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I&N Store 8/8

13 Monday Aug 2018

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Abstract Studio, aftershock comics, Amazing Spider-Man, berger books, black badge, boom studions, Catwoman, christopher cantwell, clankillers, Dan Slott, Dark Horse Comics, DC Comics, eternal empire, Fantastic Four, farmhand, hilary jenkins, hot lunch special, Image Comics, Images and Nerds, in demand, Joelle Jones, Jordie Bellaire, Kyle Higgins, Laura Allred, martin morazzo, Matt Kindt, Miroslav Mrva, NCBD, oblivion song, previews, reviews, sandman universe, she could fly, Stephen Mooney, strangers in paradise xxv, Superman, Terry Moore, the dead hand, Tom King, Tyler Jenkins, unnatural

I was on a frame vacation–which is a vacation within a vacation, of course–and didn’t have time to flesh out my previews for 8/8’s books.  So, for you Images and Nerds completists out there, here’s a quick rundown.  This go-round, said rundown will be more re- and less pre- as I’ve read all of our I&N Demand books.

Thanks for your understanding.

  • The Dead Hand #5 (Image): I&N Demand I’m loving this series.  Haven’t heard much buzz about it, but it’s really good.  Kyle Higgins is doing great work here, playing with paranoia, with isolation, with existentialism and with an external existential threat, which, at this point, has found its way into Mountain View, a community essentially built upon a cleverly conceived existential threat of its own–one that wears the face of and, more important, particularly as it pertains to the development of the pervasive danger in the book, exhibits the mental and emotional capacity of a child.  (Parents: hits pretty close to home, no?  Ha!  Another fine twist!)  Stephen Mooney’s artwork, accentuated by Jordie Bellaire’s colors, helps to stretch the tension from panel to panel, page to page, issue to issue.  Sure, the Cold War might be over, but there are bombs still waiting to go off–and a shit ton of them are planted in the pages of The Dead Hand.

dead

  • Eternal Empire #10 (Image)
  • Farmhand #2 (Image)
  • Oblivion Song #6 (Image)
  • Unnatural #2 (Image)
  • She Could Fly #2 (Dark Horse/Berger Books): I&N Demand The first issue was a promise; and with #2, Christopher Cantwell, Martin Morazzo, and Miroslav Mrva delivered on it.  For one, the book moves at a decapitating pace; yeah, the narrative threads–see, they’re piano wire, and the quick cuts’ll leave your head in your hands.  (The cover’s got that covered, yo.)  The madness that fuels the frenzy is manifested meticulously, which may seem contradictory in reflection, but instead makes sense–which, considering the nature of the creator-reader relationship, in the end, makes all the sense in this mad, mad, mad, mad world.  Cool touch: Luna’s barrettes look like devil horns.  You know, once I noticed that, I couldn’t not see it and was like Wow, cool touch.  I even showed my wife.  She said, “Oh, yeah” and then went back to her phone–on Pinterest or Etsy or Instagram or Match or whatever the hell it is she spends so much time on.  She could swipe, that one.  But She Could Fly, if it keeps up this level of storytelling, will touch the fucking sun.

she

  • Catwoman #2 (DC): I&N Demand Joëlle Jones has brought her sexy lines and lots of leather together to give us the solo Catwoman we knew we needed and have desperately wanted, especially since the Tom King proposed the whole Bat-Cat thing.  #1 hit a lot of great notes writing-wise and art-wise.  Some of those notes were echoes of Jones’ terrific Lady Killer, which was, in retrospect, the perfect audition for Catwoman.  This second issue didn’t scratch the same spots as the first, but Jones whipped up a solid issue nevertheless–particularly in the portrayal of Cat’s angst over the big Bat break up and the development of the mystery surrounding Lady Creel’s plan for Selina; and, again, with the lines and the leather–and the Laura Allred’s luscious colors–all of it justification for my objectification of the femme feline–it’s damn easy on the eyes.

STL088823

  • Sandman Universe #1 (DC/Vertigo)
  • Superman #2 (DC)
  • Amazing Spider-Man #3 (Marvel)
  • Fantastic Four #1 (Marvel): I&N Demand The First Family is back!  Well, they’re almost back–and that, kids, is your hook.  But could their return be Doom-ed from the start?  Can’t wait to see what Dan Slott’s got in store for comicdom’s most indispensable four.

STL096763

  • Black Badge #1 (BOOM!): I&N Demand I’m kind of a Kindt junkie, and, logically, following with more figurative language, Black Badge is my next fix–oh, and how satisfying #1 was.  Exploiting the same chemical formula that worked so well in the intoxicatingly agitative Grass Kings–Kindt+Jenkins^2=masterfully mature storytelling and a well-deserved Eisner nom–Black Badge bursts onto the scene like a nostalgia bomb with a perfectly-paced adventure that calls to mind the ubiquitous kidventure movies of the ’80s (Stand by Me and The Explorers were two of my faves) and mirrors those games my friends and I used to play on the farm, as we’d battle imaginary Nazis or Russians a la Where Eagles Dare or Red Dawn.  These kids, however, aren’t playing a game–and neither is the creative team: this is some dark stuff; and like good little scouts, we best be prepared for more.  See: “Nobody can do what [they] can do.  No one can go where [they] can go.”  (Hey! you say?  “They”? Doubled for your pleasure, fair reader!  OK, you got me: mostly for mine.)  For the week, Black Badge #1 is #1 with a bullet drone strike.

black.jpg

  • Clankillers #2 (Aftershock)
  • Hot Lunch Special #1 (Aftershock)
  • Strangers in Paradise XXV #5 (Abstract Studio): I&N Demand Terry Moore’s return to Paradise has been exhilarating, with familiar faces and events unfolding, particularly around Katchoo, at a breakneck pace.  #5 slows things down a bit a lot to offer a history lesson, which is meant to make the mystery lessen a lot a bit, which it does–though not before Moore uses Katchoo–and her big ol’ yawn–to let us know that it’s OK that we got a bit–yeah, a bit–beaten up by Tambi’s walking like an Egyptian through her explanation of the situation that plagues them both.  In the end, however, Katchoo faces defeat her feet and realizes that she’s got to change her attitude–and her longitude–if she’s going to get to the truth.  Another black and white beauty from Mr. Moore.

strange

 

Thanks for reading!

Turning pages,

Scott

 

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22 I&N 22: Survival Fetish #3

02 Thursday Aug 2018

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

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22 I&N 22, Antonio Fuso, Black Mask, Black Mask Studios, comic books, comics, Images and Nerds, imagesandnerds, Patrick Kindlon, review, Survival Fetish

surv

Survival Fetish #3–Cover by Antonio Fuso

 

Here’s my 22 I&N 22* for Survival Fetish #3 (Black Mask) by Patrick Kindlon (Writer), Antonio Fuso (Artist), and Jim Campbell (Letterer):

 

A masterful message! Saheer runs–as far as stories go: gets meta for a change; aims: to survive, to gun for greatness.

 

Let us know what you think–about Survival Fetish #3 and about 22 I&N 22!

Turning pages,

Scott

 

*22 I&N 22 is a 22-word review of a comic book–which is typically 22 pages long–done up I&N style, naturally.

 

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I&N Store 8/1

01 Wednesday Aug 2018

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

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Tags

Al Ewing, Ann Nocenti, Antonio Fuso, Avatar, Batman, Black Mask, Black Mask Studios, Brian K. Vaughan, Captain America, Cliff Chiang, Daniel Gete, David Aja, David Lapham, DC Comics, Garry Brown, Image, Image Comics, Jerome Opena, Kieron Gillen, Lee Weeks, Leviathan, Marvel, Mister Miracle, Mitch Gerads, Paper Girls, Patrick Kindlon, Rick Remender, Seven to Eternity, Stray Bullets, Stray Bullets: Sunshine and Roses, Survival Fetish, The Immortal Hulk, The Quantum Age, The Seeds, The Wilds, Tom King, Uber: Invasion

Since it’s summertime, I’m Superdad full time; so I’m lucky enough to have my two daughters with me when I go to my favorite LCS–the great Android’s Amazing Comics, of course.  The girls just love to browse the shop, to check out the comics–they really know how to handle them–and the blind bags–they certainly know how to handle them–and the–as my little one calls them–soft things: you know: a rainbow of My Little Ponies and blood-red My Murderous Deadpools–all the things kids love!  Oh, it’s such a joy, especially since they let me take my time–without any distractions at all!–at the big wall of new books.

I pray I find these:

  • Leviathan #1 (Image)
  • Paper Girls #23 (Image)
  • Seven to Eternity #10 (Image)
  • Stray Bullets: Sunshine and Roses #37 (Image): I&N Demand I loved #36!  It’s easily one of my favorite single issues of the year.  David Lapham emptied his clip into that one: Spanish Scott and Monster–talk about toxic masculinity!  (Oooh, this issue’s a black and white Superfund site!)  “Monsters are comin’,” indeed!  Gotta love those bad dudes–but not as much as Love Yourself–err—himself.  I fell for that fucker right away, and it’s no surprise why: on the surface, he’s sunshine and roses; but on the inside, there’s some kinda complicated shit goin’ on.  The love, the pain, the humor in the bespectacled face of death–I rooted my ass off for Love.  And that final page, tho.  That‘s a stray bullet right through the motherfucking heart.  Color me kinda nervous going into this next one.  Fucking monsters.

stray

  • The Quantum Age #2 (Dark Horse)
  • The Seeds #1 (Dark Horse/Berger Books): I&N Demand In short:David Aja–just bee cause.  A maze sting!  (To quote Eisner-winner Tom King, who is very I&N Demand this week: “I’m sorry.”)

seed

  • Batman #52 (DC): I&N Demand Batman vs. Bruce Wayne!  OK, so Bruce was a little hot after being left at the ledge.  Does that mean he–as Bat–had to put the heat on Freeze?  Hell yeah it does!  But Bruce gets it: he knows he went too far; and now, to remedy the situation, he’s got to fight eleven fellow Gothamites–those very citizens he’s fought for all along while wearing the cape and cowl!  I can’t wait to see how this plays out.  Tom King–FYI: CIA BEF DC–takes his take on torture/enhanced interrogation techniques to the chilly jury room, and Lee Weeks kills it with his gritty realism.  All together, #51 is powerful issue that sets up one heck of a Battle–let the deliberations begin!

bat

  • Mister Miracle #10 (DC): I&N Demand I’ve never cared for the New Gods.  But now–now I care about the New Gods–because through nine issues, the New King has taken us through one emotional Boom Tube after another.  He–with the Eisner-winning help of Mitch Gerads–has got the gods grounded in the real and still they’re goddin’ it well enough to make it all so much more.  One thing Scott Free will never escape: Tom King–they’re chained together forevermore.

miracle

  • Captain America #2 (Marvel)
  • The Immortal Hulk #4 (Marvel): I&N Demand I really liked #1.  #2 was aight.  It had me kinda like Do I need this?  (Already droppin’ lots of green every Wednesday, so…)  I picked up #3 anyway and was totally Whoa!  Al Ewing won me over with the multiple-perspectives-as-offered-by-multiple-artists approach.  (Excited to see Garry Brown bangin’ out Big Green.)  Loved it!  It was incredible immortal!  Happy to see, too, a little Alpha Flight action there at the end.  As I told someone recently–if commenting on Instagram counts as telling: Alpha Flight is the bacon of comics: they make any book better! Two gamma-irradiated biceps way waaaaay up!  Hoping this one flexes its muscles, too.

hulk

  • Survival Fetish #3 (Black Mask): I&N Demand Through two, the all-ways moving Survival Fetish really gratifies: the premise is super sexy; Patrick Kindlon’s writing is sharp–the narration and the dialogue double-teaming to deliver an engaging read; but the star of the show is Antonio Fuso, whose black and white art scrupulously sells Saheer’s experience–his ever-evolving “movement”–and, ultimately, runs this fucking town.  In fact, I’m gonna sprint to the comic shop as soon as it opens to get my hands on this one–’cause there’ll probably only be one or two on the shelf and it’d suck to miss it–especially after the wait (it’s been a while) and after having re-read #2 to get my feet under me.  Damn that was good!

surv

  • Uber: Invasion #15 (Avatar)
  • The Wilds #4 (Black Mask)

What are you looking forward to this week?

Turning pages,

Scott

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22 I&N 22: Redneck #13

28 Saturday Jul 2018

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

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Tags

22 I&N 22, 22I&N22, comic, comic book, comic book review, dee cunniffe, Donny Cates, Image, Image Comics, Images and Nerds, imagesandnerds, joe sabino, lisandro estherren, poetic review, poetry, redneck, review

red

Redneck #13–Cover by Estherren & Cunniffe

 

Here’s my 22 I&N 22* for Redneck #13 (Image) by Donny Cates (Writer), Lisandro Estherren (Artist),  Dee Cunniffe (Colorist), and Joe Sabino (Letterer):

 

July’s heat: a homicidal sun over a desert of doubt; hero, thirsting for redemption, runs from and to the past—a blast!

 

Let us know what you think–about Redneck and about 22 I&N 22!

Turning pages,

Scott

 

*22 I&N 22 is a 22-word review of a comic book–which is typically 22 pages long–done up I&N style, naturally.

 

 

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22 I&N 22: Bone Parish #1

27 Friday Jul 2018

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22I&N22, Alex Guimarães, bone parish, boom studios, BOOM!, comic books, comics, Cullen Bunn, Ed Dukeshire, imagesandnerds, jonas scharf, review, Scott

bone

Bone Parish #1: Cover by Lee Garbett

Here’s my 22 I&N 22* for Bone Parish #1 (BOOM!) by Cullen Bunn (Writer), Jonas Scharf (Artist),  Alex Guimarães (Colorist), & Ed Dukeshire (Letterer):

 

A lyrical rush–ashen hearts, partners in trade, cheat life with bumps of fleeting dead. With emptiness the alternative–just say yes.

 

Let us know what you think–about Bone Parish and about 22 I&N 22!

Turning pages,

Scott

 

*22 I&N 22 is a 22-word review of a comic book–which is typically 22 pages long–done up I&N style, naturally.

 

 

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I&N Store 7/25

24 Tuesday Jul 2018

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a walk through hell, Aftershock, albatross, albatross funny books, Ales Kot, Black Mask, bone parish, boom studios, BOOM!, comic book preview, comic book review, comic books, comics, Cullen Bunn, eric powell, Garth Ennis, george orwell, Goran Sudzuka, gravetrancers, hillbilly, I&N Store, Image Comics, jonas scharf, new world, orwell, preview, previews, review, Scott, shooting an elephant, Tradd Moore, unsound

Hey!  Thanks for coming back around.   I hope you enjoy your visit.

First, I’d like to share an important update: I’m all caught up!  That’s right, I&Nmates: I’ve read everything–Every. Flippin’. Floppy. in my possession–including the procrastinative Calexit, issues #2 and #3, which were, in the end, not surprisingly, all right left.

Wow.  I’ve killed the pile, and it feels good. You know what I’m talking about: nothing burdens a comic book nerd quite like being behind a week or a month with his or her reading.

With that load taken off of my desk–a white IKEA secretary for you I&N completists–I’m re-energized and ready to let ‘er rip–so here’s what’s I&N Store this week:

  • The New World #1 (Image): I&N Demand  A few years ago, when we were still writing the good write, we celebrated Ales Kot as the writer of the moment: his voice was potent; it was poetry.  He had us hearing things and experiencing things and thinking things in ways that were unexpected.  Compared to the other solid books that populated the shelf and, ultimately, our bags, his books, particularly Zero, were just more.  Speaking of more: one of the reasons I decided to return to writing about what I love is Kot’s own Days of Hate–specifically #5, the near-silent, explosively tri-ing narrative, presented perfectly by Danijel Zezelj and Jordie Bellaire–which has, through six issues, conducted in me the synaptic symphony to which I became addicted when I was deep into Zero–or, more so, when Zero was deep into me.  Deeper still: as a self-proclaimed Always Kot-er, I will gleefully grab the 72-page initial offering of The New World–with art from the Lord of Lines, Tradd Moore–because when it comes to Kot, more is more and, damn, I’m ready to read, ready to explore.

new.jpg

  • Redneck #13 (Image)
  • Royal City #13 (Image)
  • Saga #54 (Image)
  • Action Comics #1001 (DC)
  • Doomsday Clock #6 (DC)
  • Amazing Spider-Man #2 (Marvel)
  • Bone Parish #1 (BOOM!): I&N Demand Cullen Bunn kicked my ass with his hell-raising run on Harrow County, issue for issue, the best regular monthly horror book of the last few years.  After having said goodbye to Emmy and having left Harrow in good hands, Bunn’s back with Bone Parish, a drug-laced horror book that, interestingly enough, in a kind of The Prestige vs. The Illusionist-style turf battle, seems to live in the same cemetery as Black Mask’s addictive Gravetrancers, which just so happens to be out this week, too!  Now, that book is bonkers–story-wise and art-wise; and, in that, it’s a good time, man–yeah, it’s an effing trip.  I’m pretty sure, however, that Bunn’s book–with art from Jonas Scharf–is going to be a bit tighter.  Take the underappreciated Unsound, for example: Bunn got gleefully unhinged during that paper plate masquerade, yet the story still felt grounded–even when the ground was the ceiling!  So, will I be comparing Bone Parish to Gravetrancers?  Of course.  Anyone who’s read the latter has an obligation to test the former–to see if it transcends its predecessor or if it falls flat. Hey: my bag ain’t no vacuum, after all: it’s some prime–and responsibly recycled–real estate; and these two death-drug lords, Bunn and Miller, will be throwing down–if only for this one day–to claim the turf.  We’ll soon see who’s got the write stuff white stuff the goods and who’s got the betters.

bone

  • Britannia: Lost Eagles of Rome #1 (Valiant)
  • Crossed+One Hundred: Mimic #4 (Avatar)
  • Gravetrancers #4 (Black Mask)
  • Hillbilly #12 (Albatross): I&N Demand It’s all led to this–every step, every story, every swing of Rondel’s cleaver: witches–lots and lots of witches–vs. the Iron Child and his newly-raised army.  Eric Powell has taken us on quite a journey; with each issue and one into the next, he’s crafted an epic for the ages.  I’ll be sad when it’s over, that’s for damn sure; but it ain’t over until the Hillbilly swings–one last time.

hill

  • A Walk Through Hell #3 (Aftershock): I&N Demand During the terrifying stretch of road that was #2, Garth Ennis and Goran Sudzuka unloaded with the increasingly uncomfortable self-inflicted Passion of Huzikker, the suicidal centerpiece of a crazy spent-shell game of an issue.  The never-ending barrage of bullets had me emotionally ducking for cover, had me silently begging for the poor guy to die–not unlike the response George Orwell demands with his revolutionary short piece “Shooting an Elephant.”  (Why won’t the effing thing die already!)  Another selling point, of course, is Ennis’s living anew in law enforcement.  (This reads not unlike Red Team with a twist of dread–which would make this, wait for it, Dread Team.)  No one cops cop speak like Ennis; yes, as always, his dialogue is to die for.  And speaking of dying: I’m in no rush–and neither is Ennis, clearly; it is “a walk through hell,” after all.  The terror he’s harnessed is born of the waiting and the wonder; so, yeah, let’s walk.

walk

  • X-O Manowar #17 (Valiant)

Yay!  A new pile!  You know what I’m talking about: nothing excites a comic book nerd quite like having a new pile of comics on his or her desk.

What are you looking forward to this week?

Turning pages,

Scott

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22 I&N 22: Ether: The Copper Golems #3

23 Monday Jul 2018

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

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22I&N22, comic books, comics, Dark Horse Comics, david rubín, ether, ether the copper golems, Matt Kindt

I’m very excited to introduce a new I&N feature: 22 I&N 22.

In short: 22 I&N 22 is a 22-word review of a comic book–which is typically 22 pages long–done up I&N style, naturally.

The first book to get  the 22 I&N 22 treatment: Matt Kindt and David Rubín’s Ether: The Copper Golems #3 (Dark Horse).

copper

All right, that was a lot of build up for a 22-word review; so with that necessary evil necessarily exorcised, going forward, no build up–just the review:

Despite challenging heat and posture-provoking peril, Boone Dias and crew sweat the hole thing–a dichotomous romp, both visually and intellectually “delicious”!

Let us know what you think–about Ether and about 22 I&N 22!

Turning pages,

Scott

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I&N Store 7/18

18 Wednesday Jul 2018

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

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Todd Rundgren sang:

“Hello, it’s me…”

Staind offered:

“It’s been awhile…”

I’ve been turning pages all along, just haven’t had time to write about them.  Well, guess what I found between the couch cushions along with some Cheez-Its and loose change.  That’s right: sand–a bit too much sand.  We’re beach people, sure; so some sand’s to be expected–but enough to find Abraham Lincoln circa 1994 buried up to his E plurabis unum?  Yeesh!

So, yeah: symbolism.

Back to business: here’s what I’m looking forward to this week.

  • Crude #4 (Image)
  • East of West #38 (Image)
  • Evolution #8 (Image)
  • Gideon Falls #5 (Image) I&N Demand Through four issues, Gideon Falls is flawless.  Thanks to Andrea Sorrentino’s slick artwork and innovative layouts,  Jeff Lemire’s patience is parlayed perfectly into panel-to-panel and page-to-page paranoia–so much so that I’ve p’ed myself just writing about it! Sure, it was sad to see Bunn and Crook’s Harrow County come to an end; but as Gideon Falls continues to rise, it’s clear that the horror genre is in evil, evil hands.

  • Ice Cream Man #5 (Image)
  • Infidel #5 (Image)
  • Mage: The Hero Denied #10 (Image)
  • Royal City #12 (Image)
  • Skyward #4 (Image)
  • The Weatherman #2 (Image)
  • Ether: The Copper Golems #3 (Dark Horse): I&N Demand Ether is lit!  Oh, yeah, it’s got me feeling Jung again: Matt Kindt’s exploration of the “collective unconscious,” as seen through the exploits of the brave and bold Boone Dias, is a masterful extension of the literary legacy that has brought us all here, to this book, to this point in our lives–as individuals, and as a part of the weCloud that we all draw and write from.  The masterful David Rubín amplifies the conflict at the core of the story–science (and its reliance on reason) vs. magic (analogous to art in all its mystical and mythical forms, of course)–by joyfully leaping from traditional panel work to otherworldly layouts that are visually arresting and liberating at the same time!  All together, this is a reader’s read, and I can’t wait to read #3.  Highest of praise: through the first two issues of this second volume of Ether, I’m brought back several years to how I felt while reading Spurrier and Stokely’s literary love letter Six-Gun Gorilla.  And considering Kindt’s premise, that makes all the sense in the world.

copper

  • Batman #51 (DC) I&N Demand I had trouble conveying my relationship with #50 to my wife of 8 years—partly because I was broken man and partly because she didn’t care. See: I read it at around 1 a.m. on the 4th and got so lost in it: I fell in love with having fallen in love with the idea of Bruce and Selina; and then, predictably, I got so pissed off with the impossibility of their coming together–even though it made all the sense in the world; and then I was all WTF with the last page; and then, tired and wired, I considered a crazy coupling of King-sized consequences: dethroning and deification of the true mastermind behind it all.  For having felt all of this, I realized that I loved the issue and–as my wife suggested during my unsolicited attempt at Bat and Catharsis–I loved Tom King and wanted to marry him.  See what Bruce is going to miss out on!  So, since things didn’t work out so well, particularly for the hubby-not-to-be, I’m sure there will be some Bat-sized consequences coming up in “Cold Days.”  It might take Weeks–whose gritty style will serve as a terrific contrast to the clean computer art of his predecessor, Mikel Janin–but I trust that King will work it all out and my wife still won’t care.

  • Deathbed #6 (DC/Vertigo)
  • The Wildstorm #15 (DC)
  • The Immortal Hulk #3 (Marvel)

That didn’t hurt nearly as much as I figured it would.

Thanks for reading.

What are you looking forward to this week?

Turning pages,

Scott

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Derekommendations: 8/9/17

09 Wednesday Aug 2017

Posted by dmainhart in Derekommendations, Uncategorized

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Tags

Black Hammer, Clue, Crypt-Keeper, DC Comics, Erica Henderson, IDW, Marvel, Mister Miracle, Mitch Gerads, Nelson Daniel, Paul Allor, Ryan North, Silver Surfer, The Sheriff of Babylon, the unbeatable Squirrel Girl, The Vision, Tom King

Here are my 3 must-read comics for this Wednesday:

Mister Miracle #1 (DC): Tom King and Mitch Gerads crafted the best comic book of last year with The Sheriff of Babylon, a shattering, close-up deconstruction of the everyday tragedies created by the fog of war. King also created last year’s best superhero comic in The Vision. In that book, he used the creative latitude afforded in penning a B-lister to orchestrate a tale about a family of androids, living in suburbia, that incorporated bits of Mary Shelley, Philip K. Dick and Leave It To Beaver. The resultant tale explored, amongst other trivialities, death, prejudice, and what it means to be human. Throughout, King established a pitch-perfect tone that was absurd, poetic and tragic, frequently all at once. One hopes that in working with another character not-well known outside of comic circles, King and Gerads will produce something similarly profound.

MISTER MIRACLE #1

Mister Miracle #1

The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl #23 (Marvel): If you already aren’t reading this comic book about a computer-science grad student with the powers of a squirrel (who is soon to be featured in a gosh-darn TV show), you’re missing out on the best superhero book that isn’t Black Hammer or Silver Surfer. Ryan North continues to delight with buoyant, laugh-out-loud writing that manages to feel upbeat and empowering without a trace of didactic, self-congratulatory posturing (hear that Saga?). If you still need an excuse to jump on this book, the current story allows the inimitable Mr. North to return to his first love: Dinosaurs! The child-like exuberance North obviously feels for the subject is matched by Erica Henderson’s energetic, Ditko-inflected art. The joy in this book is infectious.

UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #23

The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl #23

Clue #3 (IDW): Yes, I can feel your eye-roll: a book that’s an obvious corporate tie-in to a friggin’ board game? Has Battleship taught me nothing?! But my childhood affection for said game, as well as the cult-favorite movie it inspired (itself a corporate tie-in) impelled me to give it a shot (Or a candlestick. Whatever.). Happily, like the movie, Paul Allor’s story benefits from a wacky cast, clever pacing and an off kilter sense of humor. Nelson Daniel’s art contributes some fittingly comedic touches, especially in terms of staging and page layout. And Clue features that hallowed comic book trope, the mordant, omniscient narrator/host (think the Crypt-Keeper except with impeccable manners and in a butler’s suit). Except it seems he’s not so omniscient after all. Hmm….

CLUE #3 CVR B DANIEL

Clue #3

Happy Wednesday!

-Derek

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What’s I&N Store (9/28)

28 Wednesday Sep 2016

Posted by ScottNerd in Uncategorized

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There’s no debate: these are the only books worth my vote this week:

  • Action Comics #964 (DC)
  • Astro City #39 (DC/Vertigo)
  • Deathstroke #3 (DC): I&N Demand

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  • Detective Comics #941 (DC)
  • Hal Jordan & The Green Lantern Corps #5 (DC)
  • Wonder Woman #7 (DC)
  • Saga #38 (Image)
  • Steve Rogers: Captain America #5 (Marvel): I&N Demand

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  • Civil War II: Kingpin #3 (Marvel): I&N Demand

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  • Captain Kid #2 (Aftershock)
  • Generation Zero #2 (Valiant)
  • Hillbilly #3 (Albatross): I&N Demand

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  • Kim & Kim #3 (Black Mask): I&N Demand

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  • The Paybacks #3 (Heavy Metal)
  • Sombra #3 (BOOM!)

Avery’s Picks of the Week:

  • Scooby-Doo Team-Up #18 (DC)
  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic #46 (IDW)
  • Strawberry Shortcake #6 (IDW)
  • Disney Princess #6 (Joe Books)

What are you looking forward to this week?

Turning pages,

Scott

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