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Into this environment stepped one of the greatest writers working in the comic medium. Grant Morrison had started doing more indie work in the ’10s, and that included one of the best sci-fi comics of all time. In 2015, Morrison would team up with their Batman Incorporated artist Chris Burnham, for Nameless. Morrison has quite a reputation for bending minds with their work, but this six-issue series would see them go even further down that road. Nameless is a complicated classic, and it’s time to shout its name from the rooftops.
Nameless Used Gnostic Christianity as the Roots for Perfect Cosmic Horror

There are some fantastic sci-fi comics, but Nameless is in its own league. The premise behind the story is deceptively simple: an occult detective named Nameless is called to help save the Earth from an oncoming cosmic object. Things get extremely weird as the crew approaches the object, and the book’s ending has a very different feel from the beginning, as readers learn that not everything is as they suspected. The book has a huge twist, and it’s one that will that makes it so difficult and rewarding.
Morrison is a practicing chaos magician and has a wide knowledge of the occult. Morrison’s ’90 magnum opus The Invisibles used this knowledge perfectly, and Nameless would do much the same. In the afterword of the collected edition, Morrison talks about blending Lovecraftian cosmic horror with Christianity, specifically Gnostic Christianity, which believes that the entity we call “God” is actually a sinister being, an evil demiurge trying to usurp creation. Morrison basically asked what would happen if God were a monster, and Nameless is their answer to that question.









