I still have a ton of stuff I have yet to read this week so
I only got around to reading 6 books from other publishers. It is interesting
to me that in six books we encompass Image, IDW, Dark Horse and Dynamite.
Posed in front of a comic to give you a scale |
Before I jump into the books this week I received my
inaction Batman and Robin figures made by Aardman studios, famous for Wallace
and Gromit. I have fallen in love with these figures, they are hilarious and
absolutely the best collectible I have picked up in a long, long time. I now find that that normal action figures
have less and less appeal to me, but this type of stuff is hilarious.
Invincible #102
by Robert Kirkman and Ryan Ottley is still a rock solid and
entertaining series even over 100 issues into it. The great thing about an
independent book like this is the story has to move forward. Mark is growing
older and life events continue to have an impact on what happens in his life.
Therefore it just seems to be a natural event when Mark asks Eve to marry him
and she says yes. Also within this issue the sub plot that Mark is genetically
related to the former ruler of the Viltrum race, which means his father is the
hereditary king of their race. The current ruler tries to kill Omni-Man and
would have succeeded but for the rest of the people. So now Mark is getting married
and essentially a Prince of the Viltrum race. We won’t get a new writer who
will wipe away all of this with a deal with the devil.
Buy it.
Highway #4 (of 4)
by John Byrne was a fun little
mini-series. In many ways I think John made this story too convoluted as who
struck who and what the heck was that all about, was too often part of my read
of issue #4. It may read better as a trade and was some of John’s best current
artwork.
Don’t buy it.
East of West #2
by Jonathan Hickman and Nick Dragotta tasks me. It is a very
different book made to feel like a Western. It is an alternative history story
with the four horsemen of the Apocalypse as central characters. Hickman has
many grandiose ideas and often I feel like we are all suppose to praise him for
fear of not being one of the cool kids. The problem with much of Hickman’s work
is the investment it takes to get to the point where his epic starts to come
together. I will say this that regardless of the huge cast that this issue
already is starting to feel like the book is coming together a little bit. At
least better then Avengers, which is 10 issues in. I want more then a cool vibe
and some neat ideas; I want a story that is cohesive and works when read as
episodic chapters. I believe some of Hickman’s best work was his early
mini-series where he wrote the story for the last page, but the story was
complete and held together. Hickman still intrigues me enough and Draggotta’s
art is strong enough to keep me on this book. I’ll give Hickman this much, he
has yet to hit that seminal work yet, but most of his stuff has more ideas in
it that the majority of the books on the stands.
Buy it.
As I come into the home bend of writing these four posts I
find my energy dwindling. Often I write all four parts on Saturday and edit on
Sunday. I hate to edit myself, but blog writing on a deadline makes that my
only real choice. Plus my writing is often impressions as I’m reading Thursday
and Friday, writing Saturday and editing Sunday. All of this is a preamble to
why these blurbs seem to get shorter and shorter as the posts progress. Maybe
this digression with give me a second wind.
The Answer #4 (of 4)
by Mike Norton and Dennis Hopeless was a great book and a
horrible ending. Why, a horrible ending because I did not get enough answers.
Norton’s slick and clean lines work very well with this fast pace story. We had
more rabbits being pulled out of hats per page then most comics do in the span
of 12 issues. Devin MacKenzie is the true central character of the book and
this issue we find out that she is apparently the only person who can read an
ancient code that opens a doorway into another dimension. The Answer dies and
reappears again and we get a little glimpse as to the fact that he and another
guy have been secretly guarding Devin for a long time. Oh geez just bring on
the next mini-series already.
Buy it.
Clone #6 by David Schuler, Aaron Ginsburg and Wade McIntire as writers with Juan Jose Ryp as artist is a very good
sci-fi thriller. Luke, the Alpha clone, is trying to escape from his father and
the camp of clones to save his wife. With some help he escapes and sends a mad
killer (another clone of himself but younger) in the direction of the camp by
accident. His wife is being held captive and apparently there is steroid clone
Mark at that facility. A lot of plot elements are going on fast and furiously
but the book holds together well. At its core is Luke trying to save his wife
and child. Ryp’s art is solid as always and goes a long way in making this book
work.
Buy it.
And the last book for this week is Mask #6 by Chris Roberson
and Dennis Calero. I’m usually a
Calero fan, but the characters are hard to tell apart, especially when not
wearing masks, and the backgrounds are almost non-existent. It feels like the
story is being spread out to be longer by making panels bigger at times for no
apparent reason. Still the story at the core of the book has my interests as
the pulp heroes are all trying to overthrow a fascist government that has
gotten in power in New York
State . At $4 it is an iffy proposition.
Read it on the stands.
That brings us to the conclusion of another exciting week of
comics. Join us again next week.
I thought that was a variant Batman cover! High Ways did suffer from too many twists and turns and a quick resolution. Four issues isn't really enough sometimes. Dragotta's style is really making East of West work for me -- I love the design.
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