Kate’s Review: “Mr. Jones’s Smoking Bones”

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Book: “Mr. Jones’s Smoking Bones” by Iqbal Ali & Priscilla Grippa (Ill.)

Publishing Info: Iqbal A. Comics, March 2023

Where Did I Get This Book: I received digital copies from the publicist.

Where You Can Get This Book: Amazon | Shopify

Book Description: Barzakh, an Indian man with a grudge against the British Empire, travels to London seeking drugs to alleviate the pain of losing his friend Elisa and to fulfill a personal quest. However, he becomes embroiled in a mystery surrounding the death of a notable gentleman, supposedly caused by a smoking skeleton.

Review: Thank you to Iqbal Ali for sending me digital copies of this comic series!

I’m always really eager to read books and stories about the obsessive way that the Victorians focused on occultism and the mystic sides of death and ghosts. It’s just a topic that has fascinated me for a long time, and the Victorians were so hardcore and weird about it that it adds a whole new layer to the already spookiness of death, ghosts, and hauntings. But it’s rare that I am presented with a tale that turns that on its head and makes it even more compelling, so when I was offered to read Iqbal Ali’s comic series “Mr. Jones’s Smoking Bones” and it did, indeed, have a more interesting hook beyond the usual ‘Victorian Brits love a good séance!’, I was very, very interested to check it out. While Volume One is the most accessible volume of the series, they were kind enough to send much of the storyline as it stands now, and oh wow. It was really, really fun and as unique as I had hoped it would be.

The main setting is Victorian London, where occultism is incredibly popular, the British Empire in India is thriving even as the East India Company is falling away, and India native Barzahk has resentfully arrived in London in the shadow of a personal matter involving his friend Elisa. Elisa, who has recently been murdered and had been a member of a powerful secret society that experimented with traveling to other planes known as The Aether. It’s a mouthful, and it’s only the beginning. I love the occult and mysticism angle, as this stuff was SUPER popular during this time period in England, and Ali uses it really well to craft a creepy horror mystery with wandering ghosts, secret societies, and a mysterious smoking skeleton who has a deadly connection to Elisa and her death. As Barzahk is reluctantly pulled into investigating the deaths of powerful British men connected to Elisa, the Crown, and secret societies, we find lots of classic occult horror moments with a compelling narrative and mystery at its heart. I also really loved that it turns this kind of story on its head, with an Indian man as the protagonist when so many other Victorian occult stories are very western centric. I also loved the flashbacks to Barzahk’s work with Elisa back in India, as we get to see moments involving the horrors of the Raj and the English rule in India and how it affects Barzahk and his community.

And jumping off of that, what I liked the most about this series is the underlying theme on the British Empire in India and the way that the horrors of colonialism rained terrors onto India and its people. Barzahk is our protagonist whose resentment towards England is wholly understandable, and Ali isn’t shy about showing the violence and corruption perpetuated by the Crown as well as The East India Company. I also LOVED the fact that at the end of every issue we get a really comprehensive but easy to digest historical note about Imperial Britain and its relationship with India during the Victorian Era (as well as other pertinent facts like the occult and other facets of British society). I have a vague knowledge of some of the finer details of these things, as I’ve read a fair number of books that tackle themes like this, but I really loved the way that Ali would pull out the historical details as related to the story and highlight them. I felt like I learned a lot about the history and the context, and was able to see how this history informed the story in both broad ways as well as minute ones. As someone who used to work in a history setting with a specific focus on the Victorian Era (mostly in the U.S., but we did address the influence of England on American society as well), I live for these kinds of tidbits and lessons from the past and how it still resonates today.

And finally I quite enjoyed the artwork by Priscilla Grippa. It’s fairly realistic in design, but also has some really creepy depictions of the aether and the ghostly beings that haunt Barzahk as the story goes on.

(Souce: Iqbal A Comics)

Overall I enjoyed “Mr. Jones’s Smoking Bones”. It’s resonant of classic throwback historical comics with an occult twist, but takes it a few steps further to make it all the more unique and all the more unsettling. If you can get it, I highly recommend you do!

Rating 8: A creepy and rich historical horror story that tackles ghosts, trauma, and the evils of colonialism.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Mr. Jones’s Smoking Bones” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of now, but if you enjoy historical dark fiction/fantasy by by Alan Moore like “From Hell” or “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen” this would be a good fit.

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