Mrs Zirma (comic story): Difference between revisions

From Jenny Everywhere Wiki
Tag: visualeditor-wikitext
No edit summary
Tag: visualeditor-wikitext
Line 1: Line 1:
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Mrs Zirma'' (comic story)}}{{Comic Story
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Mrs Zirma'' (comic story)}}{{dab°page}}{{Comic Story
|title1= ''Mrs Zirma''
|title1= ''Mrs Zirma''
|image1= Mrs Zirma - Page 2.jpg
|image1= Mrs Zirma - Page 2.jpg

Revision as of 14:34, 25 September 2021

This is a disambiguation page listing all our pages on concepts related to Jenny Everywhere whose names include, or sound like, “{{{1}}}”.

Mrs Zirma was a standalone Jenny Everywhere comic story created by David LoTempio. It is believed to have been the third of the original Barbelith Jenny Everywhere stories to be released.

Contents

Plot

Jenny Everywhere is sent by Nigel to confront an old lady living in a trailer park. “Mrs Zirma” is not what she appears; she is not just a doddering old grandmother with a penchant for storytelling, but a living, breathing alternate history who tries to seep into the mind of whoever listens to her tales and replace their world with hers. Forewarned, Jenny is able to use a mental resistance technique to kick Zirma out of her head and force her to reveal her true, eldritch appearance. She then uses a Laudomite hand-grenade to kill the creature.

Worldbuilding

Jenny

  • This story focuses on one universe's native Jenny Everywhere, who has the "default look" — vaguely Asian with black hair, a ready smile, a scarf and goggles.
  • Jenny refers to herself as "an Everywhere" and states that she "became" one, suggesting that in this universe it is some sort of rank or job-title rather than her birth surname. Though unconfirmed, Nigel appears to be one as well.

Universes

Other

Continuity

to be added

Behind the scenes

Background

This story and its eponymous antagonist are named after the city of Zirma which appears in Invisible Cities, a 1972 book by Italian writer Italo Calvino.

Read online

All original uploads of Mrs Zirma now being offline, we reproduce the six pages of the story here.

Notes & References