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1[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/alandsnew2.jpg]]
2
3->''"Are you ready, my august fellow practitioners? For our spells to fail?"''
4
5An Creator/{{Image}} comic from writer Creator/KurtBusiek (''ComicBook/{{Marvels}}'', ''ComicBook/AstroCity''), artist Benjamin Dewey (''I Was The Cat'', ''Tragedy Series'') and colorist Jordie Bellaire (''ComicBook/TheManhattanProjects'', ''ComicBook/PrettyDeadly''). The series has 14 issues, originally published from 2014-2017. There were plans for further issues, but Busiek's ongoing health issues forced a delay and Dewey moved on to other projects.
6
7Dunstan the terrier lives in the floating Seventh City of Keneil in the Autumnlands, a magical world populated with talking animals. Gharta, a wizard and warthog, has brought a gathering of wizards to Keneil to perform a ritual that will allow them to summon the "Great Champion," a mythical messiah from the past that is ShroudedInMyth, in hopes that he may be able to stop the decline of magic in the world. They perform the ritual...but something goes wrong and all the magic is sucked from the city to open the portal.
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9The spells keeping the city floating in the sky fail, and the city comes crashing to the ground below, causing massive destruction.
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11And someone has come out of the portal. Is it the Great Champion...or something else?
12
13----
14!!Ho! This comic provides examples of:
15* AccidentalMisnaming: Due to Sandorst's unfamiliarity with human names he calls "Learoyd, Steven T. of the coalition forces" '''Learoyd-Steventy of Coalitia'''
16** Learoyd accidentally pronounces ''"Hatsas"'' as ''"Hot sauce."''
17* AerithAndBob: The animals with names like Sandorst and Gharta revere their legendary champion who is named ... Steven.
18* AlcoholInducedIdiocy: The Keneil survivors get drunk and decide to light fires at night which Gharta ''specifically'' warned them not to do. It incites a bat attack.
19* AmazingTechnicolorPopulation: Averted as the animal characters are colored similar to their real life counterparts. Though because the species intermingle the result is a very colorful society.
20* AnimalStereotypes: PlayedWith. Dunstan was taught that tenacity and loyalty are dominant traits of the dog tribe. Presumably the other species live up to their own sets of principles.
21* AnimateInanimateObject: The chair Learoyd uses as transportation.
22* AsskickingLeadsToLeadership: Sandorst mentions that if Steven had trounced the huge dog Bhord he would have rallied the crowd to his side.
23* BackgroundMagicField: Called "Hatsas." Its gradual disappearance initiates the plot.
24* BadassBoast: Steven delivers one to a hulking dog who wants to challenge his skill. The dog backs down.
25* BarefootCartoonAnimal: Even though the characters have fairly human-looking feet, they avoid footwear.
26* BatOutOfHell: The bats that attack in issue #4.
27* BattleInTheRain: Steven and the cavalry v. The bison.
28* TheBigBoard: Gharta and her cadre plan over a magic-hologram one displaying the wreckage of Keneil.
29* BigCreepyCrawlies: Giant bugs are used as mounts by the animal people.
30* BittersweetEnding: End of Arc 1: [[spoiler: The people of Keneil are saved from the bison tribes when a sky ship comes to their rescue. Unfortunately in a power play Sandorst blows up the bridge Learoyd was fighting on causing him to fall into raging river. Feeling responsible Dusty dives in to save Learoyd as Enna and Gharta are forced to presume the worst for them.]]
31* BodyHorror: The 'unshaped' animals which Dusty and Leroyd encounter on the mountain by Erries have become terribly disfigured.
32* BrutalHonesty: In issue #7, when Dusty asks Learoyd what he did ages past as the Great Champion to "bring magic into the world," Learoyd takes a beat and gives him the straight answer he's been avoiding since he arrived:
33-->"I got no fuckin' clue, kid."
34* CallToAdventure: As soon as Dusty is able he departs Keneil's ruins to explore the surface and follow Learoyd.
35* CarnivoreConfusion: The rabbit-people don't seem particularly concerned about bird-of-prey-people.
36* CombatPragmatist: Steven is a very crafty fighter and strategist. Notoriously he [[spoiler: used explosives to crush much of the bison army under rubble despite the fact that he was supposed to be attending a diplomatic discussion.]]
37* ComingOfAgeStory: The story acts as one for Dusty.
38* CoolAirship: Used to travel from the sky cities.
39* CoolSword: Even though Learoyd's choice of sword was gawked at because it is traditionally a female's sword it is very slick looking and Steven himself states that it is the best-made sword of the lot.
40* DevelopmentHell: The first two issues of volume 3 are scripted, but Busiek's ongoing health issues caused enough delays that artist Benajmin Dewey moved on to other projects. The series has been quietly shelved since 2018.
41* DoomedHometown: Poor Keneil is too ideal to last. It plummets to the ground in issue #1.
42* DyingTown: Erries when Steven and Dusty arrive. The sheep inhabitants are suffering from an unknown disease in alarming numbers.
43* EldritchAbomination: The mutated blob Dusty and Learoyd encounter at the conclusion of Issue #10 which appears to be composed of a dozen or more creatures gruesomely melded together.
44* ExpressiveEars: Naturally they go down when the character is angry or scared. They droop when the owner is sad and shoot up when excited.
45* FamilyUnfriendlyViolence: The great champion arrives in a flurry of incredibly graphic violence.
46* FantasticFlora: Keneil is home to metallic plants which grow gem-like stones in place of flowers.
47* FantasticRacism: Dunstan's father bluntly explains that animals who don't live in the floating "Seventeen Cities" are figuratively and literally ''below them.'' The bison tribes of the plains below are called the "Lesser Ones".
48* FloatingContinent: ''The Seventeen Cities'' that float above the planet.
49* FunnyBackgroundEvent: While Learoyd and Dusty stop for lunch and a bit of a chat in issue #4, the chair can be seen chasing butterflies behind them.
50* FurryConfusion: There are non-anthropomorphic animals in the setting in addition to the main anthropomorphic characters. Dusty explains that in The Autumnlands there are humanoid animals like himself and there are the 'unshaped ones' which seem to be normal animals. The nature of this relationship has yet to be divulged.
51** Learoyd lampshades his literal Furry Confusion with this hilarious diatribe:
52--> ''"What kind of a world -is- this, anyway? You've got talking snake-people and ordinary snakes, you've got birds that wear clothes and those [mutated birds]. You got frogs? And you got frog wizards?"''
53* FurryReminder: The animals, while generally cultured and human-like, seem to use growls and other animal sounds in situations where humans might clear their throats.
54* FutureImperfect: The gods that Dunstan performs obeisances for all have [[UsefulNotes/AmericanPoliticalSystem US Cabinet departments or major sub-departments]] as their domains. Idente, "the one above all", may be a shortened form of President.
55* GeometricMagic: Circular runes appear to be a common aspect of magic in this universe.
56* GreyAndGreyMorality: By Busiek's admission the series plays a lot with the theme of ''humanity.'' -- Who is more human: The animals who are intellectual and peaceful, but who are largely racist and classist, or Learoyd, the actual human, who is a cold, relentless killer?
57* HumanitysWake: The Autumnlands are our own Earth, long after humans go extinct. When the human Steven Learoyd is brought to the present, the animals that summoned him don't even know what species he is.
58* HumanlikeHandAnatomy: The animal characters have human-like hands though the number of fingers varies by species. Most mammals and reptiles have five fingers, ungulates tend to have four, and avians have three.
59* InsistentTerminology: He is '''Councillor''' Sandorst.
60--> Sandorst: ''"Or 'Your Grace' if you prefer."''
61* InterspeciesRomance: [[spoiler: Gharta (warthog) and Affa (giraffe) are in a relationship both interspecies ''and'' homosexual.]]
62* {{Irony}}: When [[spoiler: Dunstan's father dies]] he is buried in the ground which Dunstan remarks is the last place he would have wanted to be.
63* JerkassHasAPoint: While Sandorst himself is partly to blame he is correct that the fall of Keneil is in large part Gharta's fault. They all knew the risks.
64* KilledMidSentence: The cat-lady who sends Keneil's distress spell.
65* TheLoad: After bitching about not getting enough attention from his fellow wizards, Sandorst fails to perform at a critical time in Gharta's plan.
66* MagiBabble: Much of the magic talk. Though it's relatively simple to imagine the effects of spells like "The Unremitting Pearl."
67* MagicalGesture: Finger gestures play a part in some spells.
68* MagicalSociety: Cities with the means use magic routinely for all kinds of practical purposes.
69* {{Magitek}}: The ancient human civilization that Steven hails from seemed to use a combination of both magic and highly advanced technology, based on what little has been revealed about it.
70* MaleFrontalNudity: A consequence of the great champion being [[NakedOnArrival naked on arrival.]]
71* MatureAnimalStory: With mature themes, graphic violence, and adult language this series is definitely [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids not for kids.]]
72* MistakenForSpecialGuest: Dusty and Learoyd are mistaken for seasoned wizards by the sheep of Erries. Learoyd urges Dusty to play along so they can both gather information and take advantage of the sheeps hospitality toward them.
73* MixAndMatchCritters: For an unknown and probably plot-significant reason there are non-anthropomorphic birds in the Autumnlands that have human hands in place of their feet. They also speak.
74* TheNarrator: Dunstan acts as one, though he isn't necessarily the main character.
75* NiceGuy: Dunstan. In issue #1 alone we see Dunstan helping strangers with their luggage and showing compassion to the surface-dwelling animals that are viewed as servants by most, including Dunstan's own father.
76* NoSell: Sandorst fires a big, stunning spell at the great champion which is completely ineffective.
77* NotSoDifferentRemark: In Erries, Dusty learns that the sheep people that he had been taught were simpletons who lived to serve the floating cities are actually normal people like himself with rich lives.
78* ParentalSubstitute: Dunstan, having recently lost his father, strongly latches on to Learoyd as a male role model. Learoyd in turn seems to appreciate Dusty's company in particular.
79* PlayingWithFire: According to Dusty fire is the second spell young wizards are taught, after light.
80* PowerCrystal: Dunstan's father uses his to summon a lightning bolt with grievous results.
81* QuirkyTown: Erries and the other sheep towns which are all named similarly to 'Erries,' I.E: ''Arriez,'' ''Iries''
82* RecruitmentByRescue: Dusty cures the rambunctious goat Dirty Aelbert who loudly insists that he is no ones slave but that like Dusty and Learoyd he is also climbing the mountain to find the cause of the disease.
83* RelationshipReveal: [[spoiler: Gharta and Affa when they are consoling one another in jail.]]
84* RevealShot: The final page of Issue #3 revealing that [[spoiler: Goodfoot is in leagues with the bison]]
85* RitualMagic: Magic in this series is very complex. Spells must be studied and prepared carefully before they are used. Improper casting could cause the spell to fail or it could cause great harm with an unintended effect.
86* RunningGag: The animal characters being confused by Steven shaving his face.
87* SelfFulfillingProphecy: The prophecy of The Great Champion says that he disappeared suddenly one day. Dunstan wonders if the wizards' pulling The Champion into their ''present'' was what caused him to 'disappear' in the prophecy.
88* SlidingScaleOfAnimalCast: Type 4 - Steven is a lone human among [[FunnyAnimal anthropomorphic animals]].
89* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism: The interplay between Dusty and Learoyd encapsulates this trope well. Dusty is wide-eyed and as he learns more about the world his desire to help all those who need assistance increases. He has repeatedly attempted using rationality and diplomacy to defuse situations where Learoyd would insist on fighting. Learoyd on the other hand is simply abrasive, has little regard for the lives of the animal people around him, and acts mostly out of self-interest.
90* StatOVision: Learoyd has holographic glasses which can zoom, display information, and project schematics onto real-world objects.
91* AStormIsComing: The finale of the first arc which encompases the onset of a huge storm.
92* SufficientlyAnalyzedMagic: Magic in the series is treated like science. The gathering of wizards that kicks off the series is essentially a convention to discuss the latest trends in magic and casting techniques.
93* TakeItToTheBridge: The climactic battle at the end of the first arc.
94* TemporalSickness: This is the explanation given for Steven's sudden collapse after he arrives in the time of the story.
95* TertiarySexualCharacteristics: It isn't stated outright, but many of the females wear decorative threads on their heads which give an impression of feminine, human-like hair.
96* TheBadGuyWins: At the end of the first arc [[spoiler: Sandorst has the high ground. Steven and Dusty are in a raging river and Gharta has essentially been defamed.]]
97* TranslatorMicrobes: A translation spell allows the animals and Steven to communicate.
98* UnwiseOwl: Sandorst is short-sighted, ignorant, and a terrible judge of character. His daughter Enna is thankfully smarter and more rational.
99* {{Utopia}}: According to Dusty there haven't been any major wars in The Autumnlands for a VERY long time. The cities are especially Utopian despite the pervasive race/class-ism held by their inhabitants.
100* VagueAge: Due to the animal nature of the characters it can be difficult to determine exactly how old they are. For instance: Goodfoot could be anywhere from late twenties to forties. And is Gharta old or is she ''very'' old? The reader can only guess.
101* ViolenceIsDisturbing: Not only because the violence in the series is [[FamilyUnfriendlyViolence so graphic]], but because in the eyes of the sophisticated animals Leoroyd's brutal methods are particularly vulgar.
102* {{Wingdinglish}}: The great champion speaks like this before a [[TranslatorMicrobes translation spell]] is used on him.
103* WorldOfFunnyAnimals: Though there may be one non-animal character...
104* YouCanSeeThatRight: Steven sees [[spoiler: a gigantic, robotic ... something]] on the surface which Dusty is oblivious of.

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