Stumptown #5 is the
conclusion to the second story of private investigator Dex Parios by Greg Rucka,
Matthew
Southworth and Rico Renzi with Matthew Southworth on colors. It was
a great story and if I’m any judge of things this book is a true labor of love.
From Greg Rucka’s wonderfully structured story to his essays
on why a private eye is an great character to use for stories, the entire
series has read like a true graphic novel. Like all great ongoing characters
now that we are on the second story of Dex we get a subtle hint of problems to
come. People are coming for Dex due to her putting her nose where some believe
it does not belong. Bottom line is that I believe this is one of those series
that I will have to buy the hard cover collections since I ship all the comics
out to others. It is a great series and we are only two novels in.
I called it a labor of love because I sense the creators are
pouring their hearts and souls into the book. Greg is a great writer, but this
is some of his best stuff. Matthew continues to grow as an artist and becomes
more and more impressive with each succeeding issue. In the first arc I felt
his work was good, but now it is coming together and is flat out impressive.
Last issue’s car chase was phenomenal and this issue is very quite in
comparison but he expresses so many emotions with the characters via body
language as well as the actual facial expressions. It speaks to a lot of
thought going into each and every page. In addition the characters are all
distinctive, the story flows from panel to panel with an ease that many artist
never achieve.
Also the coloring is excellent. It is used not only to color
but to light the scenes, especially in the dark scenes. Often a colorist can
muddy the waters (at times to hide an artist’s flaws) but here it plays with
the dark scenes in a way that would make a movie lighting director proud. The
one moment in the coloring that blew me away was when the cops showed up lights
flashing. The strobe effect of the police lights played against those pages
just like it would have if you were standing there. I have never seen anyone
else pull that off and it was a great touch.
I’m not talking about the actual plot because the whole
story of a stolen guitar turned into so much more that telling you the ending
would hurt some of the joy of reading this book and that’s what I want people
to do. Go out and buy this book and pick up the first one because Rucka and
Southworth have pure gold with Dex Parios.
Part 6 coming in 6 hours.
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