In 2017, Simon Moreton's father fell suddenly ill and died. His death
sent the author back to his childhood home in rural Shropshire trying to
process his grief by revisiting his family's time as transplants to the
countryside. The story centres around Titterstone Clee Hill, and
Caynham, the nearby village in which the author lived as a child. There
are tales of empty mansions, of being bullied; cooking with his Dad,
messing around with his brother, exploring forests; being an adult faced
with an ill father; history and folklore of the Clee Hills; of
high-society scandals, prejudice and fear; industrial decline and
automation; haunted cliff faces; working on a radar station; of being a
kid, of hospitals, of growing old, of the seasons passing, of his
family, of his father and his kindnesses; of how he became whatever it
is he was, and how this big hill was a backdrop to so much of it. In a
memoir that that combines prose, illustration, photos, archival texts,
and more, Where? weaves a gentle story that slips and slides in time and
geography, creating connections across geographies, histories, families,
times, and circumstance all to answer the question - 'where are you
from?' Where? is more than a graphic novel, it is a treatise on grief,
on childhood, nature, and belonging. It is a challenge to think
differently about what it means to be 'from' somewhere, and how the
political urgency of early twenty-first century living needs us to be
more critical of our stories, reclaiming what is valuable to us from the
grip of those who would take our histories and use them for division and
exploitation.