I would have dismissed this as just a predictable one-note twist in the tale, except Kirby adds so much more richness. We have:
Note where the evidence points: the ship did indeed crash, and we saw the witch causing it on the first page! Then when the villagers accuse the woman of using charms, in the very next frame we see a strange coincidence leading to the woman charming a young man. Everything the villagers said was true, but as readers we don't see what is in front of us. The pretty woman charmed us too!
I love stories that make us think!
- historical truth (the nature of Salem),
- social truth (jealousies that cause people to hurt others)
- more than one age old human conflict (plain versus pretty, old ideas versus new, rationalism versus superstition).
- a strong female hero - that alone is enough to say this is a Kirby story and not a Lee story.
Note where the evidence points: the ship did indeed crash, and we saw the witch causing it on the first page! Then when the villagers accuse the woman of using charms, in the very next frame we see a strange coincidence leading to the woman charming a young man. Everything the villagers said was true, but as readers we don't see what is in front of us. The pretty woman charmed us too!
I love stories that make us think!
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