cover image Did You Hear What Eddie Gein Done?

Did You Hear What Eddie Gein Done?

Eric Powell and Harold Schechter. Albatross Funnybooks, $29.99 (224p) ISBN 978-1-949889-04-8

One of America’s most enduring bogeymen gets another feature role in this punishingly gruesome graphic novel from true crime writer Schechter (Deviant) and Powell (The Goon series). Ed Gein was raised in dismal small-town Wisconsin by a reportedly feckless father and domineering, fanatically religious mother (who here, as in most portrayals, is shown as the subject of Gein’s own religious/sexual obsession). In 1957, Gein was arrested after human remains were found at his farmhouse (the “incubator for madness” of his dysfunctional childhood). There, he used a skull as a bowl and refashioned the skin of corpses (some from grave-robbing) into furniture, masks, and a female body suit. Grotesque dramatizations from Gein’s stunted life, drawn in a gritty noirish fashion, run just shy of comic exaggeration, and are amply skin-crawling. The exposition-heavy attempts to plumb his madness include a professor’s lecture to a cynical newsman about Gein being driven less by Freudian mother attachment than by being a “classic necrophile” who was perhaps “in the grip of his own creepy religion.” The comic also examines how Gein became Patient Zero for much of modern horror—the muse of Psycho and The Silence of the Lambs, among others. This squirmy, nightmarish portrayal should appeal to the fans of the type of films Gein inspired. (Aug.)