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Book: “Earthdivers (Vol.3): 1776” by Stephen Graham Jones & Davide Gianfelice (Ill.)
Publishing Info: IDW Publishing, December 2024
Where Did I Get This Book: I own it.
Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound
Book Description: Join or die! New York Times best-selling author Stephen Graham Jones and artist Davide Gianfelice are back in action for the next chapter of their heart-pounding historical sci-fi slasher Earthdivers!
A team of time-traveling Indigenous survivors had one goal: save the world from an American apocalypse by sending one of their own on a suicide trip to kill Christopher Columbus and course-correct world history.
Mission accomplished? Maybe not. Blood is still soaking into the sands of San Salvador as Tad’s friends suffer the consequences of his actions—and their own slippery moral rationalizations—620 years in the future. Faced with a choice to watch the world crumble or double down on their cause, the path is clear for Seminole two-spirit Emily: it’s personal now, and there’s no better time and place to take another stab at America than Philadelphia, 1776.
But where violence just failed them, she has a new plan: pass as a man, infiltrate the Founding Fathers, and use only wit and words to carve out a better future in the Declaration of Independence. No need to cut throats this time…right?
The next chapter of the critically acclaimed sci-fi epic is here in Earthdivers Vol. 3. Collects Earthdivers #11–16.
Review: So I didn’t realize that “Earthdivers: 1776” was going to be the last volume in the “Earthdivers” series until I was reading it and it kind of clicked for me. And while I’m sad that this intense and always creative historical fiction/Science-Fiction series has come to an end, I’m pretty thrilled that Stephen Graham Jones got to see his vision through and bring this story to life. When we left off in “Ice Age”, Tawny had gone back to, well, the Ice Age, and we hadn’t seen what had become of Emily, who had disappeared into the cave at the end if “Kill Columbus”. Well for those who were wondering about her, I have great news! It is finally her time!
Given how much I enjoyed Emily in the past volumes, I was very much looking forward to her story in 1776 as she tries to take on rewriting history by infiltrating the Founding Fathers on the dawn of the Declaration of Independence. I also thought that her approach was an interesting contrast to those of Tad and Yellow Kid and his theorizing, and really matched up with how her character was portrayed in the first volume when we got to know her the most. Jones takes this arc to explore the hypocrisies of the Founding Fathers of this country as they interact with a disguised Emily and treat her as less than due to her skin, as well as exploring the nuances of Benjamin Franklin when he becomes an ally to her on her mission. I really enjoyed their back and forth, and the way that this storyline plays out made a lot of sense and really paid off. But we also had another aspect of the time travel system suddenly become apparent in this final volume, as previous travelers start falling from the sky in the 2100s storyline, their dead bodies being returned to their time after their deaths in the past. This was such a shocking twist and development, and it really added to the overall Sci-Fi system.
I do kind of feel like the ending was really sped up. Maybe sped up isn’t the right phrasing, but while we got some pretty in depth explorations of the Columbus storyline, the Ice Age storyline, and the 1776 storyline, I thought that the final arc, with Yellow Kid and Sosh, while incredibly powerful, was a bit less in depth. But that said, I didn’t feel like that took away from their story, as the two of them find themselves in two separate times, with Sosh specifically in a potentially neverending timeloop at Wounded Knee and being killed over and over again, only to come back. The chaos and the endless violence she is subjected to is unrelenting, and it’s a bleak but evocative commentary on how Indigenous people have to keep on fighting for their lives against colonial violence. Yellow Kid’s story was a bit less clear to me, but Sosh’s was so well done I wasn’t as bothered by it.
Overall, I thought that “Earthdivers: 1776” was a satisfying end to an incredibly creative and engaging Sci-Fi series. Stephen Graham Jones continues to bring us very enjoyable and engaging genre fiction.
Rating 8: A solid and satisfying end to a historical fiction time travel epic.
Reader’s Advisory:
“Earthdivers: 1776” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of now, but it would fit in on “Time Travel Fiction”.








































