This is the one group that I did not get a chance to read
everything. Even though more and more of my dollars are going to this material
I find Marvel and DC are usually faster reads and therefore I have a tendency
to read them first.
Abe Sapien #1 by Mike Mignola, Scott Allie and Sebastian Fiumara was a great start to
the ongoing Abe Sapien series. It is funny because Abe is not sure who or what
he is anymore. In all the years of following BPRD it is not been made exactly clear
what is Abe. Abe has awaken from a four month coma and left BPRD. They are hot
on his heels. Abe is riding the rails and gets an earful of how “Hell on Earth”
has occurred. It was sort of a “While you were sleeping” type thing. The art by
Sebastian Fiumara was superb. His storytelling and pure craft is top notch. The
story itself did not really get started as we were setting the stage for the
series. Even with that being the case it was an enjoyable read and a series I
will be looking forward to each month.
Buy it.
Snapshot #3 (of 4)
by Andy Diggle and Jock was outstanding. The book was an
express train of action and plot. It was amazing to pick up the book and just start
reading it. By the time this chapter was over you were gasping for air. I can’t
wait for the wrap up of this story. The twists and turns this book takes page
by page is dazzlingly and makes for a fast paced action/adventure thriller. It
is so hard to believe that Diggle had to walk away from Action comics; his work
is normally very good. I did not even bother to get his issues since he did not
get to finish his story. If that leaves more time for him to do more creator
owned stuff, then we are all getting richer for DC’s loss. Andy and Jock are both
great creators and this type of story suits them both very well.
Buy it.
Harbinger Wars #1
by Joshua Dysart, Duane Swierczynski,
Clayton Henry and Clayton Crain.
It was a great start to the story. I have been following all the Valiant books
but thought even if you have not it caught up any new reader. It also gave
those of us who knew what came before plenty of new information as it told the
story from a different viewpoint. Harbinger Wars is going to involve Harbinger
and Bloodshot over four months. It should be a great story and I’m curious to
see how this all shakes out and what impact it will have on both ongoing books.
Buy it.
Great Pacific #6
by Joe Casey and Martin Morazzo is still coming
together. I want to like the book more then I do, if that makes any sense.
There is a lot going on and a lot that has to be explained. That being said the
art work is just okay and the story is interesting but not compelling. I’m
hanging around for a few more issues as the potential appears to be here for a
very good series.
Read it on the stands.
Locke and Key: Omega
#4 (of 7) by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez. This is a 37 part
series that was broken out into six parts. We are at the ending of this story.
If you have not gotten onboard now it is not worth buying this issue. You
should go out and buy Volume 1 of the trade and it is an almost mortal lock you
will be back for volume 2. I have loaned my collected editions out to two other
people and give the singles to my daughter Gwen. Anyone who reads the book
loves it. It has terrific characterization, fantastic cast, a cool
horror/fantasy element to it and outstanding artwork.
Buy the trades.
Godzilla Half Century
War #5 (of 5) by James Stokoe. What
a great mini-series. Stokoe puts so much into every page it is amazing. I’m
guessing that he included a ton of the various monsters from the gazillion
Godzilla movies made. I don’t know them but I have to assume it was all homage.
What made this book is it was about two men who fought Godzilla over the course
of fifty years. It had all the monster fighting and madness you could want but
was a great story as well. John Layman did an excellent Godizilla mini and
Stokoe’s was also excellent. I hope IDW can line us some other strong creative
crews to do some mini-series. For my money it is the only way to go with
Godzilla as the ongoing series is not a true viable option in my view.
Buy the trade.
Uber #0 by Kieron Gillen and Caanan White. What a totally different kind of book from Gillen.
I’m not a huge fan and recently dropped Young Avengers, but I have not disliked
his writing as much as what he has been writing about. Young Avengers and
little Loki are not characters that I care about. This was a rough introduction
and maybe issue #1 is where they should have started. The book was setting the
stage for us by starting with the Battle of Berlin. It did not go the way our
history said it went because Germany
had the Uber army created, super soldiers. From here on we are now in an alternative time
line. The premise is good, but the presentation of the idea was not. The art is
overly dark as the colorist appears to be trying to hide the flaws in the art.
The biggest problem is the way the story was being told. We jump feet first
into the Battle of Berlin and jump around between Germans, Americas and
Russians. At times it was impossible to tell who was who. I’m afraid the first
issue may turn off people who could like the book.
Skip this issue.
The last book that I read of the Alternative publishers is Shadowman #6 by Justin Jordan, Patrick Zircher and Lee Garbett. I’m very sad to see Patrick Zircher leave the book as
I love his art and was intrigued enough with his story to stay on the book. I’m
enjoying all the Valiant titles and I hate to see what appears to be some sort
of internal dissention inside of Valiant. Shadowman along with Archer and
Armstrong are the two titles I struggle with getting every issue, but I enjoyed
this issue and I’m looking forward to next month’s zero issue. Still as a stand alone issue I don’t believe
it was a good jumping on point, more of a wrap up of the first arc.
Skip this issue.
That’s a wrap for this week.
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