The Dear Hunter Act 1 Comic -

"The Dear Hunter Act 1 Comic" is available for purchase at major comic book retailers, online marketplaces, and bookstores. You can also find digital versions of the book on platforms like Comixology and Kindle.

The second half, "The River North," adapts the instrumental The River North (a musical flood) into a literal, feverish boat journey. Hunter escapes his mother’s murder (she is killed by the Pimp & Priest’s thugs) and drifts toward the glittering, dangerous city. The final pages introduce the pivotal characters: The Dime (a seedy tavern), the pimp Edel (who will later become antagonist), and a haunting first glimpse of the "Boy who looks just like him"—his unknowing half-brother. the dear hunter act 1 comic

The Act I comic takes the rapid-fire events of the album—the birth, the childhood montage, the confrontation, and the escape—and stretches them out to allow for character beats that the music could not fully explore. We get silent panels of Hunter observing the world around him, providing an internal monologue that doesn't require lyrics. It fills in the "gaps" between the tracks, offering a continuity that makes the drastic shift from the safety of the brothel to the danger of the streets feel earned rather than abrupt. "The Dear Hunter Act 1 Comic" is available

The Act I comic faithfully adapts the album’s lyrics and themes into a silent, atmospheric narrative. It opens with the birth of Hunter (also called "The Boy") to a prostitute, Ms. Leading, in the seamy "Dime" — a lake-side brothel. The story follows his early childhood, his mother’s death, and his subsequent rescue by a kind stranger, only to be placed in an orphanage. The comic concludes with the teenage Hunter leaving the orphanage, unaware of the cyclical tragedy that awaits him as he returns to the Dime in Act II . Hunter escapes his mother’s murder (she is killed

For longtime listeners, the comic offers “Easter egg” gratification. A single panel depicting a trunk of costumes hints at the shape-shifting villainy of later acts. The lullaby “His Hands Matched His Tongue” becomes a poignant two-page spread where The Boy and Ms. Leading’s silent communication speaks louder than lyrics ever could.

Published through the band's own imprint, Cave and Canary Goods .

The Dear Hunter Act I comic is a rare example of a musician successfully translating their vision into a different medium without losing the soul of the original work. It’s dark, beautiful, and haunting—just like the music that inspired it. Whether you’re a die-hard fan or a newcomer to the story of the Boy, this graphic novel is the perfect entry point into one of the most ambitious stories in rock history.