Rickheit, Hans – Cochlea & Eustachia Volume 2

January 22, 2026

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Cochlea & Eustachia Volume 2

To readers of this website who are just discovering his work now and who think that maybe Hans has put out both of these books recently, a little reality check: that’s not the case. This second volume was at least a decade after the first, and he’s been working on it since 2014. If you’d told me that he spent about a month on each panel of this almost 200 page behemoth, based on the frankly absurd amount of detail in each image, I’d absolutely believe you. Just a gorgeous book from start to finish, full of beautifully detailed horrors. Should I tell you about the story? Fine, but this really is one of those cases where the art alone could carry the book. Things start off in almost a straightforward fashion: there’s a lone figure wearing a bear mask, crawling through the wreckage of civilization, hunting for a bird. He successfully knocks a bird out of the sky, cuts it open… and then removes a key from the carcass, which he uses to open up his own face. Yep, for a page or two there I was almost fooled that this was a typical post-apocalyptic story. Nope! We go inside his open face and see a character (that is soon named Fronky by Cochlea and Eustachia) who is clearly looking for something. He pulls two husks out of filing cabinets, plugs them into a device of some kind, and out come our heroes! Well, one of them, anyway. She has to pull her twin out of her husk, as she doesn’t really want to leave it. And, considering what happens to both of them throughout the book, she had the right instincts. The mystery of their origin is revealed, in case (like me) you were still curious from the last volume. Which has almost nothing to do with this one, in case you were wondering if you had to read them in order like I did. Anyway! Fronky was incapacitated somehow, and they manage to extract a black bubble from him. Which they then crack open, revealing an armadillo, which they then spend a lot of time chasing, and which figures into the overall plot pretty heavily. From there… you know, me going over this point by point doesn’t help either of us. There’s a giant with a globe for a head who’s hunting the twins, there’s a room full of exact duplicates of Cochlea and Eustachia, there’s a creep who’s using versions of them to power his vehicle, one of them loses an eye, and just about every oddity in this world is hunting them. Small details in panels are paid off beautifully down the line, and it somehow all ties together nicely. There’s a lot more nudity in this one than the previous volume, but it’s not like I’d call either of these appropriate for all ages. If you’re a fan of the odd and almost inexplicable (that somehow all makes sense in the end), I couldn’t recommend these two books highly enough. $36 (or get both volumes for a discounted price of $56)


Rickheit, Hans – Cochlea & Eustachia Volume 1

January 20, 2026

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Cochlea & Eustachia Volume 1

I’d occasionally like to go back in time and give the past version of myself a smack on the head. I reviewed a few comics from Hans way back in the early days of the website, starting in 2005 if my rickety archiving system is accurate. At the time it was obvious that he was an exceptional talent, which current me can confirm by reading those old reviews. And yet! I somehow managed to lose track of the guy. One look at his website shows that he’s been making books ever since, so that’s a pile of books I need to get caught up with in a hurry. Because (long-winded and meandering introduction over) this is an exceptional comic, unlike just about anything else you’re likely to see. Before I even get started on the story, I’d recommend to anybody reading this book to take your time on those panels. Every one has a level of detail that rewards lingering on it, and the choice to go full color (his previous comics were black and white) was inspired. So what’s going on in here? Oh boy. Cochlea and Eustachia are twin (?) human girls (???), and no, you cannot tell them apart unless they’re actively addressing themselves. The “human” part is dicey since one drilled a hole into the side of the other and no blood came out (there was also only a momentary sense of pain), and the “twin” part is in question because most of this volume deals with the repercussions of getting mistaken for another identical version of the girls who’s going around and causing chaos. Things start off with a mole man emerging from the his cage in the back of a giant statue of an anteater with a fancy collar (or possibly a taxidermied anteater), which rouses Cochlea from her sleep. This also lets the reader take a tour of this house, surrounded by a sea of bird skulls, which is filled with mysteries and wonders. And dangers! They’re both seemingly at constant risk of injury or death, although we do see later that the rules might be a bit different in their world. After observing both the mole man going about his day and their evil twin doing all sorts of damage, one of them is captured after being mistaken for the evil twin. Horrible things happen to her as a result (how did a phone get up there anyway?), after one particularly horrible thing happens to the mole man, and things take an ugly turn after a plug is pulled. No more from me about the story, as I feel like I may have already said too much. This volume also has a short story in the back, which shows the pair digging up a (still living?) body and doing some improvements to it, which I should also probably leave to the reader. Highly recommended, obviously, and once again, reader: take your time with this one. There’s not a huge amount of dialogue, but some of these images are guaranteed to stick with you. $25 (or $56 for a pack of volume 1 & 2)