

And that’s exactly what they want you to think. And before you’re even ten pages in, you already feel like Wilfrid is your best friend. It’s mesmerizing and fresh with a unique nuanced queer perspective.


When Wilfred and Beppe agree that their deaths will probably be either starvation or cannibalism, they ask Anton to break the tie.ĭoyles bold linework and tense pacing is reminiscent of masters like Goseki Kojima from Lone Wolf and Cub. Doyle’s deep historical and religious knowledge fuels this political drama as their wry humor shines through. The only hint being that at the slightest glimpse of the Margrave, their eyes seem to turn blood red. And Wilfrid? Well, no one is quite sure what they desire. Wilfrid, for their part, ends up entangled with the enigmatic Oswald, a charge of the King desperate on retaking the city the Margrave holds. But, they very well may face his wrath regardless. The guard, Beppe and his ally, Anton, will face the wrath of the Margrave should their plot be discovered. They’ve hatched a plot to get Wilfred out of the city, which has fallen under control of a disgraced fanatic, the Margrave. It is asked innocently, as if between friends, as a guard plays cards with his prisoner, the mysterious Wilfred. How do you think you’re going to die? It’s the first question posed in Jennifer Doyle’s queer revenge thriller, Knights Errant. Comixology: A comiXologist recommends… KNIGHTS-ERRANT Vol.
