


Hayes is a stonekeeper, as well as a leading member of the Resistance and Guardian Council. For half the book younger brother Navin seems a spare wheel, but come the time he steps righteously up to the plate.Īmulet hooks from the start, and Kibuishi ensures the adventure keeps coming until the end, when you’ll want to head straight into The Stonekeeper’s Curse at full speed.Emily Hayes (エミリー・ヘイズ Emily Hayes) is the main, primary female protagonist of Kazu Kibuishi's graphic-novel series, Amulet. A weird, but likeable supporting cast is gradually introduced, and Kibuishi ensures there’s a place for everyone. He introduces a range of threats, keeping to the ethos of simplicity, yet with teeth, literal and metaphorical. There’s no point in revealing Silas Charnon as an inventor without later showing his craft, and Kibuishi is imaginative in doing just that, as Emily arrives at a turning point determining the remainder of the series. This task is greatly aided by an amulet Emily discovered in the house, which acts as a sort of other-worldly Alexa, offering advice in times of need, not least how to channel an effective blast of power.įrom the art on down, Kibuishi keeps everything relatively simple and easy to understand, which shouldn’t indicate wonder is absent, nor does the simplicity prevent some great surprises.

Emily’s mother is the first to discover what lurks in the basement and the first to be transported to a different world, but in circumstances requiring Emily and her brother Navin to rescue her. It seems a rule of children’s fiction that a secret must always be kept from adults, advice that should never apply to real life, and Kibuishi has no time for that attitude. It’s not long before Emily discovers the basement also contains a pathway to another world, one where there are hungry monsters. He was an eccentric inventor, and as seen on the sample art, the house already has some unearthly occupants. The fantasy starts when the Hayes family moves to a new town and into a creepy old house owned by Emily’s great-grandfather before his disappearance decades previously. It’s a policy he sticks with, meaning Amulet should be categorised as young adult level rather than all ages.

Amulet’s intended nine volumes begin with a tragedy, which is a signifier of Kazu Kibuishi not shying away from real life even though fantasy is the primary genre.
