To round out the week we will close with my remarks on the
alternative publishers’ offerings. Damn Joe Casey got in my head as I used to
just call this category other. It is funny but a large portion of the
alternative offerings are still either licensed deals or super hero in some
form or another. Comic books tend to lend themselves to the more fantastic and
allow one to produce stories with an unlimited budget (in that doing the stuff the
artists draws on paper is cheaper then getting it on the screen).
The best book of the week has to be Todd The Ugliest Kid on Earth #3 (of 4) by Ken Kristensen and MK Perker.
Seriously I read pages to my wife and forced her to read a few pages as I was
laughing so much as I was reading it. I probably impacted her relentless focus
on her iphone. This is Mad Magazine at its best on steroids and a book that
sees social taboos as things to leave in the rear view mirror. It starts with
the police detective trying to ignore any evidence that Todd is not the killer
and moves onto scary scenes of running out of toilet paper in a killer’s house.
It has Todd’s parents in stalker mode and being easy mode. Todd learning the
ropes in prison has to be the best scene of all. Last and far from least we are
provided with a wonderful glossary to jail terms. This book is flat out my
favorite book of the year and one of the funniest damn comic produced in ages.
Where is Jake Ellis
#3 (of 5) is just a good damn comic. Nathan Edmondson is becoming known to me as the
spy / covert operations type of writer and his work is very engaging. Tonci
Zonic art is out of the Mike Mignola type of school but with a fluid feel to
it. The adventure of Jon remaining on the run from some sort of government
agency and his bizarre mind partnership with Jake Ellis has been a good one. This
is the second mini-series in I don’t know how many, but I do know I want the 10
issue hardcover to read the story over in one sitting. It is a fun ride with
plenty of twist and turns. It is one of the better books on the shelf.
The Walking Dead #108 by Robert Kirkman and Charles Adlard
was a decent issue. My whole feeling towards this series is being impacted by
the TV show which sucks. This issue we meet Ezekiel who is the leader of yet
another group and he is going to help lead a charge against Negan. We have four
different groups that have been introduced so far and I guess it all goes back
to the idea that Rick and company are discovering a larger world. Tribal communities
are spring up and the Zombies are less of a focus of the story. The pace is
always a problem with this book as it all takes too long for anything to
happen. I still like the series I just don’t feel any pizzazz this issue.
Highways #3 by John Byrne
has been a real surprise. John’s work has been uneven over the last few years
but this story is very entertaining. We have science fiction with some
espionage type twists in it. In just three issues John has move the plot and
characters forward at a great clip. More happens in three issues of this series
then in a years worth of many of the big two’s books.
Next up is Ghost #4
by Kelly Sue
Deconnick and Phil Noto. The payoff was we find out her origin.
She was trapped in some sort of limbo and she is now back as has some sort of
ghost like powers. The guy who trapped her was a demon and now they find out
there are 32 demons who have escaped and they will track them down. Noto’s art
does not always excite me but he knows how to tell a story. I’m not sure if I
will follow the continuing series that is being launched from this book. I will
try it out but the quest book is being done in Talon by DC also and I’m not
sure how much I have vested in this book. Kelly also made the plot a little too
elaborate and I got a little lost in who was who by the end of the mini-series.
Still her work gets better and better and there is enough for me to give the
ongoing a whirl when it hits the stands.
Mind the Gap #8
by Jim McCann
and Rodin
Esquejo is maddening. It was set up as a murder mystery and now the
onion is getting peeled back and we are finding out there is a lot more to
whole story. It appears the Elle’s mother may have been doing some sort of
experiment to her daughter that has now manifested in her ability to enter
other people’s bodies when they are close to death. I felt like the book read
like a story that had a beginning middle and an end and now I feel like it is
going to be stretched out into a long series. Not sure I’m signed up for a long
haul, especially as we are eight issues in and there are no endpoints that have
occurred. This book is cruising on the cancellation line.
Last up is Bloodshot
#9 by Duane
Swierczynski and Manuel Garcia. This is flat out a great action
book and Bloodhshot himself is being made into a great character. He has gone
from being the programmed warrior with a super healing factor (that makes some
level of sense) to now a protector of super powered children. It is a
relentless story and at the same time you feel for him as he is desperately
trying to find his true identity. Valiant
has been absolutely brilliant in picking and choosing the talent for their
books and letting them run with it. It is a wonderful re-imagining of the
Valiant books. I recently started to re-read the original Harbinger series and
while the core of the story is the same it is greatly changed. I loved the
original Valiant books under Jim Shooter and these books under Warren Simons
are just as good and updated for today’s audience. If I had to follow only one
company out of Marvel, DC and Valiant, I would choose Valiant today.
A long week in review comes to a bittersweet end, come back
and see me next week as I get lonely working from home.
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