from Moore. [9] [10]

The junkyard owner, Libby, played a minor role in Moore's first comic work, Strangers in Paradise . [11] Moore has confirmed that Motor Girl is also set in the same fictional universe as his other works, Echo and Rachel Rising . [12] The characters had cameo appearances in the 2018 series Strangers in Paradise XXV.

Plot

As a US Marine serving three tours in the Iraq War, Samantha "Sam" Lockyear survives two IED attacks and spends a lengthy time being tortured as a prisoner of war. Returning home, she lives and works at Libby's scrap yard, located in a remote part of a southwestern US desert. Due to her war experience, she suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder and severe headaches. She spends her days talking to Mike, her imaginary friend who is a gorilla. One afternoon, Libby stops by to let Sam know a wealthy man has offered to buy the property. That night, a flying saucer experiences engine trouble and crashes in the scrap yard. Sam believes it is a hallucination, but plays along and repairs the UFO's engine.

The proposed buyer, a government scientist named Walton, has developed a weapon capable of shooting down UFOs and wants the land because of the high amount of extraterrestrial activity in the area. When Libby refuses, he hires two mercenaries, Victor and Larry, to strongarm her into changing her mind. Sam stops them, breaking Larry's nose. After a few more attempts at coercion, Victor and Larry learn Sam is a veteran and regret causing her trouble. Sam collapses, and Libby takes her to a hospital where they learn she still has some shrapnel in her brain. She will die if it is not removed, but doing so will cause Mike to go away.

When Walton captures an alien, Sam, Victor, and Larry decide to free it. When they put their plan into action, a large number of flying saucers descend and attack. Walton is killed. During the battle, Sam begins to hallucinate and imagines herself back in Iraq. As she realizes what is happening is impossible, she wakes up in a hospital room. Libby explains how Sam collapsed upon hearing the scrap yard might be sold and has been in the hospital ever since. Walton, the mercenaries, and the aliens were all a dream sequence. When Sam leaves the hospital, she decides to return to society.

Reception

The first issue debuted to positive reviews, averaging 8.6/10 based on six critical reviews according to review aggregator Comic Book Roundup. [13] The series as a whole was ranked number 13 on io9's top 15 comics of 2017. [14]

Multiple critics noted how different the writing and art were from Moore's previous works. [15] [16] Writing for ComicWow, Huck Talwar said the series was well-paced. [17] Hassan Otsmane-Elaou agreed in an analysis of the artwork at ComicsAlliance , where he attributed Moore's control of timing to the lack of collaborators. He went on to praise Mike as a narrative device, noting how the amount of space he occupies in a panel represents the degree of Sam's unease in the scene. [18] Halfway through the series, Newsarama reviewer Kat Calamia said the series was good when it "focus[ed] on Sam and the psychological aspects of the story", but felt Moore had not built a strong voice for Walton's group. [19] In a review of the final issue for Multiversity Comics, Nicholas Palmieri said the last minute revelations felt planned and that "Motor Girl [#10] delivered everything you could want out of a concluding issue". [20]

Prints

Issues

No.Release dateComic Book Roundup ratingEstimated sales (first month)
#1November 20168.6 by six critics. [13] 11,587, ranked 180th in North America [21]
#2December 201610.0 by one critic. [22] 8,819, ranked 200th in North America [23]
#3January 20178.5 by one critic. [24] 8,458, ranked 205th in North America [25]
#4March 20179.0 by two critics. [26] 7,481, ranked 229th in North America [27]
#5April 20177.0 by one critic. [28] 7,063, ranked 225th in North America [29]
#6May 20179.5 by two critics. [30] 6,790, ranked 260th in North America [31]
#7July 20177.0 by one critic. [32] 6,596, ranked 250th in North America [33]
#8August 20178.0 by one critic. [34] 6,483, ranked 258th in North America [35]
#9October 20179.5 by one critic [36] 6,234, ranked 254th in North America [37]
#10November 20179.5 by one critic [38] 5,879, ranked 254th in North America [39]

Collected editions

TitleFormatMaterial collectedPublication dateISBNEstimated sales (North America)
[Trades]
Real Life Trade paperback (TPB)Motor Girl #1-5May 2017 9781892597632 988, ranked 94th the first month [40]
975, ranked 112th second month [41]
No Man Left BehindTrade paperbackMotor Girl #6-10December 2017 1892597659 1403, ranked 72nd [42]
OmnibusHardcoverMotor Girl #1-10March 2018 1892597683

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References

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  3. Stryker, Jonathan (November 15, 2017). "Interview: Cartoonist Terry Moore". Horror News. Retrieved December 14, 2017.
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  10. Moore, Terry (January 20, 2018). "Exclusive Limited Edition Motor Girl Omnibus!". Abstract Studio. Retrieved March 29, 2018.
  11. Per a note from the author in Motor Girl #4.
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