Review by C.J. Bunce
If you’re lucky enough to land yourself a copy of Terry Moore’s Rachel Rising, Issue #1 or #2, do yourself a favor and grab it and pick up a few extra for your friends as this one is very hard to come by. For whatever reason, comic retailers have not ordered big enough quantities.
If you’re not familiar with Terry Moore, his two big series over the past two decades were the mega-hit Strangers In Paradise
In Strangers In Paradise
In Issue #1, Rachel wakes up in the woods in a shallow grave. Over the course of Issue #1 and #2, Rachel encounters people who know her but don’t believe she really is Rachel. She learns she has lost three days of her life. Her glowing eyes reveal something, but what that means fully is not yet revealed. She finds an aunt who she tries to get to help her, but her aunt is a strange breed who claims to see dead people, and as she is a mortician, she gets plenty of opportunity.
Is this going the way of Eliza Dushku’s TV series Tru Calling? That would be fun. In Tru Calling she worked in a morgue where dead people talked to her. Terry’s dark-haired characters look a bit like Dushku. When Echo came out, I asked Moore about the naming process and he said he was unaware that Dushku was playing a character starting about the same time on Joss Whedon’s short-lived Dollhouse TV series. All just a crazy coincidence. I’ll just go out on a limb and nominate Dushku for a role in a future movie based on Moore’s books.
But don’t think Moore’s friendly style is not as ghoulish as the next guy’s stories. There are plenty of cringeworthy scenes in these first two issues, including the subtle but disturbing aunt who proceeds to perform “mortician’s work” while rambling away with Rachel. As many questions about Rachel and Company are asked as are answered, so we can look forward to a good progression of story over several issues.
I first met Terry and his wife Robyn, who is the publisher of his books under the Abstract Studios label, at Comic-Con back in 2008 when Echo was released. I got to Terry’s booth early enough that he spent the Friday sketching his famous characters Francine and Katchoo for me as my favorite superhero team Green Arrow and Black Canary. Robyn couldn’t be nicer. My wife and I met up with Terry and Robyn again at Comic-Con this year at Jeff Smith’s 20th anniversary of Bone
I’d hoped to review this series sooner, but could not track down Issue #1. I finally had to drive three hours away to find a copy of Issue #1 and I am hoping the distributors get their acts together so it will be easier to track down Issue #3, due out soon.

