Ratings91
Average rating4.4
Now a Netflix Original Series! Acclaimed suspense novelist and New York Times-bestselling author Joe Hill continues his Eisner Award-winning story of dark fantasy and wonder. The dead plot against the living, the darkness closes in on Keyhouse, and a woman is shattered beyond repair in the third storyline of the award-winning series, Locke & Key: Crown of Shadows. Dodge continues his relentless quest to find the key to the black door, and raises an army of shadows to wipe out anyone who might get in his way. Surrounded and outnumbered, the Locke children find themselves fighting a desperate battle, all alone, in a world where the night itself has become the enemy. Crown of Shadows features an introduction by Brian K. Vaughan (Saga). Winner of the 2011 Eisner Award for Best Writer.
Series
5 primary books6 released booksLocke & Key is a 10-book series with 3 primary works first released in 26 with contributions by Joe Hill and Péter Holló-Vaskó.
Series
1 primary bookLocke & Key: Crown of Shadows is a 0-book series first released in 2010 with contributions by Joe Hill and Péter Holló-Vaskó.
Reviews with the most likes.
Holy cliffhanger! Luckily I have already have Volume 4, so I can dive right into the next installment. This series is just getting better and better. I love how all the characters' stories weave together in the novels. Plus I'm really enjoying the artwork!
I'm devouring these books! This is my third volume in three days. I'm really beginning to love the characters and the lore. Even the art style, which I initially found a little off putting, has grown on me. Looking forward to knocking out the rest of the books in this series sooner rather than later.
Story
More Keys of course! The Shadow Key freaks me the hell out. I think the mending key would really handy and the Giant Key is just awesome. The creativity not only of the keys themselves, but how they get used in the story makes for some truly excellent scenes.
Artwork
Mr. Rodriguez is able to do so much without words. It adds so much. He can do full pages without no dialogue and show so much that would be much harder in text.