Framing Emmett Till: Exposing Dark Fear
Written by Christopher Benson, Art by Eric Battle (Abrams/Megascope, 2026)
Synopsis
Framing Emmett Till: Exposing Dark Fear doesn’t waste time. From the first page, writer Christopher Benson and artist Eric Battle move at a clip that pulls you straight into one of the most painful chapters in American history; the 1955 kidnapping and murder of 14-year old Emmett Till. And they do it without losing sight of the people at the center of it. Benson, who co-authored Mamie Till-Mobley’s own account of her son’s murder (Death of Innocence: The Story of the Hate Crime That Changed America, 2003), brings a clear-eyed understanding of the story’s stakes and conflicts. Battle, an accomplished comics illustrator, dramatizes each dramatic moment in turn. Southern white supremacy is just one of many antagonists in this narrative: there are the film producers hunting for a “story with heart,” the temptation to sharpen Emmett into a defiant agitator rather than a kid who never got the chance to grow up, and finally, the question of who truly “owns” this story — the media, or the American people. It’s a fast, tense read. And yet, a compassionate one, which is an extremely hard needle to thread.
Connecting Points
This story hits close to home for me. My father is from Iuka, Mississippi; just a few hours from where Emmett Till was murdered. In the early 90s, I had the chance to visit the store where the incident began, alongside a group of students studying the Civil Rights Movement. By then the original building was run-down, with a new store built next door. I remember the day in Mississippi feeling eerily similar to how Mamie Till-Mobley once described it: “beautiful but oppressive… like the heat.” As if our presence conjured up the past, a woman came out and scolded us. “Those boys were innocent,” she screamed. In a similar fashion, Framing Emmett Till dredges up the past to expose a type of hatred that refuses to die with the passing of history.
The Art of Storytelling
Framing Emmett Till really earns its praise by handling the truth without flattening it. The book strikes a careful balance between telling a compelling story and staying honest to the record. And nowhere is that clearer than in the grocery store scene. As the incident unfolds, the panels shift fluidly between Mamie Till-Mobley’s account and the recollections of an eyewitness, and the two don’t fully agree. Rather than picking a single version and running with it, Battle’s art moves back and forth in time, layering the conflicting details on top of each other while still keeping the scene’s tension and drama front and center. It’s a smart way to show that even the people closest to a tragedy can remember it differently. And yet the conflicting accounts never undercut the horror of what happened. Another powerful moment comes during the trial, where Benson and Battle compose a scene in which the actual murder plays out inside the courtroom itself, as witnesses describe the carnage in real time. Masterful storytelling, plain and simple.
Living Color
On the downside, this graphic novel’s most glaring issue is the decision to color the book in stark, two-tone palettes. On one hand, the sepia and blue toned panels help to navigate between the past and the present, respectively. Unfortunately, without the aid of varying skin tones and a broader color palette to help with character design, the drastic color shifts become an obstacle to an otherwise flawless story.
The Guided Tour
There’s also the matter of the anonymous journalist’s own struggles woven into Emmett Till’s narrative. At times it feels intrusive, pulling focus away from Emmett and Mamie when their story should be holding the center. But that discomfort may be the point. The protagonist assumes the role of a guide that helps the reader wade through the muck of this story. His presence becomes essential to understanding the gravitational pull of the moment. Ultimately, Benson illustrates how Till’s death dragged the whole of America’s consciousness and political landscape into the river down with him — the journalist’s own career included.
Down to Earth
My summer reading list has consisted of several fictional stories that fantastically depict Black men and women heroically battling the scourge of racism. Although I’ve enjoyed the exciting, mind-boggling solutions invented to eradicate hatred in this country, Framing Emmett Till has drawn me back to reality. It reminds me that bigotry can’t simply be “blown away” at every turn or miraculously disappear. The real fight for freedom takes an act of heroism from Black folks of every walk of life. It takes a mother’s courage to show the world the truth, along with a community of Black men and women brave enough to stand for justice. Not to mention attorneys, activists, and politicians willing to fight hatred with the Constitution and the rule of law. It may not be the summer blockbuster you were hoping for, but it is definitely the story we need.
Framing Emmett Till: Exposing Dark Fear
Masterful storytelling, plain and simple.
Fast-paced
Emotionally honest
Visually inventive storytelling that never shies from the truth.
A limited two-tone color palette occasionally works against the story’s otherwise flawless execution.
Imani Lateef of Peep Game Comix created Black Comix Universe to celebrate and discover the work of Black comic book creators. He highlights current talent with his monthly reviews, showcase historical gems with Black Comic Keys and shares his personal collecting journey through blogs, social media, and his weekly newsletter.
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