Showing posts with label bluewater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bluewater. Show all posts

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Review- Free Comic Book Day offerings, Episode IV

Free Comic Book Day offerings, Episode IV

The beauty of hitting seven shops on FCBD is getting a smorgasbord of titles. Some of these are leftover stock from previous FCBD but I grabbed anything that I had not grabbed during the day.

The Censored Howard Cruse Free Comic Book Day Edition (Boom, cover date May, 2012)
Underground comics have never been my cup of tea. Still, these are decent and enjoyable enough for what they are. I can't say that I would ever consider buying a book of it, though.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 2 out of 5.



The Mis-Adventures Of Adam West/ Walter Koening's Things To Come flipbook (Bluewater Comics, cover date 2011)
Bluewater's output is readable but I wouldn't buy this. Recycle bin material or sunlight/dust shortbox handle blocker? You decide.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 2 out of 5.


Skyward Halloween ComicFest Edition (Action Lab Entertainment, cover date October, 2013)
This is decent and entertaining enough. I am not running out to buy more, but I also did not throw it in the recycle bin when I finished it.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 2.5 out of 5.


Molly Danger Featuring Princeless: Free Comic Book Day one-shot (Action Lab Entertainment, cover date May, 2013)
I like reading comic books. I will read almost anything if it is A) a physical copy and B) it is free. It is when I pay for things that I become choosier. I would never pay to read Princeless, as it is abysmal. Molly Danger was tolerable if forgettable.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 1 out of 5.



Viper Comics Presents Volume One (Viper Comics, cover date April, 2006)
A variety of different, equally uninteresting concepts. The only one that might be worth killing a tree to make is The Dummy's Guide To Danger, and even that might be pushing it.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 0.75 out of 5.



Shigeru Mizuki's Showa: A History Of Japan (Drawn & Quarterly, cover date 2014)
I am not much of a Manga fan but can enjoy anything that is well done. This was enjoyable enough. I dislike backwards opening, right to left reading traditional format Japanese comics. They piss me off and are unnatural. Still, this was an okay way to waste a slice of my day.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 3 out of 5. 

Friday, October 11, 2013

Review- VINCENT PRICE PRESENTS VOL. 6 TP


VINCENT PRICE PRESENTS VOL. 6 (Bluewater, 2013; Softcover)

Collects Vincent Price Presents Nos. 2, 6, 12, and “The Hampster”, which I cannot find (cover dates October, 2008- August, 2009)

Writers: Nick Lyons and Chad Helder

Artists: Bang Thai, R.H. Stewart, and Giovanni Timpano

Colorists: Alexander Tobler, Jesse Heagy, and Ryan S. Burt

This is readable Horror stuff, but the artwork is pretty bad. The stories themselves are okay, but the artwork and coloring are strictly amateur hour. I mean, the artwork stinks. The first two stories are about a gumshoe detective who stumbles onto macabre happenings. There is some potential to this tried and true scenario but it is squandered by the subpar artwork.

This is a print on demand book, available at www.comicfleamarket.com. I do not understand the whys and wherefores as to how Bluewater collects their issues. Why not just collect every issue? It's not like these issues in this book are their best foot forward or anything. I have read a few single issues of the title over the years and there are certainly higher quality ones than these to choose from. I am more disappointed that the potential of this title hasn't been realized as much as I am in the low quality of these stories.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 2 out of 5.

The OCD zone- The mapping of this book is pure clowntown. The pages are out of sequence in chapter one (Issue 6), making it seem like you are reading some Garth Ennis time displaced story...only you're not, it's just that someone made a huge mistake mapping this book out. A page in chapter 2 is repeated. Both sides of the same sheet of paper have the same page.

There is no indication where these issues were originally published. I had to waste a fair amount of time on various comic book database sites and still wasn't able to piece everything together. Terrible. There are also typos on the Table of Contents on the inside of the front cover.

The cover to issue 1 is used for chapter 4, even though it is not issue 1 which is reprinted. The covers of this series are some of the best things about it, and yet they are rarely collected in these books. Why? The only thing that I can guess are royalties.

DVD-style Extras included in this book: Extras? I'd have been happy with the basics, like listing which issues are collected in this particular book!

Paper rating: 4.25 out of 5. This has a surprisingly decent weight coated stock paper, which shocked me given the independent, small press print on demand thing. I like it.

Binding rating: 3 out of 5. While the glued binding is solid and doesn't creak, man is it tight. It takes a lot of effort to hold open and read. If the book were heavier it could be used as a pectoral workout machine. Having said that, I have zero concern about this book falling apart. I believe that I will fall apart before this binding will.

Cardstock cover coating rating: 4.5 out of 5. While the cover doesn't have a super thick lamination, it is decent and scuff resistant. I'm happy.



Monday, September 2, 2013

Reviews- LOGAN'S RUN: AFTERMATH, Mystery Men #1, and Barack The Barbarian #2


LOGAN'S RUN: AFTERMATH (Bluewater, 2013; Softcover)

Collects Logan's Run: Aftermath Nos. 1-4 (cover dates May-August, 2011) plus the digital only 5 and 6

Writer: Paul J. Salamoff

Artists: Phillip Simpson, Mike Dorman, Carsten Biernat, and Angel Bernuy
Colorists: Aurelio Alfonso, Juan Martin, and Jesse Heagy

This is set in the continuity of the original novel but fans who only know of the movie will be able to piece things together easily enough. This book has been in limbo for years, ever since Diamond revised their policies of what size comic companies they will and won't deal with. Many small press publishers were kicked to the curb with no viable distribution to comic shops. Haven tried but comics is a tough business for the big guys, let alone for a start-up distribution company.

Boring business talk aside, this is a good read with subpar artwork and coloring. While the 2010 mini-series Logan's Run: Last Day was outstanding, the artwork here detracts from the reading experience. I enjoyed this but would have liked it more with better artwork. Many of these artists are greenhorns whose best work is likely still ahead of them, so I'll cut them some slack.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 2.25 out of 5.

The OCD zone- This is a print on demand book, making the idea of ascertaining what “printing” a book is irrelevant. It's maddening in it's own way, though.
This book is smaller than a standard trade paperback release and is what the industry calls the Graphic Novel-Trade Paperback size, whatever that means. The dimensions are 5.8 x 8.8 inches (14.732 x 22.352 centimeters for my friends in the Metric system measuring world outside of the United States, Liberia, and Burma).
Issues 5 and 6 of the Last Day mini-series remain uncollected. Hashtag sadface.

DVD-style Extras included in this book: Issue 1's Cover B.

Paper rating: 4.25 out of 5. This has a surprisingly decent weight coated stock paper, which shocked me given the independent, small press print on demand thing.

Binding rating: 2 out of 5. While the glued binding is solid and doesn't creak, man is it tight. It takes a lot of effort to hold open and read. If the book were heavier it could be used as a pectoral workout machine.

Cardstock cover coating rating: 4.5 out of 5. While the cover doesn't have a super thick lamination, it is decent and scuff resistant. I'm happy.

This is available as a print on demand book at Comic Flea Market.

Here is my review of the other Bluewater book, Logan's Run: Last Day.
 
You can also buy NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD VOL. 1 TP and HC as well as EX MACHINA VOL. 10 TP at InStockTrades. (They were featured in the same posting for my review of Last Day).



Mystery Men #1 (Marvel, cover date August, 2011)

Writer: David Liss

Artist: Patrick Zircher

Colorist: Andy Troy

Green Brain Comics in Dearborn, MI was having their end of summer sale where they blow out dead inventory like this at 90% off cover price. I was curious about this series when it first came out and had thought about checking out the inevitable collected edition but things get by me. Time and money, wife and kids, folks. Anyways, I snagged it for a cool 30 cents and thought that it was really good stuff. It takes place in Marvel Universe continuity in the pulp hero era of the early 1930s when The Shadow and Doc Savage ruled the newsstands. Great writing, great artwork, and great coloring. I will make it a point to check the trade or hardcover out at some point...if I don't forget about it again.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 4.5 out of 5. 



Barack The Barbarian #2 (Devil's Due, cover date July, 2009)

Writer: Larry Hama

Artist: Christopher Schons

Colorist: Rachelle Rosenberg

Another 90% off find at Green Brain, this complements my copy of issue 1 which I got for free on Free Comic Book Day 2013. This is filled with groan inducing bad puns but I found it worth a chuckle. Fun political parody from a time when it seemed like Obama was going to fix the country. Now we're knee deep in the Government spying on our electronic communications and cellphone calls and about to enter another war. Meet the new boss, the same as the old boss...

Back to the comic at hand, this is filled with parodies of people in the political spotlight of 2008-2009. Red Sarah, Boosh The Dim, Hilaria, Harry Burden, Limbow (a creature who takes prescription potions which make him impervious to pain), and of course Choler (Ann Coulter), a barbed tongue monstrosity, among others. This comic will only become more dated as time goes on, with comic fans of the future not being able to make much sense of the gags. Oh well, for 35 cents it was a gas.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 3 out of 5.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Reviews: VINCENT PRICE PRESENTS VOL. 4 and STYX AND STONE


VINCENT PRICE PRESENTS VOL. 4

Collects Vincent Price Presents Nos. 13-16 (cover dates November, 2009- March, 2010)

Writers: Adriano, Clark Castillo, Mel Smith, Paul J. Salamoff, and others

Artists: Adriano, Najda Smith, Manuel Moreira, Osmarco Vallado, and others

I was lucky enough to get free digital copies of several Bluewater titles to review, and this was the first one that I dived in to. I bought the first trade paperback upon release and pre-ordered Vol. 2 every time that it was solicited, watching it be delayed, Diamond cancelling it, etc. I believe that it was going to be called the Vincent Price Presents Omnibus at one point. In any case, Vols. 2-4 will see physical releases sooner than later thanks to Bluewater entering into a new distribution deal with Comic Flea Market.


I am thankful for that, because VPP offers an interesting take on the Horror anthology, which each issue being a complete story. The creative team changes with every issue, so things are never the same. The first story deals with Anton Phibes, a 1920s criminal who has left a trail of victims across the pond. Inspector Trout from Scotland Yard comes to New York in the final days of 1999 to help his nephew, a police detective, unravel the mystery and nail Phibes.


The second story deals with alternate realities and the schizophrenic mind. The third chapter/issue are about a charlatan antique dealer and a tale of revenge. In the final, and best story, a scientific breakthrough in the quest for a cure for Alzheimer's turns out to be the creator's undoing. This device, the Oscillator, “re-threads” one's memories using a photograph as the impetus for reliving the memory in every detail. When the creator relives his past, it proves to be his undoing in the present and, ultimately, the future.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 3.5 out of 5.


 
STYX & STONE

Original graphic novel by Stefano Cardoselli

Detective Melvyn Stone and James Wyatt, whose spirits joined together when The One spared Wyatt from death, are on a mission to try and balance out good and evil. The premise is reminiscent of both Haunt and Brother Voodoo. Styx is a demon that wants the soul of Wyatt. There is also a serial killer afoot, and watching Detective Stone try to solve the case while dealing with his “shadow” Wyatt was interesting. I didn't see the ending coming at all. 


The writing in dense and there is a lot of story here. The artwork is not my cup of tea but conveys the story clearly. This isn't the best comic that I've read, but it is certainly worthwhile and provided me with some solid entertainment.
Junk Food For Thought rating: 3 out of 5.

The OCD zone- This section is normally reserved for ultra-nitpicky commentary on paper and binding. Since this was a PDF, I will instead comment on the digital reading experience. I had never read more than a few page sneak preview of any comic book on an electronic device before this. I spend too much time staring at screens and prefer the physical, escapist pleasure of reading comic books and their collected edition counterparts. Still, with zoom one can read a page in almost the same fashion as a regular comic book. It's not my cup of tea, but there are certainly a several advantages to this format. The clear advantage of digital is ease of storage and durability. No paper to damage, no bags and boards. Digital is ultimately not for me, though. I will gladly plunk down for a physical copy of this book even though I have a digital copy. I hope that publishers will at least offer print on demand books in the all-digital future.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Reviews: Logan's Run: Last Day; Night of the Living Dead; Ex Machina Vol. 10: Term Limits





LOGAN'S RUN: LAST DAY (Bluewater, 2010; softcover)

Collects Logan's Run: Last Day Nos. 1-4 (cover dates January- April, 2010)

Logan's Run is equal parts passion and nostalgia for me. While I was too young to catch the 1976 theatrical release, I did see it re-run in syndication a number of times in the late '70s and early '80s. For a kid who was enamored with Star Wars and  Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Logan's Run was equally awesome. This series is closer to the book than the movie and is exceptionally well done, with great writing by Jason Brock and Paul J. Salamoff (adapting the William F. Nolan novel) and tremendous artwork by Daniel Gete. Heck, even colorist Joseph Baker deserves a shout out for the tasteful job that he did on the series.

Not ALL is rosy, though: Bluewater originally solicited this as a 6 issue trade, but when it came out, only the first four issues were included. The arc isn't even resolved in this trade, ending on a cliffhanger. I hope that they put those two issues in the next Logan's Run trade. I won't complain too much, though, because 4 issues at a MSRP $14.99 from an independent publisher with licensing fees isn't TOO bad, I suppose. I would've rather had the complete 6 issue series in one book, though. That aside, what could be stopping you from treating yourself to this? 



NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD VOL. 1 (Avatar, 2010; Softcover)

Collects George A. Romero's Night of the Living Dead No. 1, Night of the Living Dead: Back From The Grave No. 1, Night of the Living Dead: Hunger, Night of the Living Dead: Just A Girl No. 1, Night of the Living Dead: New York No. 1 and Night of the Living Dead: The Beginning Nos. 1-3 (cover dates August, 2006- 2009)

Avatar Press continually produces quality material, and this is another fine offering from them. These issues take place before and after the original movie, and are co-written by original creator and movie script co-writer John Russo. The artwork is serviceable if unremarkable (see cover image above), with the exceptions being the issues done by Fabio Janses and Edison George. All of the variant covers are included as DVD-style extras, and the Jacen Burrows ones are my favorites. On the OCD side of things, the book has sewn binding and is printed on high-quality paper. A nice package and a good read.



EX MACHINA VOL. 10: TERM LIMITS (Wildstorm/DC, 2010; softcover)

Collects Ex Machina Nos. 45-50 (cover dates November, 2009- September, 2010)

Wow! This series has remained a favorite of mine, and while I am sad to see it end, it ended with a HUGE bang! Like all great endings, there are questions left unanswered. No one could've seen it coming, no way no how, and there is no way in Hell that I'm going to tell you how it ended. If you have not checked this series out, start with the first issue or the first trade paperback and go from there. Brian K. Vaughan and Tony Harris have made a series for the ages here, and one day I am going to sit down and re-read all 10 trade paperbacks in a row.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

The Rise and Fall of Junk Food For Thought

Logan's Run: Last Day #1 (Bluewater, cover date January, 2010)
Wow, this was shockingly good stuff. I am a lifelong Logan's Run fan and this is closer to the original novel than the 1976 feature film which, in my opinion, is one of the greatest movies ever made. I will probably wait for the trade to read the rest of this, and I can't wait for it to be collected. This comic book is printed on some super heavy-duty paper, with each page being roughly as thick as the cover.


SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL VOL. 2 (DC, 2003)
Collects Action Comics Nos. 584-586, Adventures of Superman Nos. 424-426 and Superman Nos. 1-3 (cover dates January- March, 1987).
Another enjoyable batch of issues by John Byrne, Marv Wolfman, and Jerry Ordway.

SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL VOL. 3 (DC, 2004)
Collects Action Comics Nos. 587-589, Adventures of Superman Nos. 427-429 and Superman Nos. 4-6 (cover dates April- June, 1987).
Man, this is some good sh*t! I especially enjoyed the issues featuring the Demon and the Phantom Stranger, as I have a soft spot for '70 quasi/pseudo-Horror 'heroes'. The only problem is that I now want to buy the Phantom Stranger phonebooks. %^$#^&%@&&!!!
SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL VOL. 4 (DC, 2004)
Collects Action Comics Nos. 590, 591, Adventures of Superman Nos. 430, 431, Legion of Superheroes Nos. 37, 38 and Superman Nos. 7, 8 (cover dates July- September, 1987).
Man, this is mostly sh*t! This is why I loathed DC so much growing up. Superboy? Superdog? The cheeseball Legion of Superheroes and the Metal Men? Marvel stomps any and all of these concepts. What had been a clean, cohesive reboot until this point has been derailed by the whole Crisis on Infinite Earths thing, which was an attempt to undo DC's lack of any real continuity(ies?) until that point. Even John Byrne, who at Marvel always did a great job at streamlining continuity, has a tough go at making this believable. Add in the craptastic artwork by a neophyte Erik Larsen in the last issue in the book and the insult to injury was complete. This book has it's moments, but they are few and far between.
SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL VOL. 5 (DC, 2006)
Collects Action Comics Nos. 592, 593, Adventures of Superman Nos. 432-435 and Superman Nos. 9-11 (cover dates September- December, 1987).
OK, things go back to being enjoyable here. Whew! I was worried that I sunk money into 2 books that might suck. Superman #11, with Mr. Mxyzptlk was especially good. I am glad that they phonetically spelled his name, as I had no idea how to pronounce it until now.

SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL VOL. 6 (DC, 2008)
Collects Action Comics Nos. 594, 595, Action Comics Annual No. 1, Adventures of Superman Annual No. 1, Booster Gold No. 23, Superman No. 12 and Superman Annual No. 1 (cover dates November- December, 1987).
...and my marathon comes to a halt. It's been quite a journey, and a mostly enjoyable one at that. Superman No. 12 is the star of this book, a heartfelt love story with a twist, but all of the issues contained in this trade were good, solid reads. I hope that DC continues this line, as there are many more issues in Byrne's run to be collected in trade paperback.

THE SANDMAN BY JOE SIMON & JACK KIRBY (DC, 2009; Hardcover)
Collects Sandman No. 1 (Winter 1974) and selections from Adventure Comics Nos. 72-91, 101, 102 and World’s Finest Comics Nos. 6, 7 (cover dates March, 1942- February/ March, 1946).
Shame on you, DC! You have top shelf Golden Age material by two of the all-time greats, and THIS is the respect and the treatment that you feel that this material deserves? Shoddy restoration, shoddy paper, and shoddy binding, this package is a disgrace to the legacy of Simon and Kirby. Before there was Stan and Jack there was Joe and Jack. The pair did a wonderful job creating Captain America, and this was their 'next big thing'. DC insisted on scanning old yellowed pages, which Dark Horse and Fantagraphics also do for these vintage collections, but they clean up and color correct the pages. DC only color corrected the word balloons and captions, leaving the rest a yellowed, discolored mess. Every single color looks off because they took no time whatsoever and put no effort into restoration or using modern color values to replicate the original color palette. The paper is the same crappy pulp paper that DC uses in most of their hardcovers these days, being scarcely thicker than toilet paper. Couple that with glued binding, and you have the most sucktastic presentation imaginable. The real shame of it is that these are such good stories.



THE BATMAN CHRONICLES VOL. 8 (DC, 2009)
Collects Batman Nos. 14, 15 and selections from Detective Comics Nos. 71-74 and World’s Finest Comics Nos. 8, 9 (cover dates December, 1942- April, 1943).
To say that these are good reads would be an understatement. Golden Age Batman rocks, plain and simple. The writing begins to take on a campy tone similar to the '60s television series, i.e. Batman and Robin are in a trap and a caption reads 'can they escape?' or something similar. Batman refers to villains as 'fiends'. The villains! The Penguin. The Joker. Catwoman. The Scarecrow. Tweedledee and Tweedledum. These villains are great! I will let my son read these when he gets a bit older, which is something that I can't say about modern Batman comic books. Why did comic books take such a wrong turn? They are intended for children, and should be accessible to them. I prefer this 'wholesome' Batman to Frank Miller's version.

ESSENTIAL MARVEL TEAM-UP VOL. 3 (Marvel, 2009)
Collects Marvel Team-Up (Vol. 1) Nos. 52-73, 75 and Marvel Team-Up Annual No. 1 (cover dates December, 1976- November, 1978).
The creative team of Chris Claremont and John Byrne are akin to Lennon and McCartney or Simon and Garfunkel, in that together they created wonderful and memorable works but found it difficult to maintain their creative partnership. Their Marvel Team-Up run is fantastic. Iron Fist, Arcade, Captain Britain, the Living Monolith... this is such good stuff! It's almost criminal that Marvel only reprints this title in black and white phonebook format rather than the Masterworks format that it deserves.

SANDMAN MYSTERY THEATRE VOL. 6: THE HOURMAN AND THE PYTHON (DC, 2008)
Collects Sandman Mystery Theatre Nos. 29-36 (cover dates August, 1995- March, 1996)
I am really enjoying these trades, and was delighted to see Vol. 8 recently solicited. This series ran up to issue 70, and I am hoping that they collect the entire run in trade.


The Wolfman As far as remakes go, this is about as much as one could hope for in this day and age. There were a few digital drag and speed type edits in the beginning, but by and large the editing and pacing were quite tasteful. The camera angle changes were slow by today's ADD standards but were pleasing to those of us who still have an attention span. The sequence where he changes into the Wolfman were almost as good as The Howling. All in all, an enjoyable movie, especially for a buck at the dollar show. 7 out of 10.



Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Astonishing Junk Food For Thought

So Marvel, in their infinite wisdom, has yet another all-ages, new reader friendly line. No, not Marvel Age, or Marvel Adventures, but the Astonishing line. The main difference being that this is set in mainline continuity and is supposedly new reader friendly. Why don't they just make the regular titles more new reader friendly? I stumbled into various titles in the '80s and was able to catch up with what was going on, but that is hard in the age of multiple crossovers and lazy Bendis writing, all-conversation/ feeble set-up issues.




MARVEL MASTERWORKS GOLDEN AGE YOUNG ALLIES VOL. 1 (Marvel, 2009; Hardcover)

Collects Young Allies Nos. 1-4 (cover dates Summer 1941- Summer 1942)

This series is a lot of fun at times, offensive to 21st century sensibilities at others, and ridiculous all around. This series features some of Stan Lee's earliest writing, as well as artwork by future I, Robot writer Otto Binder. The artwork is passable for the era. Unlike most Golden Age comics, the bulk of these 64 page issues are devoted solely to the Young Allies, with only a handful of back-up features appearing. There is a stray Father Time feature that is quite good, and the Vagabond is as bizarre as any of the other stories of his featured in other GA magazines. It's great to see the Red Skull as the YA's main adversary, as I am a sucker for him. We even get to see him unmasked here, which is pretty rare. 

Not everything is all rosy here, though. As stated in the introduction, Whitewash Jones is a product of the time. Think of Buckwheat from the Little Rascals and you get a general idea of the type of comic relief he provides. This isn't the type of book that I'd let my son read by any stretch, but it is fascinating from a historical perspective. One of the reasons that I buy all of these Golden Age collections is the fact that they are so rare and expensive in their original formats that I would never get to experience them otherwise, or certainly nowhere near the sheer volume of them that I have in the last 5 or so years. This book is totally worth picking up as long as you understand in advance what it is you're picking up. The production values on this book are top notch, with the highest quality restoration (only 1 page looks iffy to my eyes and probably wouldn't register to most people), paper and binding. It's ironic that this book is made in China, though, given the portrayal of Far Easterners in this book. I wonder if any of the workers on the lines ever look down at what is being printed.




BLACK TERROR VOL. 1 (Dynamite, 2009)

Collects Black Terror Nos. 1-4 (cover dates November, 2008- May, 2009)

Yet another satisfying installment in the Project Superpowers universe. I am really enjoying all of these titles, and someday, when I am all caught up on my reading, I plan on sitting down and re-reading all of these in the order of release. I suspect that I will be able to catch up with my reading if comics go all digital ala the iPad. I have no interest whatsoever in reading comics on a computer or a screen, so when the day comes when print comics are dead then I can re-read all of these trades and hardcovers. I do realize that we will likely never see an end to print comics, but that has to happen in order for me to catch up on my backlog and re-read this fine series.




VINCENT PRICE PRESENTS (Bluewater, 2009)

Collects Vincent Price Presents Nos. 1-4 (cover dates September- December, 2008)

Wow, this was a surprisingly good read! I ordered this on a whim, always eager to check out new Horror anthologies, and this was one time when it really panned out. Solid writing and artwork throughout, the oddest thing about this series is that Issue 1 was the weakest of the bunch. Wouldn't you want to put your best foot forward? In any case, this was a lot of fun, and the only complaint that I have is that the cover of this trade has a bizarre rubber-y feeling coating rather than the typical waxy coating of most trades. Odd to the touch, but you get used to it quickly enough. Fans of Horror comics should definitely check this series out.




STAR TREK: CREW (IDW, 2009)

Collects Star Trek: Crew Nos. 1-5 (cover dates March- July, 2009)

I am a casual Star Trek fan. I used to watch re-runs of the original series when I was kid and religiously watched Star Trek: The Next Generation for the first two or three seasons. I saw Star Trek III: The Search For Spock at the old Wyandotte dollar show, and saw every movie released in the last 20 years at the theatre. I am just not a Star Trek expert, so if this defies continuity or not I cannot say. What I can say, though, is that John Byrne turns in a helluva entertaining series that I picked up on a whim in this trade paperback that should please fans of the series (any of them). My only gripe with this book is that the covers are collected in the back rather than in front of each issue as a chapter marker. OCD on that topic aside, this gets my highest recommendation.




THE COMICS OF FLETCHER HANKS: I SHALL DESTROY ALL THE CIVILIZED PLANETS! (Fantagraphics, 2008)

Collects selections from Big Three Comics No. 2, Fantastic Comics Nos. 1, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 16, Fight Comics Nos. 2, Jungle Nos. 3, 5, 7, 9, 10 and Planet Nos. 7 (cover dates December, 1939- February, 1941)

I bought this book as something of a goof because I saw the way that Fletcher Hanks drew necks and it made me smile. Over the course of reading the exploits of Stardust the Super Wizard and Fantomah, I became a fan of his artwork and ridiculous writing. Stardust seems to gain a new power in every panel of every story. Like many early Golden Age comics, these are super violent and loaded with a 'might makes right' mentality, and they rock because of this. Kudos to Fantagraphics for compiling his complete work over the course of two books, as these stories would otherwise be lost to the mists of time.




ESSENTIAL LUKE CAGE, POWER MAN VOL. 2 (Marvel, 2006)

Collects Luke Cage, Power Man Nos. 28-49 and Luke Cage, Power Man Annual No. 1 (cover dates December, 1975- February, 1978)

This is strictly second tier stuff, even by '70s standards. Sure, it occasionally rises to very good (the Claremont/ Byrne stuff) but for the most part, this is overwritten bravado tinged smacktalk coupled with Don McGregor's at-the-time-interesting political commentary which, in 2010, comes off a bit preachy. Frank Robbins is one of the worst pencilers that has ever graced the pages of comic books. He's like a fourth rate Harvey Kurtzman. The villains are strictly C- and D-list. Mr. Fish? Spear? Cockroach Hamilton and his shotgun Josh, which he refers to it as in nearly every panel that it is shown. This series has it's moments, but this batch of issues isn't anywhere near as entertaining as the first 27, or after the title morphs into Power Man and Iron Fist with Issue 50.




SUPERMAN: STRANGE ATTRACTORS (DC, 2006)

Collects Action Comics Nos. 827, 828, 830-835 (cover dates July, 2005- March, 2006)

When coupled with strong inkers like we see here, John Byrne still rules. Solid writing, good artwork, and tasteful coloring made this a joy to read. Even better is the fact that this was in the 1/2 off box at Big Ben's Comix Oasis.




CALIBER: FIRST CANON OF JUSTICE (Radical, 2009)

Collects Caliber Nos. 1-5 (cover dates May- September, 2008)

I can appreciate something that is well done, even if I am not totally crazy about the subject. I picked this up in the aforementioned half off box of trades because the artwork looked decent, and that sums up this book in a nutshell. Decent. Not great, not horrible, just competently done comic books.




WOLVERINE OMNIBUS VOL. 1 (Marvel, 2009; Hardcover)

Collects Captain America Annual No. 8, Incredible Hulk Nos. 180-182, 340, Kitty Pryde and Wolverine Nos. 1-6, Punisher War Journal (Vol. 1) Nos. 6, 7, Spider-Man Vs. Wolverine, Uncanny X-Men Nos. 172-173, Wolverine (Vol. 1) Nos. 1-4, Wolverine (Vol. 2) Nos. 1-10 and selections from Marvel Age Annual No. 4, Marvel Comics Presents (Vol. 1) Nos. 1-10, 72-84 and Marvel Treasury Edition No. 26 (cover dates October, 1974- July, 1989)

Wolverine is the best comic book character to come out of the '70s, and there are many people who would argue that he is among the best characters ever created. I would not be one of them, though. Wolverine, as he was originally created and appears in the first chunk of this monster 1,000+ page tome, was a borderline psychotic quasi-hero, almost as likely to go off on a teammate as he would an enemy. This unpredictability, coupled with his lack of an origin or past, made him intriguing. As time moved on, Chris Claremont decided to add layers to the character, with mixed results. His healing factor became a ridiculous thing, eventually making him nearly unbeatable. He was suddenly a samurai, which I always thought was retarded. Claremont made him 150 or so years old, also retarded. I bought into the fact that his healing factor slowed his aging, but I gauged it around 20-30 years, not a hundred (or more in stories told this decade). Later on, they ret-conned Wolverine into Captain America's past, etc., and that is when he jumped the shark. Nowadays he is in every single title, and it makes one wonder if he has the ability to bend time in order to fit into every character and team's life. 

The Wolverine ongoing series that started in 1988 (Vol. 2) reveals that he supposedly has had all of this spare time to foster a separate identity in Madripoor. Reading comic books requires a healthy suspension of disbelief, but this is ludicrous when you go back and re-read Uncanny X-Men until this point. When exactly did he have time to do this? Things like this have made me loathe the character anymore, but thanks to this book I can at least go back and revisit a time when he didn't make me vomit.




SUPERMAN: THE MAN OF STEEL VOL. 1 (DC, 2003)

Collects Man of Steel Nos. 1-6 cover dates (October- December, 1986)

I have been a John Byrne fan since 1984, when I started reading Fantastic Four and Alpha Flight. When he went to work on this title for DC, I was very curious but wouldn't cross the "party line" back then. This was one of the first major character "reboots" which have since become a cliche, but this still holds up pretty well. Byrne's writing and artwork have a real fluidity here that make this a good read. I have issues with the book AS a book, though. I dislike the pulp paper that DC uses in their trades, as I worry that it will yellow and age with time. Also, Issue 5 has obliterated line work. These issues aren't that old or rare that they couldn't do a decent restoration job.




Sloan/ B Sides Win: Extras, Bonus Tracks and B-Sides 1992-2008

Sloan has finally listened to their die-hard fans and given us the rarities collection that we have clamored for. Unfortunately, it is only available as a download from their website, and the PDF isn't scaled for a printer friendly 5X5 booklet layout. I am glad that this has been made available (and cheap too... $9.99 for 26 tracks), but I would have been glad to pay more for a factory pressed physical CD version. 

This collection is by no means complete, as I own 3 songs that are not on here. Stove/Smother from DGC Rarities Vol. 1; Waterfalls from the Paul McCartney tribute album, Listen to What the Man Said, and their cover of Rush's In the Mood from the Fubar soundtrack are not included. Some of the earlier B-sides and bonus tracks are pretty rough around the edges, but some, like Dirty Nails and Pretty Together, make you wonder what they were thinking when they left them off of the original domestic releases. Strangely missing is the entirety of the Live Sloan Party bonus disc from the first US printing of One Chord To Another. I got one on eBay ages ago, and I'm sure that it isn't getting any more common. Hopefully Sloan will bundle the aforementioned songs and put all of this into a nice box set at some point. Hey, I can dream, right?