Through The Woods Emily Carroll

Through The Woods Emily Carroll Rating: 4,6/5 4802 votes

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This answer contains spoilersI don't know if this is accurate, but this is purely my interpertation. IMy thoughts were that he was actually a she, because at the end of the storyI don't know if this is accurate, but this is purely my interpertation.

IMy thoughts were that he was actually a she, because at the end of the story she said, 'he was no man'. My theory is that she actually went crazy and killed her sisters, bc in the pics, as she was looking for sisters in the house you could see the 'man' hidden in several different places. Meaning, to me, that the person who killed her sisters and her sisters bodies was still in the house. I'm not really sure. It's just a theory I have and I have pondered this story for a while. I will say out of all the stories in the book, I found this one to be the most disturbing. Mainly because it remains a mystery to me.

Oct 20, 2016  I hope you enjoyed my review of #ThroughtheWoods by Emily Carroll. If you would like to pick up your own copy of this graphic stories collection, you can do so while also supporting my channel. And even though we're seeing a number of great new comics exploring the horror genre lately, Emily Carroll's graphic novel Through the Woods stands out as a unique and haunting (pun intended.

Through the woods emily carroll wolf

If anyoe finds out the real interpertation, please que me in!. This answer contains spoilersI work in an elementary school library and we are making this a young adult book for our grades 6-8. While it is freaky, there isn't any thingI work in an elementary school library and we are making this a young adult book for our grades 6-8.

While it is freaky, there isn't any thing inappropriate language, sexual, etc wise. There is some murder, a story about finding body parts, and some pictures dictating smeared blood but for those who enjoy horror, the stories are mysterious and intriguing so the pictures add great excitement to the read.

Emily Carroll
BornJune 1983 (age 36)
London, Ontario
NationalityCanadian
Spouse(s)Kate Craig
www.emcarroll.com

Emily Carroll is a Canadian comics author from London, Ontario. Carroll started making short webcomics in 2010; she gained recognition on the World Wide Web with the horror webcomic His Face All Red.[1] Since then, Carroll has created comics for various comics anthologies, and she has won several awards, including the Eisner and Ignatz.

Works[edit]

Emily Carroll created illustrations for 2013 video gameGone Home.[2]

Emily Carroll drew her first webcomic in May 2010.[3] On October 31, 2010, she posted a comic titled His Face All Red,[4] which Comic Book Resources described as 'genuinely creepy, genuinely bleak stories of murder and monstrousness.' The webcomic makes frequent use of infinite canvas, but despite this, it was released in print in December 2011.[3] After her first webcomic, Carroll has contributed to various print anthologies, including 'Explorer: Mystery Boxes,' 'Fairy Tale Comics,' 'Creepy' and 'The Witching Hour.' In 2014, an anthology of her comics was published in book form as Through the Woods.[5][6]

In 2014, Carroll uploaded the horror comic stripThe Hole the Fox Did Make to the Internet. Carroll chose for a limited format to see how she could create unease in a limited space. Furthermore, she created this webcomic during breaks between other work, and the format facilitated drawing in 'small chunks'.[5]The Hole the Fox Did Make was praised by Paste Magazine as one of the best webcomics of 2014.[7]

Carroll entered into the world of independent video game development in 2013, creating illustrations for The Fullbright Company'sGone Home, as well as collaborating with game developer Damian Sommer to create The Yawhg.[8]

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Carroll illustrated the 2015 graphic novel Baba Yaga's Assistant from Candlewick Press and a graphic novel adaptation of Speak.[9]

Awards[edit]

  • Emily Carroll won two Joe Shuster Awards in the category 'Outstanding Web Comics Creator', in 2011 and 2012 respectively.[10][11]
  • Carroll won the Pigskin Peters Award in 2014.[12]
  • Carroll won two Eisner Awards in 2015: one in the 'Best Graphic Album-Reprint' category for Through the Woods, and one in the 'Best Short Story' category for When the Darkness Presses.
  • Carroll won an Ignatz Award in the 'Outstanding Artist' category in 2015 for Through the Woods.[13]
  • Carroll won the British Fantasy Award for 'Best Comic/Graphic Novel' in 2015 for Through the Woods.[14]

Bibliography[edit]

  • Through the Woods. New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books. 2014. ISBN9781442465961, OCLC885365003
  • 'Ann by the Bed' (Frontier #6). San Francisco: Youth in Decline. 2014. OCLC915825979
  • Marika McCoola; Emily Carroll (2015). Baba Yaga's Assistant. Somerville: Candlewick Press. ISBN9780763669614, OCLC1003143156.
  • 'Beneath the Dead Oak Tree'. Leeds: Shortbox. 2018. OCLC1079067301
  • Laurie Halse Anderson; Emily Carroll (2018). Speak: The Graphic Novel. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN9780374300289, OCLC974448720
  • When I Arrived at the Castle. Toronto: Koyama Press. 2019. ISBN9781927668689, OCLC1106371579

References[edit]

  1. ^Hubbard, Taryn. 'An interview with Emily Carroll: A Fairy-Tale Teller in the Digital Age'. Room Magazine.
  2. ^Smith, Zack (10 September 2014). 'Emily Carroll Takes Us THROUGH THE WOODS'. Newsarama.
  3. ^ abCollins, Sean T. (5 December 2011). 'Emily Carroll's His Face All Red and Other Stories headed to boookstores via Simon & Schuster'. Comic Book Resources. Robot 6.
  4. ^'emily carroll'. LiveJournal. Archived from the original on 2 November 2010.
  5. ^ abDueben, Alex (21 August 2014). 'Emily Carroll Walks 'Through the Woods''. Comic Book Resources.
  6. ^Woerner, Meredith (17 July 2014). 'Exclusive Horror Story From The Absolutely Chilling Through The Woods'. io9.
  7. ^Jackson, Frannie (17 December 2014). 'The 20 Best Webcomics of 2014'. Paste Magazine.
  8. ^Chambers, Becky (31 May 2013). 'Rally Your Friends and Face The Yawhg, A Choose-Your-Own-Adventure Game With Artwork by Emily Carroll'. The Mary Sue.
  9. ^Lodge, Sally (1 August 2013). ''Speak' to Be Adapted as a Graphic Novel'. Publishers Weekly.
  10. ^'2011 Nominees and Winners'. The Joe Shuster Awards. 18 June 2011.
  11. ^Boyd, Kevin A. (15 September 2012). 'The 2012 Joe Shuster Award winners'. The Joe Shuster Awards.
  12. ^'Past Winners'. Doug Wright Award.
  13. ^'Your 2015 Ignatz Award Winners!'. The Comics Reporter. 20 September 2015.
  14. ^Alverson, Brigid (26 October 2015). 'Comics A.M. Emily Carroll's 'Through the Woods' wins British Fantasy Award'. Comic Book Resources.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Emily_Carroll&oldid=924092117'