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Monday, October 13, 2025

Book Review: Universal Monsters: The Mummy by F. E. Hicks et al.

Universal Monsters: The Mummy written and drawn by Faith Erin Hicks, colors by Lee Loughridge

This very faithful adaptation manages not to be a "movie-in-comic-book-form" by switching the focus to Helen Grosvenor, the woman who has an eerie resemblance to the Mummy's ancient paramour. Back in the day Imhotep was in love with a priestess of Isis named Ankh-es-en-Amon. She died from a plague and Imhotep tried to resurrect her using the Scroll of Thoth. He failed when authorities showed up. They buried him alive and cursed him with immortal life (while in a nameless grave!). This story starts with Helen as a young girl dealing with her parents--a British father and an Egyptian mother. They are rich and lean toward a British lifestyle. Helen only hangs out with the children of their servants who are all full-blooded Egyptians. The kids at the British school hold no interest for Helen. But the Egyptian kids think of her as the boss's daughter, and a half-breed at that. If that was not enough problems, Helen also discovers another soul trapped inside her who becomes her closest friend, though an invisible one, so others (British and Egyptian) think she's strange. Her life gets stranger as her father is involved in an archeological dig that discovers Imhotep's mummy, who comes to life when one of the assistants reads aloud the Scroll of Thoth buried also in the tomb. Plenty of troubles follow from this.

The shift in focus is interesting and provides a way to explore the story without changing the basic beats of the plot. Helen is an interesting person and her interactions with the other soul living inside her provide a lot of drama. The art is nice but less like a horror story than I was expecting. Hicks has a distinctive style (see her Nameless City series) that is a little more cartoonish than the story is. My quibble about the art is small because her writing is so fine, the whole is very satisfying.

Recommended.

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