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Monthly Archives: February 2014

What’s I&N Store (2/26)

24 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by ScottNerd in What's I&N Store?

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Alan Moore, Brian Wood, Cary Nord, Dark Horse, David Aja, DC Comics, Dead Boy Detectives, Deadly Class, Doc Savage, Dynamite Entertainment, Ed Brisson, Fantastic Four, Garry Brown, Hawkeye, Howard Chaykin, IDW, Image, James Robinson, Johnnie Christmas, Jonathan Hickman, Jordie Bellaire, Kevin Eastman, Kieron Gillen, Kurtis J. Wiebe, Leonard Kirk, Marvel, Matt Fraction, Matt Kindt, Mind MGMT, Miracleman, Nick Pitarra, Pariah, Rat Queens, Rick Remender, Robert Venditti, Roc Upchurch, Ross Campbell, Satellite Sam, Scott Snyder, Sean Murphy, Sheltered, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, The Manhattan Projects, The Massive, The Wake, Three, Valiant, Vertigo, Wes Craig, X-O Manowar

A nice list of books to round out the month.

  • The Massive #20 (Dark Horse): #19 struggled a bit to to rise to the level of “Longship.”  It was to be expected, I suppose, even as expectations were expectedly ramped up as a result of the exquisite study in tension that was the showdown between Cal Israel and Bors Bergson.  In general, there is something magical about how Brian Wood gets more out of simmering than most get out of boiling.
  • Mind MGMT #19 (Dark Horse): Matt Kindt is working at a completely different  level; and, in that, he’s competing against himself–and winning, wouldn’t you know!  Oh, you know–because you’re a regular reader of Mind MGMT, right?  If you’ve been a regular reader of our humble blog, then you know that #16 was our favorite issue until #17 came along and earned our coveted Best Single Issue of 2013 award.  #18–our #1 book of January 2014–has trumped #17 as our favorite issue of Mind MGMT to date; so you know what we’re expecting: #19 is going to be better still!  It’s going to be magic!
Mind MGMT #19

Mind MGMT #19

  • Pariah #1 (Dark Horse): Sounds interesting enough; has me thinking Gravity, obviously, but that’s OK.  The creators–Aaron Warner, Phillip Gelatt, and Brett Weldele–come with some impressive credits, so I’m going to give it a try.
  • Dead Boy Detectives #3 (DC/Vertigo): A unique narrative with a decidedly Vertigo vibe.
  • The Wake #6 (DC/Vertigo): According to Scott Snyder: “#5 [was] the big game changer.”  If that means that the series is suddenly going to get interesting, a bit more challenging, then terrific.  If it simply speaks to the leap forward in time that we’ve been hanging onto since #1, then I’m bored already.  Aside from some Snyder-esque horror in #3, the series has been an absolute snoozefest.  This is a rep-read–did I just coin that?–if there ever was one.
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #31 (IDW): I’m still marveling over the fact that I’m reading a Turtles book.  Thing is, it’s good.  The writing’s solid, and Ross Campbell’s art is terrific; it suits the situation in which the Turtles find themselves perfectly.  And it certainly doesn’t hurt that Mateus Santolouco’a return to the title is just around the corner.  Sweet!
TMNT #31

TMNT #31

  • Deadly Class #2 (Image): I’ve about reached the end of my Remender rope.  But I have just enough left for this one.  I hope I get a bit more than recycled schemes, though.
  • The Manhattan Projects #18 (Image): Clinically insane, historically hilarious.  Engaging despite its evolving at a Darwin-esque clip.  #17 ends on a Hickman high note: a heavily armed General Westmoreland flips off Einstein–easily one of my favorite characters–and fires, “F&@% your science, Doctor…I’ve got a machine gun.”  Genius!
  • Rat Queens #5 (Image): It sure as hell ain’t high art, but who gives a rat’s ass?  Wiebe and Upchurch are spreading a plague of royal merriment!  Catch it as quickly as you can!
Rat Queens #5

Rat Queens #5

  • Satellite Sam #6 (Image): All I remember of #5: lots of below the belt lip service.  Now, with the oral stage set, what’s to come, Sigmund Fraction?  I hope we get back to business–before the afterglow turns totally to aftergloom.
  • Sheltered #7 (Image): #6 offered up an interesting angle: the adult as the innocent.  Derek and I talked about it here: I&N the Gutter with…Sheltered.  I’m hoping that this series stays tight and doesn’t get tedious–like Revival, for instance.
  • Three #5 (Image): #3 was great.  #4 didn’t quite have the same impact but was a damn fine follow up with an edge of your seat cliffhanger.  Can’t wait to see how it plays out here in #5. Kieron Gillen’s got something really good going with Three. Looks like when he’s doing his own thing, as with Uber, he’s much more effective and, ultimately, more engaging. He grabs his angle, does his research, and soars.
  • Fantastic Four #1 (Marvel): James Robinson’s The All-New Invaders has been a major disappointment.  In fact, we called out #1 as our Biggest Dis(appointment) of January.  We all know that Robinson’s capable of so much more.  Well, I hope he brings that more to Fantastic Four–and I hope what he and Leonard Kirk bring together as a team to “The World’s Greatest Comic Magazine” justifies the reboot.
  • Hawkeye #15 (Marvel): Wouldn’t you know: a filtered Fraction is a much better–and certainly sexier–Fraction. But Fraction’s only half of the team that’s serving up the second best hero book–after Daredevil , of course–in the Marvel Universe: David Aja has a hand–a very active hand, sexually actually–in the sexification of Clint Barton, as well. Hey Derek!  Smart move jumping onto Mind MGMT–finally. Now it’s time to set your sights on some super hero action. What are you waiting for?  I’ll even lend you my trades!
Hawkeye #15

Hawkeye #15

  • Miracleman #3 (Marvel): I’m hooked on Alan Moore’s Miracleman! Gosh, I wish I had read these stories back in the day, though. But thanks to Marvel for giving me an opportunity enjoy them now.  Could do without all of the ancillary material, however.
  • Doc Savage #3 (Dynamite): On the strength of Derek’s recommendation, I’ve picked up the first two, but I haven’t gotten around to reading them yet.
  • X-O Manowar #22 (Valiant): A reliable read, though rarely remarkable.  Aric, however, remains one of my favorite characters.  I wonder whether or not Aric’s involvement in Unity will bring a little something extra to this book.  We’ll see.

What are you looking forward to this week?

Turning pages,

Scott

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Top 5 Books of January

21 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Adventure Time, Afterlife With Archie, Archie Comics, BOOM!, Braden Lamb, Brian K. Vaughan, Damon Lindelof, Dark Horse, Dinosaur Comics, EC Comics, Ed Brubaker, Fatale, Fiona Staples, Francesco Francavilla, Good Housekeeping, Henri Rousseau, Image, Lost, Matt Kindt, Mind MGMT, Roberto Aguirre Sacasa, Ryan North, Saga, Sean Phillips, Shelli Paroline, The Midas Flesh

Our first Top 5 of the year! If the titles below are any indication, 2014 is already shaping up to be a great one for our beloved medium. To wit:

5. Afterlife With Archie #3 (Archie): Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and Francesco Francavilla serve up another clinic on the art of the mash-up. Opening with a nightmare scene worthy of EC Comics, this issue also treats us to tragic teen romance (is there any other kind?), a new wrinkle on a classic rivalry, and a climactic set piece featuring teens in bathing suits engaging in the kind of logic that only makes sense in horror movies. Oh, and two more beloved characters acquire the taste for human flesh. Forget that other zombie book; this is the best undead comic on the stands, and a lot more fun besides. (DM)

Afterlife with Archie #3

4. Saga #18 (Image): Our #4 book of 2013 kicks off the year in feline fashion!

Saga #18

Saga #18

Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples head into their well-deserved–and freakin’ fan-frustrating!–“Vacationanza” with another extraordinary chapter rife with expertly orchestrated peril and commensurate–in one case, winged–crescendos.  The issue bares its teeth–along with poor Lying Cat–on page one and from there hits the high notes that our hearts–which are wrenched and warmed by design–long to hear, that they recognize and react to, like a favorite song or a lover’s voice.  The final note, struck on the final splash, resounds, envelops us in pure joy.  “That a girl,” indeed.  OK, sure, the “TIME JUMP!” is a bit of a leap; but isn’t that what we love about these creators–these characters, even?  When they go, they go boldly.  And the result?  I mean, by now, “Isn’t it obvious?” (SC)

3. The Midas Flesh #2 (BOOM!): Ryan North made his name on the wise-assery of his clip art cult favorite Dinosaur Comics and his innovative, medium-bending work on the Eisner Award-winning Adventure Time comic book. Here he tries something a little different: a more or less straight up narrative. Forgoing the conceptual bells and whistles of his earlier work, North trusts instead in the fantastic nature of the story he’s telling. And so far it’s a doozy: a band of space explorers have discovered a planet shrouded in legend and frozen in time; encrusted in solid gold and instant death to any who descend upon it. The planet of course, is earth. Mixing science fiction, ancient mythology and talking dinosaurs (naturally) North is able to balance his trademark philosophical/slacker humor with high adventure and some genuine pathos. And then there is the ethereal beauty, recalling the ruins of Pompeii, and rendered lovingly by series artists Shelli Paroline and Braden Lamb, of the transitory everyday moments, gilded for all eternity, commemorated in catastrophe. (DM)

The Midas Flesh #2

The Midas Flesh #2

2. Fatale #19 (Image): I have to admit, this long-time favorite had fallen a bit on the old depth chart recently.  The noir/horror (noirror) tone established, if not invented, by Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips seemed to spring naturally from the early stories taking place in the 1950s and worked surprisingly well in such far-flung eras as the Middle Ages, the Wild West and the 1970s. But somehow, the Seattle grunge scene of the early ’90’s seemed a poor fit. All the shaggy hair and Doc Martens seemed to dull the edge of the knife Brubaker’s been wielding (or maybe it just brought back too many memories). But with this issue, they’ve once again reached Nirvana. Our unfortunate band of would-be rockers, the latest to fall under the spell of the title character, are dispatched in a pool of blood and flannel in an issue as cold and sleek as any in the series. And by the end, Brubaker has masterfully set up his players for the present-day finale. The femme fatale has found herself. Her enemies have found her. And you’ll find the sweet, foreboding sense of despair that has become this title’s stock in trade, especially in those last few unrelenting pages. And in the knowledge that the end of this book is nigh. Savor it while you can.  (DM)

Fatale #19

1. Mind MGMT #18 (Dark Horse): The following confession is being made under extreme coercion. Not physical or emotional, but artistic. You see, everything that’s appeared on this site about Matt Kindt’s superlative Mind MGMT has been written by our man Scott. That’s because until recently, I was not reading it. This is no fault of Scott’s; he’s been pushing it on me ever since I gave him my copy of issue one (gave it to him! like some philistine! some rube! some unmitigated yokel!). I rationalized that I wasn’t a fan of conspiracy fiction; after all, early on the book was garnering comparisons to Lost (with praise from Damon Lindelof yet) and I’ve generally found such fare queasily claustrophobic. So despite its quality, which was readily apparent from the get-go, I figured it simply wasn’t my cup of tea. The change came with issue 13, the first of a series of one-shots each focusing on a different character. But the selling point was really the cover:

Amidst all the slick sci-fi and sexy superheroes was a comic that looked like a 1950’s issue of Good Housekeeping? Talk about audacity! But that was only the beginning. Inside I found that Kindt was playing all sorts of games, unearthing his sordid, multi-layered drama from beneath a veneer of suburban bliss. As the one-shots continued, each gaining momentum from the last, so did Kindt’s lay-outs and design choices become ever more daring, until story and art finally exploded in a beautifully orchestrated climax of form and content in the epic #17 (which, not coincidentally, we named the top single issue of 2013). Claustrophobic? Anything but! Such wild experimentation happily continues in #18, from its Rousseau-inspired cover, to the subtextual juxtaposition of text and images, quite unlike anything I’ve seen (*impressed*). And so I’ve finally succumbed to Kindt’s persuasion: I’ve bought the trades (sadly, not printed on newsprint like the single issues), absorbed the stories and have surrendered my will to Mind MGMT. Because this is what comics can do. Book of the Month. (DM)

Mind MGMT #18

Mind MGMT #18

The Biggest Dis(appointment): All-New Invaders #1 (Marvel):

I know that you thought the same thing I thought when I first saw this advertised: James Robinson and Steve Pugh?  Yes, please.  Well, didn’t take very long for that to turn into No, thanks. Perhaps I should’ve paid more attention to the “All-New” designation, which, from recent experience, is wielded not unlike “delicious” on a box of gluten-free anything.  Once you get into it–once you take a bite–you find yourself thinking What was I thinking?  For Gods and Soldiers’ sakes, I’m still picking the clichés out of my teeth!  And if Robinson were shooting for hokey–as a bit of an homage, I suppose–with his dialogue, well, then he hit the mark.  Oh, he Imperius Wrecks the mark, all right!  Yeah, someone should’ve invaded the dialogue writing process to liberate the language from the atrocities of The Word Reich–to prevent the Hokeycaust!  I guess I should’ve seen it coming.  I guess I was blinded by my faith in Robinson.  I guess I was remembering fondly some of my early experiences with The Invaders.  (In fact, I have a few early copies, including #2 (1975), which I bought in 1983 around the same time I got into Wolfman’s Vigilante.  How’s that for a memory, eh?)  I guess, too, I was hoping that I’d finally get a version of Captain America–post-Brubaker–that I could be proud of.  In the end, guess what: it doesn’t take supreme intelligence to realize that the All-New Invaders is, disappointingly, old news.  So, when’s Fantastic Four #1 coming out, again? (SC)

All-New Invaders #1

All-New Invaders #1

Turning pages,

Derek and Scott

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What’s I&N Store (2/19)

18 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by ScottNerd in What's I&N Store?

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A Voice in the Dark, Alex + Ada, Alex Maleev, Avatar, Avengers World, Batman and Two-Face, BOOM!, Braden Lamb, Brian Azzarello, Brian Michael Bendis, Brian Wood, Chris Bachalo, Chris Samnee, Cliff Chiang, Colin Lorimer, Curse, Daredevil, Dark Horse, DC Comics, Doug Braithwaite, Extinction Parade, Frank Barbiere, Image, James Asmus, Jonathan Hickman, Jonathan Luna, Joshua Hale Fialkov, Kris Anka, Larime Taylor, Mark Waid, Marvel, Matt Kindt, Max Brooks, Michael Moreci, Ming Doyle, Minotaur, Nick Spencer, Patrick Gleason, Peter J. Tomasi, Quantum and Woody, Raulo Caceres, Riley Rossmo, Ryan North, Sarah Vaughn, Shelli Paroline, Skyman, The Bunker, The Midas Flesh, The White Suits, Tim Daniel, Uncanny X-Men, Unity, Wonder Woman, X-Men

The only forecast worth a damn:

  • Skyman #2 (Dark Horse): My interest in the book has been ramped up not by #1 so much as learning more about Joshua Hale Fialkov as a writer through his book The Bunker from Oni Press, which came out in print last week.  Yeah, so, suddenly I’m like “Sky’s the limit!” for this one.
  • The White Suits #1 (Dark Horse): The new one from Frank J. Barbiere–writer of the underwhelming Five Ghosts, which I dropped after #2–is described as “violent noir,” which is right up my alley; so I’ll pick it up.
  • Batman and Two-Face #28 (DC): Best Batman of the bunch?  Peter J. Tomasi and Patrick Gleason’s Batman, biatch!  OK, so, it’s not Mind MGMT; very few books are.  But it is Batman: it sounds like, looks like, and feels like Batman–and that’s what’s important, isn’t it?  The turn with Two-Face has been a fun one, and it ends here.
Batman and Two-Face #28

Batman and Two-Face #28

  • Wonder Woman #28 (DC): The only New 52 book I’ve been on from the get-go.  Remarkably consistent, drawing more from myth as we go along.  Bring on the Minotaur!
  • A Voice in the Dark #4 (Image): We were lucky enough to receive a preview copy from Larime Taylor a couple of weeks back.  My review–and assessment of the series–can be found here.
  • Alex + Ada #4 (Image): If I had more time, I would’ve written up a Scottlight On post for #3–a very positive Scottlight On post.  I loved it: the dialogue, the absence of dialogue; the composition of balance, the language of juxtaposition; the slow simmer, the tempered tone; the spirit of Asimov, the sword of Damocles.  Very much looking forward to what Jonathan Luna and Sarah Vaughn have programmed for us this time around.
Alex + Ada #4

Alex + Ada #4

  • Avengers World #3 (Marvel): Certainly isn’t a must read, but hasn’t been bad.  Certainly worth another issue.
  • Daredevil #36 (Marvel): The end–for now.  We know where it’s going from here, yet I wonder where it’s going from here.  From Hell’s Kitchen to Hells Angels?  Is DD gonna chill on Devil’s Peak?  Or drink from the Devil’s Punchbowl?
Daredevil #36

Daredevil #36

  • Uncanny X-Men #17 (Marvel): This isn’t a good sign: I don’t really remember what happened in #16.  Then again, maybe it’s the sign I’ve been waiting for all along. Maybe I should just be done with this book once and for all and put my four bucks toward something I won’t whine about every damn month.  Hmm.  Maybe save up for Rucka’s Cyclops book out in May.
  • X-Men #11 (Marvel): I swore after #10 that I was done.  That’s three times after only ten issues!  Sounds about right.
  • Curse #2 (BOOM!): I wasn’t overly impressed with #1.  Figure I’ll give it another shot.
  • Extinction Parade #5 (Avatar): I have an idea: let’s marry Max Brooks’s writing with Alex Maleev’s artwork.  That’d be something!  As it is, this is a tolerable exploration of the relationship between otherwise intolerable vampires and zombies brought to the page in the typical Avatar style.
  • The Midas Flesh #3 (BOOM!): #2 was one of our Top 5 Books of January!  Our needle’s pointing due Ryan North!
The Midas Flesh #3

The Midas Flesh #3

  • Quantum and Woody #8 (Valiant): James Asmus is keeping it crazy in his little corner of the Valiant Universe.  Always good for a laugh.
  • Unity #4 (Valiant): Outside of Mind MGMT, this is where Matt Kindt’s clearly most comfortable.  And with Kindt’s Rai reboot on the way, we’ll see just how comfortable.  Makes all the sense in the world that Valiant would be the best fit for him: he gets to remodel the house instead of simply moving the furniture around.

My daughter now expects a “present” every time I come home from the comic store.  Instead of just grabbing something off the shelf willy-nilly, I’m going in with a plan.  I’m calling it…

Avery’s Pick of the Week:

  • Scribblenauts Unmasked: Crisis of Imagination #2 (DC): There’s no doubt about it: Avery loves her superheroes.  While flipping through #1, however, she seemed to like the little villains the most.  I’m in trouble.
Scribblenauts Unmasked: Crisis of Imagination #2

Scribblenauts Unmasked: Crisis of Imagination #2

What are you looking forward to this week?

Turning pages,

Scott

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I&Nsight: A Voice in the Dark #4

18 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by ScottNerd in I&Nsight

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

A Voice in the Dark, Image, Larime Taylor, Top Cow

In his creator-owned A Voice in the Dark (Image/Top Cow), the amazingly talented writer and artist Larime Taylor emphatically embraces darkness as both inspiration and instigator.  He has exploited his relationship with the dark side to a great effect: A Voice in the Dark #1 received quite a bit of well-deserved attention and sold out at the distributor level before it even hit the stands; and through the first three issues, he’s used soul-eclipsing shadows as a grindstone for his own voice–to varying degrees of sharpness.

Sure, Taylor’s super-sized initial offering–delivered in a deliberately drawn out manner–laid an effective enough foundation and gave us something to enjoy–and, for many reasons, admire; but his voice reverberates most effectively in the tense second installment, in which Zoey–the morosely murderous protagonist, who happens to host a college radio call-in show–counsels a seemingly suicidal caller, who, shockingly, has planned to embrace an even darker -cide.  Taylor does a bang-up job of selling the suspense with his patient pacing, which erupts in a parricidal twist that throws Zoey for quite a loop.

Lamentably, that loop lasts the entirety of issue #3, on its own a carousel of conversation that triples down on a singular revelation, leaving us wondering if Taylor’s voice is focused too fervently on setting up what’s to come; if he’s unwilling or unable to collapse conversations, to lean out scenes, or to give us the credit we deserve as willing and able participants in this game–partners who don’t mind if our minds end up, in the case of a well-crafted comic, in the gutter, where we may fill in the gaps, as necessary.  Certainly, he–and #3–would’ve been better served had he followed his own killer advice: “Let’s leave a little to the imagination.”

A Voice in the Dark #4

A Voice in the Dark #4

It’s tough to imagine that Taylor would take a similar tack going forward.  Unfortunately, he does.  Issue #4–“Killing Game, Pt. 2,” in stores Wednesday (2/19)–is more of the same: while more effective than the previous part in the sense that the story isn’t stuck in the same cyclical set-up rut, the pacing problems persist as Taylor spells out every moment methodically, murdering any humor and any suspense–the pancake and butter of the series–with cruelly dull dialogue and a string of stereotypes that, like, read in mono.  Taylor’s heavy-handedness is highlighted, however, as the ethical dilemma at the heart of the issue–and the series as a whole–is played out clumsily in a college classroom, leaving me wondering if Taylor himself would concede that, along the way, “too many mistakes [were] made.”  If not mistakes, certainly questionable choices.  Hey, now there’s a topic worthy of debate!

So, the biggest question becomes, then: what choice will I make when I see #5 on the shelf in a month’s time?  If I’m being honest, I expected that Taylor’s voice after four issues would be scalpel sharp and that I would be celebrating his surgical precision with a splattering of bloodstained compliments, the happy result of my metaphorical exsanguination.  Surprisingly, the series has been more of a slow bleed: Taylor has inexplicably shunned momentum and, as a result, has unexpectedly left me in a position where I have to hold out hope that he can return to the form that made me a fan in the first place.  But it’s more than hope, really: I’m willing to stick around–probably for the remainder of the series–because I know Taylor has it in him; #2 is all the proof I need.  I trust–and I don’t do so lightly–that his voice is still being held to some soul-eclipsing shadow deep there in the dark; and, once ready, he’ll scream.

I want to be there to hear it.

Turning pages,

Scott

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What’s I&N Store (2/12)

11 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

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Stocking up before the next big storm.

  • Astro City #9 (DC/Vertigo): I’m enjoying the Winged Victory arc thus far.
  • Royals: Masters of War #1 (DC/Vertigo): The premise seems interesting enough, even if it is emerging–initially, anyway–in the shadow of Gillen’s Uber.  I’m willing to let Rob Williams and Simon Coleby live their fantasy.  Who knows: maybe they’ll rule.
Royals: Masters of War #1

Royals: Masters of War #1

  • Suicide Squad #28 (DC): Keeping on until Kindt kicks it.
  • Egos #2 (Image): The undeniably fresh egotwistical ending was enough to sell me on an otherwise stale story.
  • Fatale #20 (Image): #19 was one of our top books of January–and deservedly so:  Brubaker and Phillips hit all of the necrotizing notes we’ve come to expect and love.  Expecting to love this one just as much.
  • The Fuse #1 (Image): It’s an Image #1. And it has a cool logo. Count me in!
Fuse #1

Fuse #1

  • Manifest Destiny #4 (Image): #3 was a big step back. In fact, the flora zombies made me sad.
  • All-New X-Men #23 (Marvel): The Trial of Jean Grey? Ugh. More like the trial of my patience. If I’m being honest–and I always am when it comes to Bendis’s X-anything–I enjoyed the first half of #22. The comical conversation between Scott and Jean was pretty terrific. It sorta reminded me of what I loved about Bendis’s early work on Ultimate Spider-Man. Sigh. I miss Miles.
  • Winter Soldier: Bitter March #1 (Marvel): Insanity, I know: I keep returning to the Remender well and, not surprisingly, I keep coming up dry. Deadly Class fell flat, never separating itself in any significant way from its creditors. Thing is, darn it, I love the Winter Soldier. Trust me, though: I’m not insane enough to expect that Remender will fill my Bucky bucket like Brubaker; heck, I’m pretty sure he’s shooting for a different vibe all together. But I’ll take a bullet and see what I bleed.
  • X-Force #1 (Marvel): Si Spurrier won me pretty much for life with the brilliant Six-Gun Gorilla, our #3 book of 2013. So, yeah, count me in.
X-Force #1

X-Force #1

  • Death Sentence #5 (Titan): Love, love, love this mad independent clause. Montynero rocks hard, man. He and Mike Dowling are living fast and will most assuredly be leaving behind a classic corpse once the final chord is struck.
  • Harbinger #21 (Valiant): Still doing what the X-books should be doing.
  • Letter 44 #4 (Oni Press): Derek asked me why I’m still on board with this one. I told him I really like President Blades. No joke: three issues in and he’s one of my favorite ongoing characters. Unfortunately, everything else about the book has been mediocre at best.
  • Rachel Rising #23 (Abstract Studios): Our #5 book of 2013. So very good on all fronts, thanks to cartoonist extraordinaire Terry Moore. As beautiful as horror gets.
Rachel Rising #23

Rachel Rising #23

  • The Sixth Gun #38 (Oni Press): Still loaded. Can honestly say that I’ve never been disappointed with a single issue. Bunn and Hurtt will be remembered as one of the great writer/artist tandems for what they’ve done with this pretty perfect series.

What are you looking forward to tomorrow?

Turning pages,

Scott

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What’s I&N Store (2/5)

04 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by ScottNerd in What's I&N Store?

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Tags

All-New Invaders, Archer & Armstrong, Avatar, Brian Wood, Fred Van Lente, Garth Ennis, Greg Rucka, Image, J. Michael Straczynski, James Robinson, Jeff Lemire, Lazarus, Marvel, Michael DiPascale, Michael Lark, Pere Perez, Peter Milligan, Roberto De La Torre, Rover Red Charlie, Shadowman, Sidekick, Trillium, Twilight Zone, Valiant, Vertigo, X-Men

My clever introduction has been postponed indefinitely due to snow.

  • Trillium #6 (DC/Vertigo): #5 was flippin’ fantastic.  The balance between the two realities was rendered in a ridiculously meticulous manner.  In many ways, even more impressive than #1 in execution.  Can’t wait to get into this one.
Trillium #6

Trillium #6

  • Lazarus #6 (Image): #5 ended on a naturally disastrous note, one that echoes still, boding a symphony of construction–of resurrection.  Lucky for us, reigning master builders Rucka and Lark are a pair of heavies who always deliver as promised.
  • Sidekick #5 (Image): Engaging enough, though not J. Michael Straczynski’s best monthly.  That distinction goes to…
  • Twilight Zone #2 (Dynamite): #1 was a bit of a revelation, wasn’t it?  Terrific tone–totally Twilight Zone!
Twilight Zone #2

Twilight Zone #2

  • All-New Invaders #2 (Marvel): I’m sure that you’re a lot like me in thinking that it’s got to get better–that James Robinson is a lot better than his cliched riddled initial offering.  Sure, I’m going to try this one; but I’m not going to suffer through growing pains just because I know in my heart it should be good; so, if it doesn’t do it for me here, I’m out.
  • X-Men #10.NOW (Marvel): Another one I’m down on.  The series started off really well.  Brian Wood affected a strong, recognizable voice; in fact, it actually sounded like an X-book, with hints of Claremont, especially in the high notes.  Unfortunately, the “Battle of the Atom” smashed the title’s early momentum, leaving us with scattered neutrons, electrons, and promises.
  • Archer & Armstrong #0.2014 (Valiant): I’m guessing the story of Wee Obie Archer is going to buck the trend of zero-issues having zero value–if only because I expect nothing less from Fred Van Lente and Pere Perez.  Yeah: no throwaway here.
Archer & Armstrong #0.2014

Archer & Armstrong #0.2014

  • Rover Red Charlie #3 (Avatar): #2–like #1–had some really affective moments and some really awful moments.  Not expecting anything different; it’s the nature of the beast, innit?
  • Shadowman #15 (Valiant): Of all the books I get on a monthly basis, this one confounds me the most.  I don’t care a lick about the characters, but for some reason I really like the series.  Doesn’t hurt that Milligan and De La Torre have come together like peanut butter and chocolate.  Dark, dark chocolate.

What are you looking forward to tomorrow?

Turning pages,

Scott

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