---
product_id: 13187325
title: "OINK: Heaven's Butcher"
price: "£2.05"
currency: GBP
in_stock: false
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/13187325-oink-heavens-butcher
store_origin: GB
region: United Kingdom
---

# OINK: Heaven's Butcher

**Price:** £2.05
**Availability:** ❌ Out of Stock

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- **What is this?** OINK: Heaven's Butcher
- **How much does it cost?** £2.05 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Currently out of stock
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.uk](https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/13187325-oink-heavens-butcher)

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## Description

In a dark, oppressive future, pig-men work tirelessly feeding a society they cannot fathom as slaves of human masters. When Oink realizes that the dogma being forced on them is all lies, he undertakes a path of revenge and revelation.

Review: Very Compelling! - I must admit, I knew nothing about this comic until stumbling onto it on desertcart one day, so I have not read the original version before buying this remake. So, I must base my score entirely on the product before me than any changes made. First off, the artwork is beautiful. It looks like it’s been painted, and it’s just gorgeous (the characters are not so gorgeous to look at since they are rather ugly-looking people, but that’s irony for you). The story takes place in a dystopian future and follows the titular Oink, who is a genetic man/pig hybrid bred by the government to be slave labor in factories. One day he realizes that the dogma being used to keep them in line is a lie, and goes on a murderous rampage to try to change things. This is a pretty common theme in literature, and it’s handled quite well. In fact, I found the book so compelling that I read it a second time right after the first. I had read on the author’s website that the story was apparently inspired by his frustrations with the public education system while growing up. That’s interesting, but I suspect this story would serve as a good metaphor for many different broken social systems as well. Overall, I quite enjoyed this book. My only complaint is that it felt a lot shorter than I would’ve expected – I honestly wish we’d gotten to see more of the world that the author had created. Oh well, I still recommend you go get it if it seems up your alley!
Review: The Good, the Bad - This is not your typical comic/graphic novel. Its an enlightenment of both Science Friction and an Apocalyptic outcome.... or its seems to be. Its got a little of everything. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. The government of this new era, has a generic project that was created to be the slave labor of this new world order. However when one creature finally sees the light, he revolts and Hell comes to the place they call Heaven. From then on you follow this character on his freedom incursions. Part Mad Max, Part Planet of the apes, and part Rocky. Its a story that is both unique and eye catching. The art is hand painted and each panel is beautifully done.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #3,345,976 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1,149 in Dystopian Graphic Novels #3,161 in Dark Horse Comics & Graphic Novels #9,229 in Horror Graphic Novels (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 62 Reviews |

## Images

![OINK: Heaven's Butcher - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71MiZ692MRL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Very Compelling!
*by F***S on November 16, 2017*

I must admit, I knew nothing about this comic until stumbling onto it on Amazon one day, so I have not read the original version before buying this remake. So, I must base my score entirely on the product before me than any changes made. First off, the artwork is beautiful. It looks like it’s been painted, and it’s just gorgeous (the characters are not so gorgeous to look at since they are rather ugly-looking people, but that’s irony for you). The story takes place in a dystopian future and follows the titular Oink, who is a genetic man/pig hybrid bred by the government to be slave labor in factories. One day he realizes that the dogma being used to keep them in line is a lie, and goes on a murderous rampage to try to change things. This is a pretty common theme in literature, and it’s handled quite well. In fact, I found the book so compelling that I read it a second time right after the first. I had read on the author’s website that the story was apparently inspired by his frustrations with the public education system while growing up. That’s interesting, but I suspect this story would serve as a good metaphor for many different broken social systems as well. Overall, I quite enjoyed this book. My only complaint is that it felt a lot shorter than I would’ve expected – I honestly wish we’d gotten to see more of the world that the author had created. Oh well, I still recommend you go get it if it seems up your alley!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The Good, the Bad
*by D***. on March 21, 2015*

This is not your typical comic/graphic novel. Its an enlightenment of both Science Friction and an Apocalyptic outcome.... or its seems to be. Its got a little of everything. The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. The government of this new era, has a generic project that was created to be the slave labor of this new world order. However when one creature finally sees the light, he revolts and Hell comes to the place they call Heaven. From then on you follow this character on his freedom incursions. Part Mad Max, Part Planet of the apes, and part Rocky. Its a story that is both unique and eye catching. The art is hand painted and each panel is beautifully done.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ The 2015 remake in comparison to the 1995 original...
*by J***S on September 25, 2016*

A brief note about my history with OINK. I first encountered John Mueller’s book during the late 1990s, in its original trade paperback edition. My parents would not have allowed me to purchase it, but I read it numerous times in the bookstore. It was a startling, eye-opening work of graphic literature … disturbing, thought-provoking and impossible to forget. Years later I acquired a signed copy of this edition, which I cherish. (I also sought out and enjoyed the still-uncollected sequel miniseries, OINK: BLOOD AND CIRCUS.) When Mueller announced on his website that he was remaking OINK, his great passion project, I was intrigued. He promised greatly improved artwork and new story elements that, in his view, would create the definitive version of OINK. Having now read the new edition, I think it’s fair to say that the revamped OINK is indeed a very different book! The script has been HEAVILY rewritten and some changes of great significance have been made. Much of the layout has been entirely reconceived, with chapters combined and whole pages added or subtracted. The artwork has been redone from the ground up, with more uniformity of style and a thorough digital paint job. MAJOR SPOILERS AHEAD! While I respect what Mueller has done in revisiting and overhauling this deeply personal work, I must confess a preference for the original edition. The reasons are several, but I’ll start with the dialogue. There is now much less of it. I imagine Mueller felt that his original text crowded his art at times—which would be a fair critique. And it’s often very praiseworthy to show and not tell. But some memorable dialogue has been excised in the process. I will give a few examples. Oink no longer refers to himself as “the storm” in the prologue, nor does he bear the brand “Q43.” In the first chapter, his observation “They chain us up” is no longer followed by the key insight “I chain me up.” In the aftermath of Judas being shot, the Warden Superior originally descended into an apocalyptic rant about demons and blood; now he simply prays for mercy. And so on. Some of this rewriting is in service to the changes that have been made to the story, and the tweaks to Oink’s character. Religious imagery has been toned down (instead of a gear-like cross in the chapel, we get a straight-up gear), as has nudity (Oink is no longer naked in his dream; the original's mostly nude birthing slaves are now covered in Matrix-like machinery; and Cardinal Bacaar’s hybrid sex slave is … well, she no longer exists). Oink himself seems more philosophical and less bloodthirsty. The prologue originally alluded to Oink’s long and murderous history—of massacres in places with strange names, like “Mustek” and “Kamonesia.” No longer. The new art is similarly a mixed bag. Mueller has clearly matured as an artist. His layouts are more thoughtful and his color more painterly. For me, however, much of the potency of the original OINK book was the sheer rawness (at times, verging on delirium) of the visuals. The imagery was not always realistic or “correct” in all particulars, but it always packed a wallop. Some of that punch has been dampened in this new edition. Consider the image of Spigot suspended in mid-air against a blood-red background, poised to kill. Was the composition a little wonky? Sure. But it was MEMORABLE. Now, Spigot simply stands and points. Where we had hand-drawn lettering and color, we now have computer-generated letters and digital paint. Elements like fire and sky are executed with more realism, but feel less feverish, and somehow less liberating. Compare the explosion of the slaughterhouse—a hellish fountain of fire in the original, a realistic burning building in the remake. In the earlier edition, the final pullback of Oink atop the wall revealed eerie craters and a brilliant blue sky. We (or at least this reader) really felt Oink’s shock of beauty. Now the tones—and corresponding emotions—seem muted. Many panels in the original book had a rough, unfinished aspect to them, but this often worked to dramatic effect. When Oink beheld the birthing chamber, for example, the sketched-out quality seemed to reinforce the horrible unreality of the scene. When Spigot murdered the guard in the chapel, the right-hand panel was barely drawn ... Mueller reveals on his blog that he ran out of time and had to leave this bit unfinished, but the contrast does have the effect of making the dying guard really pop off the page. In the new edition, the panels blend together, creating momentary visual confusion. Story-wise, there are some major new elements here—but there are also big cuts. For example, a new multi-page sequence from Oink’s youth has been added to the first chapter. It works well enough, though I’m not sure the scene was needed. Conversely, the Warden’s fire-and-brimstone sermon before the crucified Spigot (though he’s not really crucified in the new edition) has been reduced to almost nothing—and the subsequent queasy scene of Oink stumbling into the hallway and vomiting into his hand is entirely gone. A more dramatic revision is made to Oink’s nightmare of “Heaven.” In the original book, he dreams that he is standing naked on a winding bridge that leads into the mouth of a vast behemoth—a monstrous giant with spades for hands and meat hooks through its shoulders. He is then accosted by a contorted pig/angel creature who recites sinister doggerel. In the new edition, Oink’s dream is of a magnificent tree and a divine light that he cannot reach—plunging instead into a chasm of tumbling gears. It’s very pretty and poetic, but I found the freakishly disturbing vision of the original more effective. Finally, the confrontation with Bacaar has been completely reconceived. Bacaar’s pig-human sex slave no longer exists, and so she does not figure into Oink's final, character-defining choice. Instead, Oink finds Bacaar looking out over the burning city, and the cardinal delivers a short speech about Oink’s purpose in the divine plan—to which Oink responds by tossing him out the window. There is much more I could say. Almost every page and every line of dialogue has been altered in some way. Some of the sequences do breath or flow a little better, and some of the new art—like the bottomless prison stair in the prologue—is fairly memorable. But from my perspective, too much has been lost. The original OINK read like a bellow of pain and frustration at a world gone mad. The new OINK feels more deliberate and considered in its storytelling … smoother and more streamlined, for better and for worse. (An example: when Oink beholds the birthing room, his original response is simple: “Dis’ be evil.” He will burn the factory and hope Heaven burns with it, because, “It all bad, everything in dis’ place be bad.” In the new edition, Oink is more self aware. He says, “I was born here,” pauses to speak with one of the women, and the purpose of the burning is to set them free. The rewritten scene adds nuance, but tempers the violent clarity of Oink’s righteous fury.) For all that, I do recommend the new edition to Mueller’s fans. It’s a fascinating insight into the evolution of an artist, and contains some very nice work in its own right. It’s worth pointing out that the supplementary front and back matter in each edition is unique. The original book contained, among other things, a full-page introductory poem, a cover gallery and loads of concept art. The new edition has a sketch gallery and some cool tribute pin-ups from various artists. The front matter of the new edition features a two-page spread of a pig parade, but if you have the original edition you’ll know that this is a riff on one of Mueller’s pre-OINK paintings. In conclusion: the new edition of OINK: HEAVEN’S BUTCHER is less of an update and more of a remake. It will never supplant the original in my heart, but I’m glad to have it as a companion volume. If you are able to obtain a copy of the original, I encourage you to do so! If you can’t, the revised edition is still worth your while. As critical as I may have come across in my review, the heart of the tale is intact. You might even consider hunting down the signed hardcover edition from Big Pig Ink. The bottom line is that Mueller is an artist of powerful vision, and he deserves your support. I look forward to seeing what he does next—and I hope this is not the last we see of Oink.

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*Product available on Desertcart United Kingdom*
*Store origin: GB*
*Last updated: 2026-05-25*