If a cottagecore setting and sentient, chivalrous mushrooms strike your fancy, I have the perfect graphic novel for you. The Mushroom Knight, a clever creation from Oliver Bly, is a fantastical tale about tiny woodland creatures, a changing forest ecosystem, and a young black girl who has lost her dog.

| Title: The Mushroom Knight, Vol. 1 | Author: Oliver Bly |
| Release Date: March 5, 2024 | Publisher: Mad Cave Studios |
| Page Count: 112 | Genre: Fantasy |
Synopsis:
An adolescent girl searches the deep dark woods for her missing dog, entangling her destiny with a chivalrous mushroom faerie on a mystical quest to protect the biome from catastrophic ruin.
The Mushroom Knight follows the adventures of Gowlitrot the Gardener, a sentient bipedal fungus created by a race of woodland gnomes called Gödels, as he investigates and unearths a deadly conspiracy that reveals the true nature of himself and the devastation humans have wrought upon the global biosystem that he has sworn to protect.
Review:
Although the synopsis of The Mushroom Knight sounds so promising, with a quest for a missing dog and a sentient fungus, this is, unfortunately, one of those times where I wish I liked the book more than I did. Things I love: Bly’s depiction of nature, his odd-ball fantasy creatures, and the general tone of the writing. The writing is somewhat ethereal and pretentious but in a nice, light-academia way. However, I spent much of the book pushing through a story that, while lyrical, also felt somewhat confusing and incongruent.
The story is divided in two, with little crossover between the two parts. There is a story of a girl mourning her missing dog, and there’s a story of magical forest creatures. While these two stories cross at points, they do not connect enough to make sense to me. I found the ending of The Mushroom Knight melancholy, though I can see where others could construe a different meaning.
Art:
While the story in The Mushroom Knight confused and frustrated me, the art did the opposite. The art is clear and beautiful. I have never seen a better version of cottagecore-meets-scientific, and I really, really loved it.
Final Thoughts:
The Mushroom Knight is beautifully illustrated, and its concept is mostly solid. I think the story would have benefitted from further review and possibly more exposition. I do hope to see more from this writer/creator in the future, as I think his depiction of nature is gorgeous, earthy, and fresh.
Review: 3/5 Stars
Thanks to Mad Cave for an advanced review copy! All thoughts are my own.


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