Welcome back to Part
Two of my fill-in of Jim’s “What I Read”/Week In Review. As you know by now Jim was away for a family
funeral and we remember him and his family in our thoughts and prayers. Part One was in place of my normal Saturday
post. So, if you’re a Jim-only reader
just step back a few days and see five more titles.
Superior Spider-Man
#009 by Dan Slott and Ryan Stegman was a Grade A book. I had planned to do a solo spotlight review,
but this “fill-in” post for Jim got to be rather large, so I thought I’d “cheat”
and split it into two parts. Potto®
manages to (for now) eliminate Peter Parker’s brain patterns (or “ghost”). The story mainly consisted of mental battles consisting
of Peter’s greatest friends and foes (well, only the Ditko-era ones with the
exception of the Kingpin) and a great (literal) face-off. It was
pretty sad to see Peter forget people (join the club dude, but I think my
mental frailties come from sleep deprivation) and I really liked that Slott
thru in the classic “mistake” of Peter Palmer
from an early issue. I can’t wait to
see what Potto® does without the controlling influence of Peter and it’ll be
even more interesting to see how Peter comes back from this setback. This is the most entertaining Spider-Man
storyline in DECADES!!!
Buy it and buy a copy of Avenging
Spider-Man for Jim (He needs it).
Buy it or Wait for the trade.
Your choice, but it actually reads well as a monthly.
Polarity #2 by Max Bemis and Jorge Coelho has some really great dialogue. I picked up this series after Jim’s and my
LCS’ rave reviews and it really took a weird turn this issue. There’s no way Tim is just hallucinating. He actually has drug-induced super-powers (a
regular Modern-day Hourman – just kidding)!
I really like Jorge’s art – it fits the vibe of the book perfectly. But my favorite part is the brutal
truth-telling that Tim does reading peoples’ minds – social commentary at its best.
Buy two and give one to a friend – you know… the one who is a
little off. I’d say give two away, but I don’t have the
disposable income Big “Sugar” Grand-Daddy Jim has! :D
Detective Comics #20
by John Layman and Jason Fabok was both excellent and
disappointing at the same time. I really
liked the Ogilvy character as an opportunistic backstabber and loved the way he
usurped the Penguin’s throne, disrupting the status quo. But I was shocked to find that he willingly
turned himself into a creature of the night.
I looked at the cover and thought, “He doesn’t even look like a penguin?” Well, that’s okay, because he’s not the E.P.
anymore. This is the best Batman book on
the stands IMHO, but really Batman is more of a guest star than the central
focus. I believe Fabok, who is
phenomenal, did all (or all put one) of the story arcs (it helps having a back-up
to keep the monthly page count down). I
had thought I would eventually sell this series, especially since I’ve become
so disenfranchised with the New 52, but you can almost (if you squint) pretend
that this is happening in any universe, not just the “You’re Dead to Me”
non-legacy version. The ending of the
second story was a great save for what I initially thought was the demise of
the best new Batman villain in many years.
Buy it.
Green Arrow #20
by Jeff Lemire and Andrea Sorrentino is the book that I
get because of the hype, but really don’t like it as much as everyone
else. It reminds me of those cutting
edge 70’s stories (the 17-pagers) that were really dense and had the art no one
had really seen much before. The art is
fantastic and the story is intriguing. However, I’m still not hooked yet. But I’d rather get the first prints now just
in case it really takes off.
Buy it, so you can be part of the crowd.
Come back next week to
see what new format Jim is using this time! Being Jim is exhausting. You’ve got to appreciate the sheer volume of
material he puts out week-after-week.
Thanks Matthew - Great job.
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