General

Topic   The Comics & Graphic Novels Thread

theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
20-May-2016(#1)
This topic had many older posts which were moved here:

http://gametz.com/General/comics-graphic-novels-th...




There are a lot of folks here who are comic fans. I'm not 100% sure who reads the comics or are just fans of the films, but for the most part there seems to be some pretty knowledgeable people here when it comes to the funny books. Figured this thread would work nicely for the overall discussion.

Post what you're reading too!

What I'm Reading:


PREACHER Book Three


Select Reviews:
Once in a while I'll actually post a review to the "What I'm Reading" book. Here they are in "nsfw" tags due to length but, I assure you, they're safe for work yes





We Stand On Guard - 6.5/10:



Plowed through this in like an hour or less. Pretty good read and the art is magnificent, but it wasn't Brian K. Vaughan's best work by any means. He seems to work better in the serialized story genre, which this technically was, but it was a planned 6-issue miniseries, so it read more like a film in comic form. His character work is still on key, but in the limited story-space, some of them kind of fizzle out as opposed to have a satisfying end to their arc. And then there are some characters who don't fizzle out, but whose fates still leave a lot to be desired. Our main character is among that list.

Regardless, the overall story was strong enough and the concept of portraying the US' foreign policy as terrorism in a hypothetical 100-year time-jump was as interesting as it was bold - if a little awkward to read, being an American and all. Though it's easy enough to admit that this sort of wartime scenario wouldn't be difficult to imagine breaking out the exact way it does in this story, if the real-life situations mirrored the fantasy of this book. Which is a scary thought - as I'm assuming was the point: if we start warring as opposed to discussing over everything (water being the culprit here), where does it end?

So it was an interesting concept with extraordinary art, nearly perfect characterizations and some very memorable scenes, but the end was a bit of a disappointment and not many character arcs ended in any interesting way. I feel like this would have benefited if it were an on-going that ended after 2 or 3 years. It could have at least used 2 or 3 more issues to give proper time to all the characters. It was a cool concept, but a rare flub from Vaughan when it comes to a proper ending.
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Paper Girls: Volume 1 - 8.5/10:


I had already read the first 2 issues of Paper Girls before snagging the TPB, so the rest of the book was a breeze. This is another super strong story by Brian K Vaughan (LOST, Y The Last Man, Saga, Ex Machina, etc). It's very reminiscent of the nostalgic 80's "coming of age" movies - just with a sci-fi twist to keep it from straying too close. It's like a mix of Stand By Me, Gunther & The Paper Brigade, E.T. and, for a more modern comparison, the J.J. Abrams film Super 8. 4 bike-riding girls who deliver newspapers wake up early the morning after Halloween to find the town is in a real odd state. It's a plot that eventually delves into time travel, high-concept time wars and monster-ridden landscapes - but it does so in a way that is immediately reminiscent of the straight-forward coming of age stories we loved as kids. There are lots of pop-culture references - including one big one that actually acts as a really smart plot device to tease why things are going so crazy. This volume leaves you with the possible understanding of what drove certain characters to do what they did, while also not really over-indulging us with reveal after reveal.

I'd say definitely give it a shot if you're interested in that sort of thing. I can't wait until the next batch of issues is released.

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Absolute Batman Incorporated by Grant Morrison - 8.5/10:


Firstly, this hardcover is gorgeous. It comes in a thick slipcover and the book itself is great quality. The art looks great on the bigger pages, and this book really is super big. I'm about two thirds done at this point and I've already read the 8 issues from the New 52, but the whole epic has just been a great read through. The ending is one I can look forward to as I read like when watching a favorite movie. This was Morrison's brain child and it ran alongside his now legendary 7-year run on Batman. While some of that run lacked the quality of a top notch Morrison story, Batman Incorporated does not. While the idea of a franchised international bat-team, especially one run by Bruce Wayne, is kind of a contrived premise, Morrison is able to work little bits of Batman's past and spin the folks he'd met over the years (even the obscure ones) into the tale to make it something really worth checking out.

I dug the first half of the book just fine - but it was mostly all exposition issues for what was to come. I know Morrison spread this series out to run alongside the rest of his run, but the early chapters really seem to drag a bit. Probably wouldn't have been my favorite Bat-title if I were subscribed. While at the same time, those issues re-establish the bits of Batman's mythos that you'll need to know for this story via mostly self-contained issues featuring small-time villains and small-time allies alike. Once you get past the set-up, the book really gets incredibly good. It pays off the slower earlier issues in the best ways, connecting the dots between each early chapter. The "New 52" era issues are the best however, as this story's ending is one of the better pulled-off endings I've seen in recent years, It's very satisfying despite a tragedy or two along the way.
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Inhumans by Paul Jenkins & Jae Lee - 9/10:


This is one of my all-time favorite superhero stories ever written. It's a very cinematic self-contained story that ran for, I believe, 12 issues. It's some of the best character work a Marvel team-up book has ever had. Strong lead characters, a very memorable villain and a fascinating plot makes this one worth picking up again every once in a while. Think this will be my 3rd or 4th read-through of it, but it's always a great time. This is also the book that my avatar is inspired by. It's the "Relax" narration panel from this book - advice Black Bolt (the Inhumans' king) would give his people if he could speak without risking his voice killing everyone around him. It's advice I constantly try to remember.
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The Walking Dead Compendium Vol. 1 - 7/10
The Walking Dead Compendium Vol. 2 - 8.5/10



So I put a halt to my Walking Dead comic marathon that I started in time for the new season in October. I plowed through the first 2 Compendiums but with the holidays, so many new books that I was eager to read fell into my lap. So while I do intend on starting the Volume 3 back up in February to coincide with the return of Season 7 of the TV show, I figured I'd move this out of the "What I'm Reading Now" section. My review: It's real good. About 2/3 of Volume 1 are very hard to read at times due to the characters talking far too much, over-explaining situations and sometimes long-monologuing (not a word) about the same events in 2 or 3 different scenes. However about halfway through the Prison arc, when the Governor becomes a pivotal character, the series really hit its stride. Volume 2 is non-stop great, featuring many of the most memorable moments from the comics. I am indeed looking forward to Compendium Vol. 3 when the mood strikes, because that's where the series hits "legendary" status in my eyes.
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Kingdom Come - 7/10


This was a real fun story with a neat concept that kind of got muddled with the art. While the artist has done great work on very similar stories, this one featured a few panels that were hard to follow. I'm not sure if it was lazy art or the script wasn't the easiest to follow, but some things got lost in translation throughout. Regardless it was very cool to see older, grizzled versions of the golden age superheroes pulled out of retirement to deal with the "new generation" of heroes who were fine with casualties and chaos anytime they fought. This story also pulled off yet another new take on the Superman/Batman relationship that pays off real dramatically toward the end. All in all, a great Secret Santa gift and a fun story worth the read.
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Paper Girls: Volume 2 - 8/10


This was a great follow up to Volume 1 even if the 80's setting was sorely missed. Our characters find themselves in modern day and on a journey to find their friend after being chased by some humans from the far future with a technology-rooted culture. This series keeps things intriguing by having the main character Erin interact with her 2016-self and the dynamic there is a highlight of the book. There is some very witty banter between the Erins. Some twists (both tragic and very interesting) are thrown along the way - but this is a series that should be read as spoiler-free as possible. It has as satisfying of a cliffhanger as Volume 1, so I'm very much looking forward to Volume 3.
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Redwall: The Graphic Novel - 7.5/10


While I've only ever read a couple of the Redwall novels, I've always been fascinated by the series and its lore. I'd never read the first novel so the fact that it was in graphic novel form really enticed me. I was a little disappointed in the lack of color, as the novels always painted the settings with lush colors, but I was able to look past it for the memorable characters and villains.. Kluny the Scourge is classic. However some of the art, especially when it came to the Abbey Mice, was too similar. It was a little difficult to tell the main characters apart. This gets a bump up in points because while the first half of the book plays as a fantasy-by-numbers book starring animal characters, it eventually becomes a story about a legendary knight being reborn in an abbey monk. It was a cool little plot twist that, while telegraphed, I really didn't see coming. It makes me want to read the Martin the Warrior novel soon.
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Thor by Jason Aaron & Russell Dauterman - 9/10


Really great stuff from this creative team. Having not kept up with the Thor comics the past few years (much longer actually), I got this for Christmas. I have to say, I was blown away by what I read. A great mystery (that isn't a mystery anymore but for me it was) of who IS the new Thor, and Odinson (the OG male Thor) gets a real nice new complexity to his character as the "Unworthy Thor." It seems despite the MCU, Thor's comic line has been able to avoid the mainstream issues that other Marvel comics have lately. This book made me rush to snag the next couple books from the duo: Battleworld: Thors & The Mighty Thor Vol.1 and it also reminded me to check out Journey Into Mystery by Kieron Gillen Vol. 1.
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Batman: The Court of Owls - 8/10
Batman: The City of Owls - 7/10
Batman: Death of the Family - 6/10



The Court of Owls - Court is a classic Batman story. It features new lore for the city of Gotham (something Snyder is great at), a new group of villains that were as intriguing as they were creepy, and a new threat that really made Batman seem like he was in an uphill battle. Hell, it even featured a climactic issue taking place in a giant death maze. Batman grew as a character, thinking he knew about Gotham better than anyone only to find out he can still learn new secrets. It also ended with a great cliffhanger if you were reading solely via trade paperback. It's too bad Snyder had a little trouble sticking the dismount.
The City of Owls - This story starts up with the fun and memorable "Night of Owls" issue that features the Court's army of Talons (undead assassins) laying siege on Gotham and, most notably, Wayne Manor. It was a fun start to what would end up being an overly-telegraphed ending to what was set up in "Court of Owls." It also featured a reveal that left a bit to be desired - as it left a lot of ambiguity on the table. Which would have been a little more acceptable if the character involved played a larger role in Snyder's Batman, but having not appeared since, it kind of puts a damper on what could have been a little more menacing of an ending.
Death of the Family - This is the story that got me back into collecting - and reading it without all the hype, it's really not that special. Nowhere near a top Joker story by any means. It featured a slasher-film version of Joker, not just in appearance (with his strapped on face-skin that had been removed a few months earlier) but also in character mechanics. Joker killed people a little too easily during the first issues, including snapping a bunch of cops necks in the dark somehow and drowning a bunch of rich kids. Which was the point, admittedly - to have an even more unhinged Joker. But as the story progressed it fell into cliche territory, with a bunch of well-tread Batman tropes: Joker trying to convince Batman he's weak due to the Bat-family, Batman and Nightwing arguing, Joker hosting a villain-fest for Batman (my #1 least favorite plot device in a Batman story is when the writer piles a bunch of high-profile villains into one issue), and Joker feeling some sort of misplaced "love" for Batman. And then there's the whole question of if the Joker knows who they all are or not. These are all themes I can get behind, but they've been presented far more accurately in better Joker stories - and not all crammed into 5 or 6 issues. There are some good moments in this story, with the highlight being the climactic Batcave chase that capped off the last issue, but that just wasn't enough to save the whole convoluted, almost try-hard story from being anything more than mediocre. This was a disappointment because Snyder had written one of the most memorable Joker scenes in modern Batman stories (in my opinion) just a few years earlier during his "Black Mirror" story. It was short and sweet and just perfect. His Joker in this story spoke in too many monologues about the same thing and just wasn't too funny. Capullo's art fudging ruled throughout all these books though.

However, Snyder took a much better whack at a Joker story with "Endgame," which is one of my favorite modern Joker stories, but that's not for another few volumes. Thankfully Snyder picked up his slack for the New 52 Batman origin which he told in epic fashion over the next 2 volumes. His run remained fun from that point on, and these books were still fun to read, but aside from "Court," the other ones are just average.


From Hell by Alan Moore - 7.5/10


After finally getting around to reading this book after getting it for Christmas 2 years ago, I can say it was worth the wait. Or has been. This book is a (fictionalized) investigation of the Jack the Ripper murders of the 1800's that suggests the string of homicides was an elaborate conspiracy pulled off by the Royal Family in order to keep the news of the Prince having an illegitimate child with a shopkeeper. This is based off a real theory but it has been debunked many times, even Moore himself. However, it's an interesting tale of what could have been all the same, while still managing to give an extremely accurate portrayal of the heinous acts and the aftermath they had on London at the time. The story of Sir William Gull is certainly intriguing to say the least.
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Uzumaki: Volume 1 - 7/10


Admittedly, I'm not the biggest manga reader - but I'm always willing to give interesting premises a shot. Dorohedoro Volume 1 is on deck, but I've been feeling a bit of a horror vibe lately and have been wanting to read this. Snagging it in a $15 lot with Revival Vol 1, Outcast Vol 1 and Wytches by Scott Snyder was just a bonus. Anyhow, this was a sort of starkly fun tale about a girl who lives in a town that's cursed by spirals. The shape. This is only Volume 1, so I'm not sure what the origin of these spirals are yet (if it's ever even revealed). This left me a little in the dark, but I decided to just go with it.

There were a few genuinely creepy moments in this one, but quite a few goofy moments that just didn't work for me. One example of something creepy was when two star-crossed lovers had somehow discovered a way to spiral into each other and opted for a life as intertwined spirals over their families keeping them apart. The imagery here, and at an earlier part of the book including a spiral-corpse, really hit home. One example of too goofy, however, was the two-girl showdown decided by who could get more attention based on the whacky spirals in their hair.

Unfortunately that second example was the story that ended Volume 1 so it kind of left off on an air fart, but the rest of the book has at least persuaded me to eventually check out Volume 2.
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Revival: Volume 1 - 7.5/10


I went into Revival completely in the dark and was pleasantly surprised. It was a quick read (a little too quick to be honest) but there were some really memorable characters. Many creepy moments too, and these first 5 issues really open up a few mysteries that I imagine the series tackles further down the road. Like Uzumaki, this first volume has gotten me interested in checking out volume 2.

There are some real questions presented about characters in this story that make me sort of anxious to read more, but these didn't really come until the last 2 issues. The first 3 were the standard "dead are coming back and the town doesn't know how to deal with it" situations with underlying tones of what was to come. My favorite aspect of the comic was the dynamic between a psychopath who claims to have met the devil and devotes his life to exercising demons by any fudgeed up means necessary, and a "revived" main character named Em who he claims is the devil incarnate. It's interesting because she definitely does some semi-dastardly things, and her actions within this first volume could easily fit the "devil in disguise" routine. The "demon" had a neat, simple and disturbing design too so I'm interested what more the series does with these entities moving forward.
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Wytches by Scott Snyder - 8/10


Real creepy, atmospheric tale about a girl who was "pledged" to the ancient Wytches that haunt a New Hampshire town. Great use of foreshadowing in this one, and the characters really worked. There is some clunky dialogue and silly character moments but otherwise, they all stand up.

I love the study of witches in general that this book features. Lots of lore - the "wytches" are portrayed as genetically "evolved" beings whose magic can grant anyone who pledges somebody to them their wildest dreams. They mark the portal to their world with ginger - thus the old "witches live in a gingerbread house" schtick. It's real fun the way Snyder presents the creatures as grounded in some sort of reality that is able to explain away a bunch of real-life myths about witches.
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Saga: Deluxe Edition Volume 1 - 10/10
Saga: Deluxe Edition Volume 2 - 10/10
Saga Volume 7: The War for Phang - 7.5/10



Image just dropped the Deluxe Edition Volume 2, so I re-read Deluxe Edition Volume 1 in anticipation. Plowed through both within a day or two, and then read where the story left off with the trade-paperback for Saga Volume 7, dubbed "The War for Phang". My "Phang" write-up contains spoilers, so beware.

The first book is an exercise in world-building, character development and story-telling. There's so much to this story that it's hard to want to type about it, but it's a fantasy epic that spans different planets over the course of one child, Hazel's life. She narrates it as we, the reader, get to watch her parents (two former soldiers of warring homeworlds) sacrifice everything to keep her hidden. Being a "hybrid" of two races, she is a highly sought-after person when news breaks of her existence.

The second book is more of the same - but better, if possible. Lots of incredible visuals, the characters are taken in directions that are genuinely surprising and the story progresses at exactly the right pace. Brian K Vaughn has a way of creating very personal moments on an epic sci-fi backdrop. This book just furthers the fun of the story, even if some major gore and violence occurs along the way. It's always done in a surprising and honestly interesting way.

Volume 7: The War for Phang was a noticeable step down in my opinion, but still a strong entry into the series compared to most comics. My issue with this portion of the story was its overly-bleak atmosphere. Saga can absolutely get bleak and tragic at times, but most of the time there is another character's plot to add some levity or color. In "The War for Phang", just about all the characters are brought to the lowest we've ever seen them. Some of the tragic nature seems a little forced, to be honest. One moment when a drugged out Prince Robot insinuates that he is either going to rape Alana (Hazel's mother) or kill himself was a little out-of-nowhere considering their relationship up to that point. Then the big twist in the last issue was fittingly tragic, but just seemed like another tack in this overly-bleak tale. There was also a 2-headed villain introduced in this batch of issues that, for the first time since Saga started, left me underwhelmed with the design of a character. And what makes that character worse, is that they (two heads) leave devastating effects in their wake for our main characters - but, having been killed at the end, ultimately won't play a huge part going forward. It felt a little too quick - to bring our characters so far low only to have the threat eliminated quickly, like they just needed an excuse to torture the characters.

I'm hoping all this leads to some real good character development in the issues to come ("Phang" was about 50/50 in that department) or else this volume will always sort of stick out as needlessly bleak portion of the story.
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theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
9-Oct-2021(#121)
I think I'll obviously be reading that Chapter 55 asap though, just to see how it picks up after the cliffhanger.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
9-Oct-2021(#122)
I might buy the singles, I'm not really sure how I'll buy it. I'll definitely read #55 asap though.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
17-Oct-2021(#123)
Y: The Last Man was canceled. For being in development hell for a long time, it's probably disappointing to everyone who made it.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
17-Oct-2021(#124)
Kommie wrote:
> Y: The Last Man was canceled. For being in development hell for a long time, it's
> probably disappointing to everyone who made it.

Yah saw that, but BKV and the show’s director seem very confident that a Season 2 will happen on another network. I still haven’t watched Season 1 unfort.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
* 13-Nov-2021(#125)
Finally started reading Low Volume 1. Got this book years ago at Barnes and Noble but have put it off ever since. Rick Remender story about Earth's final generation of humans living on the bottom of the ocean because the sun has been quickly destroying the planet. Very cool sci-fi setting and an unconventional family situation, even if the first issue is a tiny bit predictable.

Friend will be giving me Volumes 2-4 in a few days and then I'll only need to read 5 to be caught up.

Anyone else reading this? Any idea if there's an endgame in sight or if this is just going to be ongoing for the time being? I feel like the concept only has legs for a few volumes but with it not over after 5 I'm wondering what else happens in the series.

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Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
14-Nov-2021(#126)
5 is the last volume, it's a complete series.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
14-Nov-2021(#127)
Oh nice, must have ended fairly recently then eh?
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
14-Nov-2021(#128)
Beginning of the year, I think. Took awhile for the last issue to come out.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
14-Nov-2021(#129)
Kommie wrote:
> Beginning of the year, I think. Took awhile for the last issue to come out.

Did you read the whole series? Like? Dislike?
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
14-Nov-2021(#130)
theJaw wrote:
> Kommie wrote:
>> Beginning of the year, I think. Took awhile for the last issue to come out.
>
> Did you read the whole series? Like? Dislike?


Uh. It was okay. Only real complaint is the overt sexualization of female characters.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
15-Nov-2021(#131)
@Kommie yah I noticed a bit of that in Vol 1 but it wasn’t too gratuitous yet. At least they allowed the wife character to take the main protagonist role (at least in Vol 1), and didn’t just make her a character with no agency.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
1-Dec-2021(#132)
https://www.humblebundle.com/books/lone-wolf-cub-k...

Complete Lone Wolf and Cub for $25, it's a steal. Has others as well, but this is difficult to find in print so all of it for $25 is amazing. Only a little over a day left though.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
23-Jan-2022(#133)
Re-reading the third deluxe edition of Saga and man, this story is great. I forgot just how huge it is, and how little we've ACTUALLY gotten as to the overall big picture.

Spoilers below, but if you haven't caught up on Saga during the 3 year hiatus before its big return, I'm sure you won't care....

Anyhow, at the beginning of this hardcover (I think volume 7 of the trade paperbacks), it's insinuated by the dying Robot ambassador of the comet Phang that the "wings" and "horns" are actually conspiring together somehow, despite the whole story up until that point driving it into our skulls that these two factions have been warring for years. This is even the main catalyst for what puts out main characters on the run in the first place - a baby born between both sides, with both horns AND wings. Re-reading this scene with the ambassador asking "Or?" when questioned about who plans on killing off the comet, it's really a startling revelation.

I'm realizing now that despite like 10 issues releasing after that, we still haven't really gotten any follow up to how the two sides are working together exactly. Thankfully, we have a whole other half of the story to find out, but I appreciate how the first half of the comic really told this story from a ground-level POV - with characters finding crap out at the exact same time as the reader, and not finding out more until a long while after. It makes me feel like the second half is going to be SO MUCH larger in scale and stakes, now that they're gonna have to delve more into the actual factions at play.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
23-Jan-2022(#134)
Next week.
EB

(frozen)
* 23-Jan-2022(#135)
Did either of you read Department of Truth? I’m about halfway through the second graphic novel and I’m still really enjoying it. SUPER dark at times but very good.

Also read Batman: Damned a couple weeks ago. Wasn’t a fan of that one.

Batman: Creature of the Night was good but not great.
nonamesleft
Double Gold Good Trader
* 23-Jan-2022(#136)
Not a recent comic, but I just finished Batman VS Predator. It's been awhile since I read anything DC. No particular reason why. Just so.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
23-Jan-2022(#137)
EB wrote:
> Did either of you read Department of Truth? I’m about halfway through the second
> graphic novel and I’m still really enjoying it. SUPER dark at times but very good.
>
>
>

I read volume 1 and liked it enough to keep buying it. Something is Killing the Children is also something else by the same writer that I like.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
24-Jan-2022(#138)
Azzarello (writer of Damned) can be sort of hit-or-miss for me, but he co-wrote The Dark Knight III: The Master Race with Frank Miller and DKIII is easily my favorite of the famous "Dark Knight" series (with one of my favorite depictions of Superman) so he'll always be held in fairly high regards for me.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
24-Jan-2022(#139)
Kommie wrote:
> Next week.

So pumped, just hope I get re-caught up by then. Shouldn't be an issue haha.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
24-Jan-2022(#140)
theJaw wrote:
> Kommie wrote:
>> Next week.
>
> So pumped, just hope I get re-caught up by then. Shouldn't be an issue haha.

So, on my recent re-read my one gripe is a lot of Marko's dialogue is just super cringey(? not sure how to describe it, cringey, lame, something else). Basically, any dialogue aimed at Alana ends with him saying "love" or some such lameness. It's not a deal-breaker but still kinda lame.

Issue #54 spoilers



And well, considering he's dead it won't be an issue going forward.

theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
* 24-Jan-2022(#141)
Yah he can be a bit corny at times, but then other times he can be a mega badass, so I don't mind it too much. Balances out enough for me.

Decided I'm going to be reading Saga month-to-month, but digitally. I have no space for a ton of comics right now anyhow, so I'll just take the digital route to stay kept up and then buy the Deluxe hardcovers as they release to keep up my the physical collection.

@Kommie you decide how you're gonna approach it?
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
25-Jan-2022(#142)
It's the only book on my pull list at my comic store. Not sure how long I'll be doing that since I almost never go out that way.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
26-Jan-2022(#143)
Not sure if it's just Saga 55 or not, but any attempt to 1-click buy it for Comixology/Kindle on Amazon doesn't work... can't even subscribe to the series. On the actual Kindle Fire, it says it can't connect to the store when I try checking out. Like I said, not sure if it's happening across the board or if it's just Saga 55, but it wouldn't surprise me if this issue dropping effed with the servers a bit.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
26-Jan-2022(#144)
theJaw wrote:
> Not sure if it's just Saga 55 or not, but any attempt to 1-click buy it for Comixology/Kindle
> on Amazon doesn't work... can't even subscribe to the series. On the actual Kindle
> Fire, it says it can't connect to the store when I try checking out. Like I said,
> not sure if it's happening across the board or if it's just Saga 55, but it wouldn't
> surprise me if this issue dropping effed with the servers a bit.

I found it digitally.... elsewhere so it's out there digitally.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
26-Jan-2022(#145)
Oh I know it’s out there, just thought it was interesting that Amazon is struggling.

I gotta finish rereading the third hardcover before I start into the return, but I’m puuumped.
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
* 28-Jan-2022(#146)
So, not sure if you heard but Maus was banned in a Tennessee school for nudity/language. Apparently, this was a panel causing a fuss over "nudity"



What's shocking is that Tennessee was even teaching Maus to 8th Graders in the first place. I certainly never read it in school.

Local comic store giving copies away for free:

https://www.wbir.com/amp/article/news/local/knoxvi...

And it's now a #1 bestseller on Amazon. The Tennessee school board one this one. And it's also Out of Stock on Amazon.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
28-Jan-2022(#147)
Yeeeaaaah saw that. Gonna go ahead assure you (as I'm sure you already know) that it wasn't REALLY nudity or language that got Maus banned. Texas passed a bill to remove critical race theory as a requirement from schools, Florida advanced a bill to "ban making white people feel bad about racism", and now Tennessee is banning a book all about the struggles folks who faced racism on a genocidal level went through. Seems the most hillbilly of State governments are strangely trying to sweep racism as a whole under the rug (likely so they continue, you know, being racist).

Fudgein gross. I pulled out my hardcover of Maus last night after reading that story and plan on giving it another read just to stick it to the (rich white) man.
Feeb
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader Global Trader - willing to trade internationally
28-Jan-2022(#148)
Yeah it’s racist crap.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
29-Jan-2022(#149)
Reading a new issue of Saga was sort of surreal, really hit me how hard I missed the series as I got deeper into the issue.

Where the first half of the story had a lot of layers of gray when it comes to the "good and bad" sides regarding the characters' moralities, Chapter 55 draws CLEAR lines in black and white.


Obviously the (now weird drug dealing) crew revolving around Hazel are the "good guys", and the two bounty hunter weirdos (The Will and Gwendolyn) who fudge in front of both Marko's literal skull and Lying Cat herself are the primary villains. That scene, btw, ended up being fudging eerie, even with all the hyper-sexual nonsense. Obviously there will be more characters established and twists that will play into the plot moving forward, but I firmly believe the "main characters" who will be the major players in the long run are the characters they made a point to focus on in Issue 55.

Also, I had developed my theory (based on some online speculation) that Sophie would ultimately become Hazel's arch-nemesis in Saga's endgame, and now that The Will and Gwendolyn are in literal cahoots, that seems all the more likely now. I could see some big event happening where The Will and Gwen both get offed whenever Sophie is "of age", and she takes up their plight. Big too-early prediction: Sophie becomes Hazel's nemesis only to ultimately bond with her and pass up the bounty hunting life that got the two folks who brought her up killed. Maybe a bold guess but whatev.



So happy Saga is back.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
31-Jan-2022(#150)
@Kommie you read the new issue of Saga yah? Any thoughts?
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
31-Jan-2022(#151)
I liked it, good enough. Can't exactly come out the gate guns blazing.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
31-Jan-2022(#152)
Yeah when you think about how a comic script is written vs a film script... you really get very little story in single comic issues. Generally speaking, one page = one minute for a film script (whether it be TV or movie), so a comic issue is ultimately a tiny snapshot of an entire arc. Won't be able to REALLY judge it until the arc is wrapped up.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
* 2-Feb-2022(#153)
My (just about) brother-in-law gave me a late Secret Santa gift tonight - BRZRKR Volume 1. Apparently written by Keanu Reeves and the art in this book looks incredible. Interested to see what the story gets up to.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
4-Feb-2022(#154)
Haven’t been able to sleep tonight, got some rough news. So I did the adult thing and ordered the paperback release of Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth. I remember loving this right when I was getting back into comics hard around a decade ago, but feel like I’d appreciate it more now. I have the OG hardcover SOMEwhere but don’t feel like digging it out, and honestly don’t want to handle it more than necessary as it’s already a little beat up.

Really looking forward to revisiting it in a much lighter copy of the book haha
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
8-Feb-2022(#155)
Has anyone here read Jimmy Corrigan or what?
Kommie
250 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader
* 8-Feb-2022(#156)
Never even heard of it. Although it looks like Seth McFarland ripped off the character design for Stewie from this.
Tony
Triple Gold Good Trader
8-Feb-2022(#157)
theJaw wrote:
> Haven’t been able to sleep tonight, got some rough news. So I did the adult thing and ordered the paperback release of Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth.
> I remember loving this right when I was getting back into comics hard around a decade ago, but feel like I’d appreciate it more now. I have the OG hardcover SOMEwhere
> but don’t feel like digging it out, and honestly don’t want to handle it more than necessary as it’s already a little beat up.
>
> Really looking forward to revisiting it in a much lighter copy of the book haha

Is this the origin of The Spectre?
EB

(frozen)
14-Feb-2022(#158)
Read some stuff over the weekend, thanks to Hoopla:

- Moon Knight Vol 1: From the Dead. Been slowly getting into Moon Knight a little bit lately,. Found out pretty much all the graphic novels are on Hoopla which is cool, and I’d heard good things about this run (2014-15). Enjoyed this book quite a bit, though the short issues (22 pgs) really made some stories feel cut off at the knees. Apparently Warren Ellis is a really sucky guy, which is disappointing because I liked this a lot. Luckily future issues in the series are written by other authors. Issue #5 was especially good: basically one long fight scene that was done really well. Definitely plan to check out the other issues of this series.
- V for Vendetta. My first time ever reading this, and I think to sum it up in a word: challenging. The huge number of characters to keep track of is made more difficult by the art style that I found sometimes difficult to follow, and the story I think ultimately takes on a little too much by the end. Not bad, but not as good as I had hoped. Probably will watch the movie at some point.
- Batman: Ego. Interesting idea and solid execution, plus the short length helped it from becoming too overbearing. Enjoyed it.
theJaw
GameTZ Subscriber Triple Gold Good Trader
14-Feb-2022(#159)
@EB V for Vendetta definitely benefited from me having watched the movie first when I read it. Tbh I prefer the movie more.
EB

(frozen)
14-Feb-2022(#160)
theJaw wrote:
> V for Vendetta definitely benefited from me having watched the movie first when
> I read it. Tbh I prefer the movie more.

Interesting. I will definitely check it out then.
Sid_Ceaser
500 Trade Quintuple Gold Good Trader Has Written 6 Reviews
15-Feb-2022(#161)
I just picked up the two massive colorized volumes for High School of the Dead.

Incredible art and color and panties everywhere!



Topic   The Comics & Graphic Novels Thread