I’m a big fan of Warren Ellis’ writing (Transmetropolitan is a personal favourite!), so when I heard that he was writing a four part series called “Captain Swing And The Electrical Pirates Of Cindery Island“, I was pretty excited. The first issue was released yesterday by Avatar Press, and it did not disappoint. Raulo Caceres’ style of meticulous hatching manages to evoke a sense of Victorian pen and ink plates while demonstrating a depth of contrast that is modernized very nicely by Digikore Studios’ colour work.
The series is set in 1830s London, and centres on Captain Swing, a character associated with Spring Heeled Jack, a figure from English folklore; in Ellis’ version, he’s an electrically powered Victorian anarcho-air-pirate. Ellis calls the work, “Not steampunk. An Electrical Romance of a Pirate Utopia Thwarted“, and it’s certainly true; there are clockwork gears and Victorian sensibility, but instead of coal and steam, the emphasis is on the crackling glow of electrical energy. Everything about this series brings to mind Nikola Tesla, whom I would argue is pretty much the coolest scientist who has ever lived.
So, to sum up:
Captain Swing And The Electrical Pirates Of Cindery Island = electro-sci-fi + airships + pirates + English folklore + foul-mouthed government-hating author + lovely art and colours – steampunk.
I say we call it “Teslapunk”.



