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Digger #2

Digger, Volume Two

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The second collection of Digger is here, featuring the third and fourth chapters of the highly acclaimed webcomic. Digger is still lost in the strange land she discovered at the end of a one-way tunnel, which now seems more intentional than accidental. A seemingly innocuous fossil she picked up on the way is suspected of having more to it than meets the eye, and the beneficient talking statue of Ganesh has a need that sends Digger and a decidedly unhinged acolyte deep underground in search of answers.

128 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 2006

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About the author

Ursula Vernon

78 books1,440 followers
Ursula Vernon, aka T. Kingfisher, is an author and illustrator. She has written over fifteen books for children, at least a dozen novels for adults, an epic webcomic called “Digger” and various short stories and other odds and ends.

Ursula grew up in Oregon and Arizona, studied anthropology at Macalester College in Minnesota, and stayed there for ten years, until she finally learned to drive in deep snow and was obligated to leave the state.

Having moved across the country several times, she eventually settled in Pittsboro, North Carolina, where she works full-time as an artist and creator of oddities. She lives with her husband and his chickens.

Her work has been nominated for the Eisner, World Fantasy, and longlisted for the British Science Fiction Awards. It has garnered a number of Webcomics Choice Awards, the Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story, the Mythopoeic Award for Children’s Literature, the Nebula for Best Short Story, the Sequoyah Award, and many others.

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5 stars
327 (62%)
4 stars
156 (29%)
3 stars
32 (6%)
2 stars
7 (1%)
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2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Mir.
4,955 reviews5,307 followers
March 18, 2017
The first volume took a little while to get going, but now we're on a roll.



It's not all vampire squash and masked insane acolyte education jokes, though, there is some pretty dark stuff going on. I can't wait to find out more about the buried gods.

Profile Image for Mary Catelli.
Author 54 books203 followers
June 11, 2017
Spoilers for volume one ahead.

Recovering from her injuries in the cottage of the nineteen-year-old hag, Digger has a few more incidents. She had been drugged with poppy because she had been seen with a demon -- or so the Veiled think the shadowchild is. Fortunately, the statue put its foot on it. So we have many things -- a visit to Ed, digging a root cellar, the shadowchild dancing about at the notion of being a demon (since it wonders what it is), another attempt to eat Digger, cute little winged rats -- and the statue wants Digger to go back into the tunnel. It involves a beneficent offer to Digger and his companion to skin them, eating lunch, cold servants, and a lot more stuff that shifts the tale to a significantly more serious level, with the plot picking up pace.
Profile Image for Mitchell Friedman.
5,691 reviews214 followers
August 25, 2024
This is a pretty cool book. Weird, and not sure if this will hold together to some end. Not sure how much sense it is making. But Digger as a character is great. And her dialogue is witty - I kind of want a list of all the stuff her mom said. And the art works - even the tunnel and caves by glowstick. Turning back and forth to the footnotes isn't a lot of fun, but a lot of the footnotes are worth it. Hauling around the omnibus is a pain - it makes me wonder if this web comic doesn't actually read better as a web comic.
Profile Image for Octavia Cade.
Author 94 books134 followers
August 28, 2017
The story continues. Digger the awesome wombat is sent by the statue of a god she doesn't believe in down creepy skin-infested caves, with a mad and fainting teenager from a cult of suspicious and religious bastards, and down in the caves are metal headed bird monsters and an eviscerated god, with a heart kept alive by minions who don't believe in the engineering power of pulleys and levers.

Totally mad, but it's certainly entertaining.
Profile Image for McKenna Deem.
229 reviews1 follower
February 23, 2024
It’s not everyday that a wombat finds the almost-corpse of an almost-dead god, but today is that day.

Though the first volume of Digger took a second to get into, the second volume dives right in and continues Digger’s philosophical journeys with gods, demons, and the devout.

Personal favorite moment is the Ganesh statue reminding Digger that “without the mad, we would be deprived of many fine saints and holy men.” Sounds about right.
Profile Image for Christopher.
526 reviews21 followers
October 14, 2020
Vampire squash.

You had me at the ineffective vampire squash.

The dead god is creepy and there's more of an over-arching mystery getting built in this volume. But I'm still interested in this strange world and a main character who can both take it in stride and reject the more esoteric parts as just not being relevant to her grounded life.
Profile Image for Kir.
201 reviews
November 7, 2020
Vol 2 = chapters 3 & 4 which I read online.
I love the wacky worldbuilding, crazy creatures and dry humour. The comments of the pages are often pretty good as well. I really wish this was available to buy in hard copy.
Profile Image for OLLI at WVU.
68 reviews2 followers
March 22, 2021
Digger is still healing from wounds she incurred earlier, and is seemingly not trusted by both the Hag caring for her and the captain guarding the town / temple.

But she still has friends.

This story is so adorable.
Profile Image for Howard.
380 reviews15 followers
May 13, 2022
Volume two continues to entertain. The author's occasional asides [told in footnotes] are especially enjoyable, especially the translations of Wombat curses.. The vampire squashes are not to be missed.
Profile Image for Sylvia.
411 reviews
September 22, 2019
Still on my Kingfisher/Vernon binge. This is an awesome webcomic: great art, fantastical and creepy story. Also I love Digger and her scary friends.
Profile Image for J.
140 reviews
February 13, 2020
Digger is a fantastic graphic novel/on-line comic, and Volume Two continues the amazing story.
Profile Image for Falkor.
21 reviews
August 2, 2007
The continuing adventures of the eminently practical wombat Digger, who is drawn more deeply into the mysteries of the odd land to which she was transported in the previous volume. She has to cope with a pack of hyenas who want to eat her, a priest who wants to arrest her for consorting with demons, and a strange shadow creature who may in fact be a demon. As if she didn’t have enough stress, Ganesh sends her on a dangerous mission: to go back down the tunnel she dug to his temple and try to find out what sort of being guided her to create it.

Vernon’s story grows in scope and complexity in her second volume, while still keeping its humorous flourishes, intriguing secondary character sketches and emotionally expressive art. A fun, engaging continuation of Digger’s story that leaves readers eagerly waiting for the next volume.
Profile Image for Lily.
112 reviews
October 14, 2014
Ursula Vernon improves in the second volume of Digger. The artwork has come together into a cohesive style, and the plot really gets going. I particularly like how Vernon changes her style when illustrating Ed's story; she transitions from a fairly realistic (considering that the main character is a talking wombat that walks upright) style to a more "primitive" style that reflects the nature of the mythology that Ed is relating.

Superb. You have to read it.
Profile Image for Knitography.
176 reviews3 followers
September 5, 2016
As a whole, Digger is one of the best stories I've ever read. Every character is a delight - Shadowchild, the wombat, the statue of Ganesh, THE SNAIL. It's utterly charming and I love everything about it, except for the fact that it ended. I can see myself re-reading this somewhere down the line, which I rarely do.
Profile Image for Horizon.
108 reviews48 followers
June 12, 2010
This is my new favorite author! I was very excited to be able to carry her books at Horizon. I have been making myself not devour them all at once, but to savor them one at a time. Deliciously quirky!
975 reviews15 followers
December 15, 2012
Second volume in the digger saga introduces what will develop into the core plot of the series - the cold ones and their undead god. the tone is darker, but the humor is still there and the art is still lovely.
Profile Image for Christiane.
1,247 reviews19 followers
March 16, 2013
I very much enjoyed the continuation of the story. There is humor, magic, adventure, cute flying rats, and some serious creepiness. Fans of “Coraline” and other Neil Gaiman books for kids might well enjoy this comic.
Profile Image for Fraser Sherman.
Author 10 books32 followers
February 22, 2014
The story of Digger, a female wombat whose tunnel mysteriously dumps her in a far-eastern realm continues. As Digger tries to figure out who she can rely on until she gets home, Ganesh the elephant god asks her for a small favor. Very funny, including the vampire squash.
Profile Image for Catherine.
Author 52 books134 followers
October 11, 2012
A bunch of people told me that I would love this and they were totally right! The snark, the wombat, the gods--now I need to go and buy the rest of them.
Profile Image for kvon.
683 reviews4 followers
January 31, 2013
Graphic novel. A nonspiritual wombat has to deal with gods, demons, assassins. Part of an ongoing story that I haven't read. Nice storylines and clean art, but not personally compelling.
Profile Image for R.
203 reviews2 followers
November 19, 2015
The plot continue and you can't stop watching her trying to understand what she found at the end of the tunnel
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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