It's Sweethearts Eve, and Dean gets a double whammy of threats. Werewolf leader, Lucius, visits Soupy's Gas to remind Dean's vampire gang of his challenge race through Hell, and Fairer Than visits Dean too, to challenge her to a death match. But can Dean handle her worst problem: making things...
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It's Sweethearts Eve, and Dean gets a double whammy of threats. Werewolf leader, Lucius, visits Soupy's Gas to remind Dean's vampire gang of his challenge race through Hell, and Fairer Than visits Dean too, to challenge her to a death match. But can Dean handle her worst problem: making things right with Bunny herself?A paranormal, lesbian romance that was nominated for a Gaylactic Spectrum award:Meet magical witch girl Bunny, a good teen witch happily attending Haunt High, drinking Ghost Shakes at Shivers, and dancing her supernatural midnights away at cemetery spook fetes. Dean is her perfect greaser, vampire girlfriend, but beyond hotrods and motorcycles lies something more in the Enchanted Forest: fairies. And even among such ancient, preternatural denizens, they've someone to fear, namely the notorious heart breaker and home wrecker, the dark fairy, Fairer Than.Fairer Than: gorgeous, red-haired, stronger than a fairy ought to be, and smoldering in more ways than one. Her reputation has Daughters of the Faerie Court flee before her wake lest they fall for her charms. And there's a certain teen witch she'd like to charm, if only a certain vampire was out of the picture.Dean: the coolest vampire greaser in Little Salem, ready to defend her girl and show her a great time–except when she's distracted by a dark fairy who threatens to take Bunny away.Charm School by Elizabeth Watasin, an indie b/w comic book emulating the best in old school 50's pin-up art with a touch of girl romance style, or shoujo manga. Digitally retouched and re-lettered by Elizabeth Watasin. Rockabilly monsters meet fairy tale legends as paranormal hearts and heads collide."Watasin simply introduces her characters and tells her story, and the readers love it on its own terms. She's not the first artist to do such a thing -- Los Bros. Hernandez are certainly pioneers in this regard -- but she's currently the standard-bearer, and rightly so."—Comics Journal
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