


PRE-SALE: Miktlán The Journey to the Source
Creator: HUMO Humberto Morales
Soft Cover
Full Colour
72 Pages
Oversized Graphic Novel
Rating: Adult
Genre: Mexican Mythology/Folklore
In Aztec mythology, Mictlān refers to the underworld or the "place of the dead." This has been a significant concept in Mesoamerican cosmology, where souls of the deceased journeyed to this realm after death. A personal representation of Life and death illustrated and written in a poem form by "Humo" Humberto Morales of how the first settlers of Mexico lived this idea and were able to coexist, united to understand their existence in a different level of awareness.
For the first time in English speaking language for the world published by Studiocomix Press in a Full colour soft cover edition with 60 pages plus extra material, Adapted in Ontario Canada by Alfonso Espinos, Mictlan the Mexican folktale of death as impactful as Dante's Inferno by Gustave Dore.
Creator: HUMO Humberto Morales
Soft Cover
Full Colour
72 Pages
Oversized Graphic Novel
Rating: Adult
Genre: Mexican Mythology/Folklore
In Aztec mythology, Mictlān refers to the underworld or the "place of the dead." This has been a significant concept in Mesoamerican cosmology, where souls of the deceased journeyed to this realm after death. A personal representation of Life and death illustrated and written in a poem form by "Humo" Humberto Morales of how the first settlers of Mexico lived this idea and were able to coexist, united to understand their existence in a different level of awareness.
For the first time in English speaking language for the world published by Studiocomix Press in a Full colour soft cover edition with 60 pages plus extra material, Adapted in Ontario Canada by Alfonso Espinos, Mictlan the Mexican folktale of death as impactful as Dante's Inferno by Gustave Dore.
Creator: HUMO Humberto Morales
Soft Cover
Full Colour
72 Pages
Oversized Graphic Novel
Rating: Adult
Genre: Mexican Mythology/Folklore
In Aztec mythology, Mictlān refers to the underworld or the "place of the dead." This has been a significant concept in Mesoamerican cosmology, where souls of the deceased journeyed to this realm after death. A personal representation of Life and death illustrated and written in a poem form by "Humo" Humberto Morales of how the first settlers of Mexico lived this idea and were able to coexist, united to understand their existence in a different level of awareness.
For the first time in English speaking language for the world published by Studiocomix Press in a Full colour soft cover edition with 60 pages plus extra material, Adapted in Ontario Canada by Alfonso Espinos, Mictlan the Mexican folktale of death as impactful as Dante's Inferno by Gustave Dore.