The title says it all
Books I decided to drop
DC
Green Lantern Corps #22– Bernard Chang’s art is not a style
that I enjoy and the first issue in the new direction was a not a "wow can’t wait to
see what happens next", so goodbye.
Suicide Squad #22 – An odd drop because it is decent enough,
but the book is going nowhere fast and with the super elixir which brings
anyone back to life, a book I can drop. Plus I’m pushing to get rid of as many
DC and Marvel books as I can as I want to try out all the new indy stuff coming
out.
Threshold #7 – Sort of a fun book updating all the oddball
50/60 space adventure characters, but again DC has cancelled it and I see no
reason to continue to invest in the book.
Marvel
Daredevil #28 – Jumped the shark with Bullseye as the great
mastermind. Such a radical change in the character that I feel like the book
lost its credibility. Waid tried to break away from the Frank Miller formula on
DD, but feel prey to it and then missed it with the Bullseye reveal. Been there
and done that, way too often.
Hulk #10– Sort of a backlash to the DD book as Waid is writing
this and I realize it is just yet another take on Bruce Banner and Hulk that is
short lived. The book is going nowhere, plus the push to drop Marvel and DC in
favor of indy work. In fact Marvel and
DC characters are all going nowhere.
Ultimate Comics Ultimates #27 – Love Fialkov (writer), but I have never
been vested in these characters. I love following creators, but I have to make
sure it is all that I want out of a book before I commit to a Marvel and DC book.
The writer was a yes, the art was so-so, the characters not so much, so it was
drop.
Wolverine #6 – Bad art (current arc), a so-so story, a decent writer, a
character I like, but I’ll wait till the big story line with him losing his
healing factor and come back then. Also this book is using the new Nick Fury
and the whole premise of the black Nick Fury is annoying. It was a blatant
change to match the movie. I would have preferred the Ultimate Nick Fury come
into the Marvel Universe and was running the show and not this.
Dark Horse
Star Wars #7 – After six issues I realized that I was not
that into Star Wars and was caring less and less about the characters. It is a
well done comic but I've never gotten that caught up in Star Wars.
BOOM
Planet of the Apes Cataclysm #11 – An okay book but they
have a hard time differentiating the characters and the story was all over the
place.
So this allows me to more easily try out
Ghosted #1 (Image) by Joshua Williams as the writer
with art by Goran Sudzuka and Miroslav Mrva. The premise is: A HORROR/CRIME MASHUP THAT’S EQUAL PARTS OCEAN’S 11 AND THE
SHINING.Jackson T. Winters is one of the greatest criminal masterminds to ever
live…except he’s rotting in jail after his last, doomed score. But when a
filthy rich collector breaks him out, he’s tasked with putting together an
elite team of paranormal experts to do the impossible: Steal a ghost from a
haunted house of horrors!
Sheltered #1 (Image) by Ed Brisson and art by Johnnie
Christmas. The premise is : A PRE-APOCALYPTIC TALE OF SURVIVAL AT ANY
COST.The men and women of Safe Haven have been preparing for any-and-all end of
world scenarios for years. However, their bunkers, weapons and training can’t
save them from the one threat they never could have expected: Their own
children.
Ballistic #1 – (Black
Mask Comics) Well it is all about the Darrick Robertson artwork that was the
first draw, the writer is Adam Mortimer who I have no clue about. The premise: This madcap sci-fi
buddy adventure about a wanna-be bank robber and his best-friend Gun, a
drug-addicted, foul-mouthed, living gun, marks Darick Robertson's return to the
hard sci-fi worldbuilding of his classic Transmetropolitan mixed with The Boys'
ultra-violence and the lunacy of Happy.
George RR Martin Skin
Trade #1 (Avatar) – The Game of Throne TV series has me reading the books and I
thought I would try a comic book version of something else he wrote. Writer
George Martin and Daniel Abraham and Art Mike Wolfer. The premise : GEORGE RR MARTIN returns to comics with Skin Trade, the World Fantasy
Award winning story that combines Martin's unique creative voice into a
powerful vision of horror! Private investigator, Randi Wade sees the ravaged
remains of innocent victims that have been savagely murdered and skinned. As
the mysterious secrets of the Blackstone Manor begin to be uncovered, she gets
ever closer to the monstrous truth…werewolves are real! George RR Martin
combines his unmatched creative vision with the visceral illustrations of
horror master Mike Wolfer to create something intensely unsettling.
Quantum and Woody #1 (Valiant)
– Writer James Asmus and Art Tom Fowler. This will be tough as this is a comedy. This may have been lighting in a bottle when it come out before. Let’s see
is Valiant can recapture the magic. The premise: Writer James Asmus (Thief of Thieves, Gambit, The End Times
of Bram & Ben) and artist Tom Fowler (Venom, Hulk: Season One) punt the
world's worst superhero team headfirst into the Valiant Universe! Once upon a
time, Eric and Woody Henderson were inseparable. Adopted brothers. Best friends.
Brilliant minds. Years later, they are estranged siblings, petty rivals, and
washed-up failures. But when their father's murder leads them into the throes
of a life-altering scientific accident, Eric and Woody will find themselves
with a whole new purpose - and a perfectly legitimate reason to wear costumes
and fight crime. Go big or go home, folks! Quantum and Woody are coming! And
the action-packed, zeitgeist-shredding exploitation stunt comic you demanded is
here at last. (And, yes, there will be a goat too. Eventually.)
See this is much more
fun then the some old week in review stuff.
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