The DESIGN A NEW LOGO FOR TONY competition ends
Saturday, February 18, at midnight. Right now, the above logo
by Christopher Mills is the one to beat.
Here’s the skinny on this competition:
Contest entries will be shown in the blog as they arrive. The best
three to five logos will receive prizes for their creators, namely
autographed copies of 1000 Comic Books You Must Read or
Grim Ghost. All prizes will come with a certificate of authenticity
confirming the items come from my Vast Accumulation of Stuff.
Maybe not great prizes, but I’m on a tight budget.
To enter the contest, e-mail me your logo with your permission to
run it in this blog. I’m not buying or seeking any rights to your
work beyond being able to use it in this contest. Should I want to
make further use of your logo, we’ll negotiate an agreement for it.
Getting back to my pal Chris, he is a jack-of-many-trades. He’s a
fine writer, fiction and non-fiction. He’s a first-rate designer.
He’s knowledgeable about many genre subjects and writes about them
in his various blog. I recommend you start with his
Atomic Pulpsand Other Meltdowns and proceed from there.
******************************
30 Rock. The series is a favorite of mine, cleverly written for a
cast of hilarious actors. That cast has a new recurring character
and I love her.
New NBC page Hazel is played by Kristen Schaal, a comedian I first
saw on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. After a rough beginning,
Hazel has fixed on a goal. She wants Liz Lemon’s life.
Schaal is holding her own in scenes with Tina Fey, Jack McBrayer,
and Jane Krakowski. We haven’t yet see her follow through on her
master plan, but, judging from what we have seen, I think she will
blend funny with criminally insane in splendid fashion. She’s one
more reason I love 30 Rock.
******************************
I’m trying to have at least one “Movie Night” a week with Sainted
Wife Barb. One cheap and at home “Movie Night,” usually consisting
of a library rental and take out food. They don’t call me “Mister
Excitement” for nothing. I have to pay them.
Our Friday night movie was Crazy Stupid Love starring Steve Carell,
Ryan Gosling, Julianne Moore, Emma Stone, Marisa Tomei, and Kevin
Bacon. Carell gets dumped by wife Moore. Womanizer Gosling takes
pity on Carell and teaches him how to score. Meanwhile, Carell’s
13-year-old son has a crush on his 17-year-old babysitter who is in
love with Carell...and Gosling is about to meet game-changer Stone.
Heartbreak and hilarity ensue.
Barb and I got a kick out of this movie. I was enjoying myself so
much that I didn’t see some plot twists coming. However, there was
one element that, while it was funny on one level, was disturbing
on another.
SPOILER BEGINS. The babysitter wants Carell to see her as a
woman. She takes nude photos of herself that she intends to send
to him. Her parents see them first and believe their daughter is involved
with Carell, who is unaware of all of this.
At the end of the movie, after Carell’s son has again and publicly
expressed his love for the babysitter, the kid tells her that he’s
going to stop bothering her. She’s surprised that he’s giving up.
He reminds her that she loves his dad and, in a few years, he will
look like his dad.
She smiles, kisses him on the cheek, and gives him the nude photos.
To hold him over during the next few years. The scene tries to
play sweet, but it’s still a 17-year-old giving nude photos to a
13-year-old. It’s like the opening to an episode of Law and Order:
Special Victims Unit. SPOILER ENDS.
Crazy Stupid Love isn’t a great movie, but it’s an engaging comedy
with really good acting. It was a good choice for us. It might be
a good choice for you as well.
******************************
Last week was the week I finally sat down and read all 30 issues of
Terry Moore’s Echo. What a ride!
Photographer Julie Martin witnesses an aerial combat with one of
the combatants being a woman in a battle suit made of an odd metal.
The suit explodes, its fragments raining on Julie and bonding with
her. That’s where the story starts.
Before the finale, Echo takes through government intrigue, deadly
encounters with bad and sometimes frighteningly powerful villains,
human interest, and a desperate attempt to keep an insane scientist
from blowing up the world. In the name of science.
Moore’s art is beautiful, his storytelling superb, and his writing
first-rate. Through these 30 issues, his dialogue encompasses the
dramatic, the heartwarming, and the horrifying, and all of it rings
true. I love this story.
According to Wikipedia: In 2009, the film rights for Echo were
purchased by producer Lloyd Levin, known for the film versions of
Watchmen, Mystery Men and Hellboy. The movie was expected to
begin production in late 2011.
Echo: The Complete Edition [Abstract Studios; $39.99] was published
last August. I highly recommend this 600-page volume, which costs
less than half what the individual issues would have set you back
had you purchased them as they came out.
ISBN: 978-1892597489
******************************
I’m killing some time surfing various entertainment news sites and
I see a photo of an attractive young woman named Christina Milian.
She’s eating McDonald’s Chicken McBites, a new addition to Mickey
D’s menu, albeit only for a limited time.
Why is Ms. Milian eating Chicken McBites? Because she’s attending
a launch party for Chicken McBites.
That’s correct. A launch party for Chicken McBites.
Launch. Party. For. Chicken. McBites.
God help us!
******************************
This was the e-mail’s header: “Professional Copywriting for Tony
Isabella’s Bloggy Thing.” The writer - Isabella Woods - said she
was a professional writer and researcher newly located to London.
She offered to write my blog for me...for free...in exchange for my
allowing her to link to other professional businesses for which she
freelanced. The links to samples of her writing were such that I
wasn’t about to click on any of them.
I’m sure this was a scam. But, even if it wasn’t, why would I ever
want anyone to write my blog? The blog I write because it keeps me
sane and keeps in touch with however many of my readers follow me
online? Now if there actually is an Isabella Woods and she really
is the 29-year-old writer she claims to be, I’m sorry for doubting
her. But I’m thinking that’s an apology I’ll never have to make.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Saturday, February 11, 2012
SATURDAY MORNING’S ALRIGHT FOR BLOGGING
Batman #69 went on sale in December, 1951, the month of my birth.
Win Mortimer penciled and inked the cover of this 52-page issue,
which featured three Batman adventures of 12 pages each. Though I
owned a copy of this issue at one time and still have a copy of it
on microfiche somewhere, I don’t remember anything about the three
stories. However, thanks to the Grand Comics Database, I can tell
you something about those tales.
Walter B. Gibson, the author of most of the Shadow novels that ran
in the pulp magazine of the same name, wrote “The Batman Expose!”
Bob Kane penciled the Batman and Robin figures while Lew Schwartz
did everything else. Charles Paris was the inker with Joe Rosen on
the lettering. I worked with Joe quite a bit during my first year
on the Marvel Comics staff, even delivered work to his house a few
times and picked it up the next morning. He was a great letterer
and a good guy.
Gibson also penned “The Buttons of Doom!” Kane, Schwartz, Paris and
Rosen all repeated their “Expose” roles on this story. The villain
of the piece was a guy named the Blaze.
Batman co-creator Bill Finger wrote “The King of the Cats!.” The
villain was the brother of the Catwoman. The same artists worked
on this story, but it was lettered by Joe Letterese. You know that
man was born to letter comic books.
******************************
I passed a fair amount of time with U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens the
other day. I watched two episodes of Justified, which might well
be the best damn show on TV, and read a bit over a third of Raylan
[William Morrow; $26.99], the new novel by Elmore Leonard. Here’s
what you need to know about this book:
It doesn’t follow the continuity of the TV series. Think of it as
an alternate universe version of the Marshall and other characters.
I’m a third into it and I have no idea where it’s going next. In
the first 100 pages, it already had more story than you’ll find in
most novels. It’s a ride, my friends, and, even without finishing
the book, it’s a ride I recommend.
As for the TV series, I try to watch when I know no one else will
be home for several hours. Because Timothy Olyphant’s performance
as Raylan is so powerful and so right that, hours after watching an
episode, I find myself talking and thinking with the same kind of
speech mannerism and patterns. And, since I’m not Olyphant, it’s
just embarrassing.
******************************
My reading habits are truly all over the map. An issue at a time,
I’m also reading Superman’s Girl Friend Lois Lane Archives Volume
1 [DC; $59.99]. I have four things to share.
1. Tom Peyer’s introduction is hands down the funniest introduction
to any DC Archives volume to date. He gets Lois. He gets us. He
gets these often wacky stories.
2. Superman is a total dick in “The Forbidden Box From Krypton” by
Otto Binder with art by Wayne Boring and Stan Kaye. Lois is sent
a box of Kryptonian accessories that confer super-powers on those
who wear them. She’s unskilled and a little thoughtless with the
powers, but she actually manages to do some good with them. Does
Superman train her in the proper use of the powers? Not a chance.
Instead, the Douche of Steel tricks Lois into exposing the items to
kryptonite - she thinks she’s saving his life - and thus destroying
their powers.
3. The phrase “Lois Lane, girl reporter, whose fondest dream is to
marry Superman” or some variant thereof, turns up in these stories
so often I wonder if it was on her business cards.
4. My favorite story so far is “Superman’s Forbidden Room” by Jerry
Coleman with art by Boring and Kaye. Lois solves a case with zip
help from Superman. You go, girl.
******************************
During one of the most depressing weeks of my life, this was some
time ago, I almost set my credit card to smouldering buying things
in futile attempt to make myself not depressed. Having lived with
depression for my entire adult life and mostly mastered it, I know
that “buying things” can be a symptom of my depression. So I do a
lot of thinking before and after purchasing anything.
I bought two movies via Amazon yesterday. The first one was Super
Shark. It’s about a giant mutant shark that walks on its flippers
on land. It’s directed by Fred Olen Ray and it stars Pa Kent (John
Schneider). That purchase didn’t concern me much because it safely
falls within my giant monster loving wheelhouse.
The second movie was 2-Headed Shark Attack from Asylum Pictures and
starring Carmen Electra. Buying that movie, well, it’s obviously
a cry for help.
Watch for reviews in a future bloggy thing as I attempt to change
my pain into your amusement. Again.
******************************
It occasionally throws people when I make light of my depression,
especially those who know I tried to commit suicide on two separate
occasions. It often throws me when people ask me for advice on how
to deal with their depression.
The only advice I can give is to take charge of your own treatment.
Yes, seek whatever therapy is available for you. Yes, consider the
medications you will be offered. But you must be the boss of your
own treatment.
Therapy helped me figure out the tools I needed to cope with what
I was going through. Medication didn’t help me. The drugs made it
difficult for me to write and that made me more depressed. Maybe
medication will work for you. Much as the world tries to fit all
of us into neat little category boxes, we humans are a remarkably
varied lot. One size does not fit all.
Depression is a serious thing. Artist Al Rio took his own life a
few weeks ago and he was far from the first comics industry artist
or writer to do so. I can imagine what his family is going through
at this time. Imagining what my family would have gone through if
I had succeeded in taking my own life is what pulled me back from
taking my life.
I’ve taken control of my depression for the most part. I can’t get
rid of it. Not in a country where the rich keeping getting richer
at the expense of everyone else and with the assistance of those
who were elected to represent all of us. Not in a country where
right-wing hate-mongers spread their vile messages. Not in a world
where people for whom I care get sick or have loved ones who get
sick. Not in an industry, to get back to comics, where so-called
fans vilify creators when those creators go up against the likes of
DC and Marvel. Not in a world where a Gary Friedrich gets crushed
by a Mickey Mouse and Spider-Man tag team. In such circumstances, it
doesn’t strike me as unreasonable to spread much of my day screaming
in rage at the heavens themselves.
Instead...I deal with my depression in my own way. I put my head
down and butt my way through it. If I don’t succeed in that today,
I’ll succeed in that tomorrow. Sometimes I joke about it because
there’s a thin line between laughter and pain. Sometimes I’ll buy
something like 2-Headed Shark Attack. Little steps. Crazy steps.
Steps nonetheless. I fight back.
If I were a drinking man hanging out at a bar this Saturday night,
I might be going on and on as I’ve done here. Cliff Clavin might
be expounding on the mating habits of 2-headed sharks. Carla would
be checking me out because I am, after all, a studly little Italian
muffin. I would definitely be wondering what the heck I was doing
in Boston. But, all evidence to the contrary, I am not a drinking
man. Instead, I blog.
I blog to keep myself in the fight...and I hope you get something
out of it as well. I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Win Mortimer penciled and inked the cover of this 52-page issue,
which featured three Batman adventures of 12 pages each. Though I
owned a copy of this issue at one time and still have a copy of it
on microfiche somewhere, I don’t remember anything about the three
stories. However, thanks to the Grand Comics Database, I can tell
you something about those tales.
Walter B. Gibson, the author of most of the Shadow novels that ran
in the pulp magazine of the same name, wrote “The Batman Expose!”
Bob Kane penciled the Batman and Robin figures while Lew Schwartz
did everything else. Charles Paris was the inker with Joe Rosen on
the lettering. I worked with Joe quite a bit during my first year
on the Marvel Comics staff, even delivered work to his house a few
times and picked it up the next morning. He was a great letterer
and a good guy.
Gibson also penned “The Buttons of Doom!” Kane, Schwartz, Paris and
Rosen all repeated their “Expose” roles on this story. The villain
of the piece was a guy named the Blaze.
Batman co-creator Bill Finger wrote “The King of the Cats!.” The
villain was the brother of the Catwoman. The same artists worked
on this story, but it was lettered by Joe Letterese. You know that
man was born to letter comic books.
******************************
I passed a fair amount of time with U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens the
other day. I watched two episodes of Justified, which might well
be the best damn show on TV, and read a bit over a third of Raylan
[William Morrow; $26.99], the new novel by Elmore Leonard. Here’s
what you need to know about this book:
It doesn’t follow the continuity of the TV series. Think of it as
an alternate universe version of the Marshall and other characters.
I’m a third into it and I have no idea where it’s going next. In
the first 100 pages, it already had more story than you’ll find in
most novels. It’s a ride, my friends, and, even without finishing
the book, it’s a ride I recommend.
As for the TV series, I try to watch when I know no one else will
be home for several hours. Because Timothy Olyphant’s performance
as Raylan is so powerful and so right that, hours after watching an
episode, I find myself talking and thinking with the same kind of
speech mannerism and patterns. And, since I’m not Olyphant, it’s
just embarrassing.
******************************
My reading habits are truly all over the map. An issue at a time,
I’m also reading Superman’s Girl Friend Lois Lane Archives Volume
1 [DC; $59.99]. I have four things to share.
1. Tom Peyer’s introduction is hands down the funniest introduction
to any DC Archives volume to date. He gets Lois. He gets us. He
gets these often wacky stories.
2. Superman is a total dick in “The Forbidden Box From Krypton” by
Otto Binder with art by Wayne Boring and Stan Kaye. Lois is sent
a box of Kryptonian accessories that confer super-powers on those
who wear them. She’s unskilled and a little thoughtless with the
powers, but she actually manages to do some good with them. Does
Superman train her in the proper use of the powers? Not a chance.
Instead, the Douche of Steel tricks Lois into exposing the items to
kryptonite - she thinks she’s saving his life - and thus destroying
their powers.
3. The phrase “Lois Lane, girl reporter, whose fondest dream is to
marry Superman” or some variant thereof, turns up in these stories
so often I wonder if it was on her business cards.
4. My favorite story so far is “Superman’s Forbidden Room” by Jerry
Coleman with art by Boring and Kaye. Lois solves a case with zip
help from Superman. You go, girl.
******************************
During one of the most depressing weeks of my life, this was some
time ago, I almost set my credit card to smouldering buying things
in futile attempt to make myself not depressed. Having lived with
depression for my entire adult life and mostly mastered it, I know
that “buying things” can be a symptom of my depression. So I do a
lot of thinking before and after purchasing anything.
I bought two movies via Amazon yesterday. The first one was Super
Shark. It’s about a giant mutant shark that walks on its flippers
on land. It’s directed by Fred Olen Ray and it stars Pa Kent (John
Schneider). That purchase didn’t concern me much because it safely
falls within my giant monster loving wheelhouse.
The second movie was 2-Headed Shark Attack from Asylum Pictures and
starring Carmen Electra. Buying that movie, well, it’s obviously
a cry for help.
Watch for reviews in a future bloggy thing as I attempt to change
my pain into your amusement. Again.
******************************
It occasionally throws people when I make light of my depression,
especially those who know I tried to commit suicide on two separate
occasions. It often throws me when people ask me for advice on how
to deal with their depression.
The only advice I can give is to take charge of your own treatment.
Yes, seek whatever therapy is available for you. Yes, consider the
medications you will be offered. But you must be the boss of your
own treatment.
Therapy helped me figure out the tools I needed to cope with what
I was going through. Medication didn’t help me. The drugs made it
difficult for me to write and that made me more depressed. Maybe
medication will work for you. Much as the world tries to fit all
of us into neat little category boxes, we humans are a remarkably
varied lot. One size does not fit all.
Depression is a serious thing. Artist Al Rio took his own life a
few weeks ago and he was far from the first comics industry artist
or writer to do so. I can imagine what his family is going through
at this time. Imagining what my family would have gone through if
I had succeeded in taking my own life is what pulled me back from
taking my life.
I’ve taken control of my depression for the most part. I can’t get
rid of it. Not in a country where the rich keeping getting richer
at the expense of everyone else and with the assistance of those
who were elected to represent all of us. Not in a country where
right-wing hate-mongers spread their vile messages. Not in a world
where people for whom I care get sick or have loved ones who get
sick. Not in an industry, to get back to comics, where so-called
fans vilify creators when those creators go up against the likes of
DC and Marvel. Not in a world where a Gary Friedrich gets crushed
by a Mickey Mouse and Spider-Man tag team. In such circumstances, it
doesn’t strike me as unreasonable to spread much of my day screaming
in rage at the heavens themselves.
Instead...I deal with my depression in my own way. I put my head
down and butt my way through it. If I don’t succeed in that today,
I’ll succeed in that tomorrow. Sometimes I joke about it because
there’s a thin line between laughter and pain. Sometimes I’ll buy
something like 2-Headed Shark Attack. Little steps. Crazy steps.
Steps nonetheless. I fight back.
If I were a drinking man hanging out at a bar this Saturday night,
I might be going on and on as I’ve done here. Cliff Clavin might
be expounding on the mating habits of 2-headed sharks. Carla would
be checking me out because I am, after all, a studly little Italian
muffin. I would definitely be wondering what the heck I was doing
in Boston. But, all evidence to the contrary, I am not a drinking
man. Instead, I blog.
I blog to keep myself in the fight...and I hope you get something
out of it as well. I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Friday, February 10, 2012
ASTONISHING STORIES OF THE SUPERNATURAL
Astonishing #10 [March, 1952] came out in December, 1951, the month
of my birth. Though it might take me years of blogging to get to
them all, I do, indeed, plan to write a little something about each
of the comic books published that month. It has been opined that
the cover of this issue was inked by Christopher Rule, but no one
has identified the cover penciler. The face on the fearful blonde
looks familiar to me, but I can’t place the artist.
Besides the Post Office-mandated text story, there are five short
comics tales in the issue:
“The Men Who Owned a Ghost” (drawn by Bill Everett);
“I Solved the Problem” (Mac Pakula);
“The Walking Dead!” (signed by Al Eadeh);
“Melvin and the Martian” (Joe Sinnott); and,
“Only an Insect!” (Pete Morisi).
We don’t know who wrote these stories. Save for the Sinnott tale,
all of them were reprinted in 1970s reprint titles like Creatures
on the Loose, Vault of Evil, and Weird Wonder Tales. I more than
likely read them and maybe even proofread some of them, but I have
no memory of any of them.
In a world where money is no object for me, I’d track down and buy
all these comic books from my birth month. Since it is very much
an object to me, writing about them is the best I can do.
******************************
I’m not thrilled with 2012 so far. Too much bad stuff going on all
around me, though, thankfully, Sainted Wife Barb and our kids are
all doing very well. I’m not doing too bad myself, though I have
been suffering from depression and stress-related ailments. I’ll
work my way through them. I always do.
My “catching up on Marvel” reading program is going good. Though
it’s been a couple months since I last picked up the comics loaned
to me by a friend, I’m relatively current on the Iron Man titles.
That was my January selection.
The Fantastic Four is my February selection, but, as it turns out,
while I had a few years prior to the Mark Waid run to read, I had
already read everything from the wondrous Waid through to the first
issues of the current Jonathan Hickman run.
The pre-Waid issues were mediocre at best. I usually enjoy Chris
Claremont’s writing, but his FF didn’t work for me and, save for a
Karl Kesel-written issue in which we learned Ben Grimm was Jewish,
the post-Claremont material was even worse.
Before I get to the rest of the Hickman issues, I’m reading various
Fantastic Four specials and mini-series. If any of them stand out,
I’ll mention them in a future blog.
Since catching up on the Fantastic Four this month will be far less
time-consuming than I originally thought, I decided to make a dent
in my back reading of X-Men titles, starting with Peter David’s X-
Factor. These were issues following the depowering of almost all
mutants and the civil war between Marvel’s non-mutant super-heroes,
and they were terrific. Up until the point where X-Factor crossed
over into the other X-Men titles.
From late 2007, “The Messiah Complex” was a pointless mess. Most
of the writers either didn’t bother to name/identify the dozens of
mutants who appeared in the 13-issue crossover or lacked the skill
to do so. The story itself felt hopelessly padded. Several deaths
seemed more sensationalistic than significant...and I bet most of
the deceased turned up alive within a year or two. It was dismal.
I’ll be getting back to X-Factor by the end of the month, though I
may be bouncing back and forth between the X-titles of that time.
Right now, I have a stack of Wolverine from 1999 to the “Divided We
Stand” issues of the X-titles to read. Since many of these issues
are by writers whose work I generally don’t enjoy, I suspect I’ll
end up doing more skimming than actual reading. But I’ll give them
a couple of issues before I go into skim-mode.
Catching up on X-Men titles will be an ongoing thing all year long.
March will find me catching up on Avengers and possibly Spider-
Man. I’ll keep you posted.
******************************
Static Shock artist/co-writer Scott McDaniel has responded to John
Rozum’s blog article on why Rozum quit the soon-to-be-canceled DC
title. It strikes me as “he said/he said” and Rozum’s version of
events rings truer to me.
Since I would much rather assume a lack of ability over malice, I
accept McDaniel and editor Harvey Richards thought their own ideas
for the title were better than Rozum’s. However, what showed up in
the book was clumsy and uninteresting. Much of DC editorial and an
alarming number of its writers and artists lack the creative chops
and the storytelling skill to produce good comic books. When you
combine this talent shortage with the mandate to launch 52 titles
in one month, what you get is mediocre comic books. Not every one
of “The New 52,” but a significant number thereof.
I still hope DC does well. Good sales for DC hopefully translates
into good and steady paychecks for freelances. Good sales for DC
maybe gives comics retailers a little extra cash to order the much
better titles being produced by companies other than DC and Marvel.
Those are all good things.
If you enjoy more of “The New 52" titles than I do, that’s fabulous
for you. I’m thrilled for you. Really. But, with rare exception,
they aren’t floating my boat.
Spare me the “mired in the past” e-mails that I’ve received from a
few churlish readers who are clearly so incensed with me than they
have forgotten their own names. Anyone who has read my reviews for
even a year knows my range of comics interests are vast. I’m not
mired in anything save for my insistence that comic books should be
well-written and well-drawn.
I know there are many other DC matters you’ve asked me to discuss
in this blog, among them the Watchman prequels - again - and DC’s
never-ending campaign to deny the heirs of Jerry Siegel their fair
and lawful piece of the Superman success. I’ll be getting to both
topics soon, along with a still-in-development piece on why I will
likely never sue DC.
But, 2012 being such a shitty year and all, I’m going to proceed at
my own serene pace on those subjects. I’ll drink some eggs, punch
out some meat, run up some stairs, and write about them when I feel
ready to last the whole ten rounds.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
of my birth. Though it might take me years of blogging to get to
them all, I do, indeed, plan to write a little something about each
of the comic books published that month. It has been opined that
the cover of this issue was inked by Christopher Rule, but no one
has identified the cover penciler. The face on the fearful blonde
looks familiar to me, but I can’t place the artist.
Besides the Post Office-mandated text story, there are five short
comics tales in the issue:
“The Men Who Owned a Ghost” (drawn by Bill Everett);
“I Solved the Problem” (Mac Pakula);
“The Walking Dead!” (signed by Al Eadeh);
“Melvin and the Martian” (Joe Sinnott); and,
“Only an Insect!” (Pete Morisi).
We don’t know who wrote these stories. Save for the Sinnott tale,
all of them were reprinted in 1970s reprint titles like Creatures
on the Loose, Vault of Evil, and Weird Wonder Tales. I more than
likely read them and maybe even proofread some of them, but I have
no memory of any of them.
In a world where money is no object for me, I’d track down and buy
all these comic books from my birth month. Since it is very much
an object to me, writing about them is the best I can do.
******************************
I’m not thrilled with 2012 so far. Too much bad stuff going on all
around me, though, thankfully, Sainted Wife Barb and our kids are
all doing very well. I’m not doing too bad myself, though I have
been suffering from depression and stress-related ailments. I’ll
work my way through them. I always do.
My “catching up on Marvel” reading program is going good. Though
it’s been a couple months since I last picked up the comics loaned
to me by a friend, I’m relatively current on the Iron Man titles.
That was my January selection.
The Fantastic Four is my February selection, but, as it turns out,
while I had a few years prior to the Mark Waid run to read, I had
already read everything from the wondrous Waid through to the first
issues of the current Jonathan Hickman run.
The pre-Waid issues were mediocre at best. I usually enjoy Chris
Claremont’s writing, but his FF didn’t work for me and, save for a
Karl Kesel-written issue in which we learned Ben Grimm was Jewish,
the post-Claremont material was even worse.
Before I get to the rest of the Hickman issues, I’m reading various
Fantastic Four specials and mini-series. If any of them stand out,
I’ll mention them in a future blog.
Since catching up on the Fantastic Four this month will be far less
time-consuming than I originally thought, I decided to make a dent
in my back reading of X-Men titles, starting with Peter David’s X-
Factor. These were issues following the depowering of almost all
mutants and the civil war between Marvel’s non-mutant super-heroes,
and they were terrific. Up until the point where X-Factor crossed
over into the other X-Men titles.
From late 2007, “The Messiah Complex” was a pointless mess. Most
of the writers either didn’t bother to name/identify the dozens of
mutants who appeared in the 13-issue crossover or lacked the skill
to do so. The story itself felt hopelessly padded. Several deaths
seemed more sensationalistic than significant...and I bet most of
the deceased turned up alive within a year or two. It was dismal.
I’ll be getting back to X-Factor by the end of the month, though I
may be bouncing back and forth between the X-titles of that time.
Right now, I have a stack of Wolverine from 1999 to the “Divided We
Stand” issues of the X-titles to read. Since many of these issues
are by writers whose work I generally don’t enjoy, I suspect I’ll
end up doing more skimming than actual reading. But I’ll give them
a couple of issues before I go into skim-mode.
Catching up on X-Men titles will be an ongoing thing all year long.
March will find me catching up on Avengers and possibly Spider-
Man. I’ll keep you posted.
******************************
Static Shock artist/co-writer Scott McDaniel has responded to John
Rozum’s blog article on why Rozum quit the soon-to-be-canceled DC
title. It strikes me as “he said/he said” and Rozum’s version of
events rings truer to me.
Since I would much rather assume a lack of ability over malice, I
accept McDaniel and editor Harvey Richards thought their own ideas
for the title were better than Rozum’s. However, what showed up in
the book was clumsy and uninteresting. Much of DC editorial and an
alarming number of its writers and artists lack the creative chops
and the storytelling skill to produce good comic books. When you
combine this talent shortage with the mandate to launch 52 titles
in one month, what you get is mediocre comic books. Not every one
of “The New 52,” but a significant number thereof.
I still hope DC does well. Good sales for DC hopefully translates
into good and steady paychecks for freelances. Good sales for DC
maybe gives comics retailers a little extra cash to order the much
better titles being produced by companies other than DC and Marvel.
Those are all good things.
If you enjoy more of “The New 52" titles than I do, that’s fabulous
for you. I’m thrilled for you. Really. But, with rare exception,
they aren’t floating my boat.
Spare me the “mired in the past” e-mails that I’ve received from a
few churlish readers who are clearly so incensed with me than they
have forgotten their own names. Anyone who has read my reviews for
even a year knows my range of comics interests are vast. I’m not
mired in anything save for my insistence that comic books should be
well-written and well-drawn.
I know there are many other DC matters you’ve asked me to discuss
in this blog, among them the Watchman prequels - again - and DC’s
never-ending campaign to deny the heirs of Jerry Siegel their fair
and lawful piece of the Superman success. I’ll be getting to both
topics soon, along with a still-in-development piece on why I will
likely never sue DC.
But, 2012 being such a shitty year and all, I’m going to proceed at
my own serene pace on those subjects. I’ll drink some eggs, punch
out some meat, run up some stairs, and write about them when I feel
ready to last the whole ten rounds.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Thursday, February 9, 2012
TONY’S BACK PAGES: MORE SEYMOUR
From Comics Buyer’s Guide #1686:
Not very long ago, I wrote about Seymour, My Son #1 [Archie Comics;
September 1963] and made a solemn vow that, someday, a copy of the
sequel to that unusual comic book would be mine. Thanks to reader
Walter Price, my someday has come. The peerlessly generous Price
sent me a well-read copy of More Seymour #1 [October, 1963]. Talk
about nigh-instant gratification.
Like its predecessor, More Seymour is written by Frank Doyle with
art by Dan DeCarlo (pencils) and Rudy Lapick (inks). The cover is
also by DeCarlo/Lapick and my thanks to Bongo Comics legend Bill
Morrison for correcting the erroneous cover credits I got from the
Grand Comics Database.
Though More Seymour is a more traditional teen humor comic than the
first one-shot, it still breaks a few of the “rules.” The 30-page
story is split into two chapters. The first is told from the point
of view of Seymour’s loving father and focuses on his exasperation
as his son turns every household chore into a disaster. This kid
could give Archie lessons in klutziness.
The second chapter portrays Seymour’s equally disastrous day at the
beach. Freed from his chores by his father, the lad anticipates a
fun time will be had by all. Sadly, it doesn’t turn out that way.
Seymour can and does out-Archie Archie!
Doyle brings the funny to the story and DeCarlo choreographs with
his trademark skill and grace. Each of them was great when working
with other collaborators, but, whenever they worked together, they
created hilarious storytelling magic.
Despite being half-a-century old, Seymour, My Son and More Seymour
hold up very well. As a father myself, I find the obvious love of
this harried dad for his goofball son heartwarming. Two classics
and, according to one of my friends at Archie Comics, they will be
reprinted later this year, most likely in a couple Archie digests.
I hope you get to read them.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Not very long ago, I wrote about Seymour, My Son #1 [Archie Comics;
September 1963] and made a solemn vow that, someday, a copy of the
sequel to that unusual comic book would be mine. Thanks to reader
Walter Price, my someday has come. The peerlessly generous Price
sent me a well-read copy of More Seymour #1 [October, 1963]. Talk
about nigh-instant gratification.
Like its predecessor, More Seymour is written by Frank Doyle with
art by Dan DeCarlo (pencils) and Rudy Lapick (inks). The cover is
also by DeCarlo/Lapick and my thanks to Bongo Comics legend Bill
Morrison for correcting the erroneous cover credits I got from the
Grand Comics Database.
Though More Seymour is a more traditional teen humor comic than the
first one-shot, it still breaks a few of the “rules.” The 30-page
story is split into two chapters. The first is told from the point
of view of Seymour’s loving father and focuses on his exasperation
as his son turns every household chore into a disaster. This kid
could give Archie lessons in klutziness.
The second chapter portrays Seymour’s equally disastrous day at the
beach. Freed from his chores by his father, the lad anticipates a
fun time will be had by all. Sadly, it doesn’t turn out that way.
Seymour can and does out-Archie Archie!
Doyle brings the funny to the story and DeCarlo choreographs with
his trademark skill and grace. Each of them was great when working
with other collaborators, but, whenever they worked together, they
created hilarious storytelling magic.
Despite being half-a-century old, Seymour, My Son and More Seymour
hold up very well. As a father myself, I find the obvious love of
this harried dad for his goofball son heartwarming. Two classics
and, according to one of my friends at Archie Comics, they will be
reprinted later this year, most likely in a couple Archie digests.
I hope you get to read them.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
2011: THE COMICS YEAR IN REVIEW
From Comics Buyer’s Guide #1686:
“Old times” never come back and I suppose it's just as well. What
comes back is a new morning every day in the year, and that's
better.”
- George E. Woodberry, American literary critic and poet (1855-
1930)
“The Year in Review” is the theme of this month’s CBG, though I’m
confining my remarks to the comic-book industry. If I attempted to
review the 2011 world outside of comics, I’d need the entire issue
and then some, though I could sum it up with Lord Byron’s “And if
I laugh at any mortal thing, 'tis that I may not weep.”
The biggest comics story of the year has to be the success of DC’s
“New 52" relaunch of all its DC Universe titles. The first month
of the releases marked the first time in decades that DC had more
market share than Marvel. DC has repeated the feat with the second
month of the relaunch.
That’s almost certainly not the end of the story. Retailers have
been buying these comics on a returnable basis. While that won’t
be the case down the line, at the moment, we can’t know for certain
how many copies of these books have actually been sold and how many
will eventually be returned to the publisher.
Many of the first month sales were likely made to the curious and
to the reemerging comics speculators. We don’t know how long the
former will stick with these titles or how long it will take those
speculators to bail on the comics as they have always done in the
past. More unknown factors to be considered.
What I can and do hope for is that these books do prove to be very
successful, enriching the creators who worked on them and giving a
shot in the arm to DC and the rest of the industry, especially the
long-suffering comics retailers. The retailers are on the front lines
of our business and deserve our thanks.
From a non-business standpoint, reaction to the “new 52" titles has
been mixed. Some readers loved them and some hated them. I have
heard from CBG readers excited about DC Comics titles for the first
time in years and from readers who have now ended their decades of
buying DC titles. My own reactions were mixed.
My favorite of the “New 52" debut issues was All-Star Western. I
wasn’t surprised by this. Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti’s Jonah
Hex was my favorite “Old DCU” title. While Hex generally featured
sharp done-in-one stories, All-Star Western #1 was the first part
of an extended story in which Jonah comes to Gotham City and kind
of sort of teams up with medical doctor and budding student of the
human mind Amadeus Arkham. There’s a “Jack the Ripper” murdering
women of easy virtue and a conspiracy of the rich and the powerful,
but the writers make the transition from done–in-one to story arc
with nary a seam to be seen.
My biggest disappointment with these “New 52" debuts? None of them
were done-in-one stories. Is that really such a lost art in modern
comics writing?
If I had to pick my “Top 10" of “The New 52":
1. All-Star Western
2. Aquaman
3. Action Comics
4. Justice League International
5. Superman
6. DC Universe Presents (Deadman)
7. Green Lantern
8. Green Arrow
9. Demon Knights
10. Frankenstein, Agent of S.H.A.D.E.
Geoff Johns’ Aquaman is the best and most relatable version of the
hero in decades. I think I prefer the Aquaman of Batman: The Brave
and the Bold by a hair, but that take on the Sea King would never
work in the DCU of the comic books.
The Superman of Action Comics is the cocky, dismissive of authority
hero of the earliest Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster stories. I like
that guy better than the mostly respectful Boy Scout and superstar
Kal-El would later become. I’m hoping the modern-day Superman seen
in Superman #1 will keep some of his early sass.
Dan Jurgens delivered a solid super-team book with Justice League
International #1. The C-list characters were fun and likeable, the
behind-the-scenes stuff with the United Nations was clever, and his
Batman was not the [rhymes with Rick] than is his usual portrayal
in today’s comics.
In DC Comics Presents #1, writer Paul Jenkins gave readers the best
version of Deadman since the earliest years of the character. I’d
rather see this Deadman in an ongoing title than being part of the
mediocre Hawk and Dove.
Green Lantern is one of the titles that has picked up from the old
DCU, something I think defeats the purpose of the relaunch. But,
despite that, I enjoyed the first issue and look forward to seeing
where it goes from there. On the down side, I can’t come up with
a single good reason why anyone needs all those other Green Lantern
titles. Nothing says “boring” to me more than 7000 heroes with the
same power and their hundreds of multi-colored counterparts...who
also have the same power. Yawn!
I hated Green Arrow. He was a womanizer and a murderer. Various
DC writers had turned him into the most unlikeable hero in the DCU.
The new Arrow is younger and not unlike Tony Stark is his style and
use of his resources to fight evil. That similarity aside, I could
relate to him much better than I could to the old Arrow. However,
it appears writer J.T. Krul is not staying on this title and that
does not bode well for its future.
The quirky Demon Knights and Frankenstein, Agent of S.H.A.D.E. were
unexpected delights. It paid off for DC to bring some weirdness to
the new DCU lineup.
On the way down side, there were several of the “New 52" titles I
found utterly repulsive: Deathstroke, Suicide Squad, Catwoman, and
Red Hood and the Outlaws. The first two books were as mean-spirited
as they come. Catwoman avoided everything good ever done with the
title character as a pretext to sexual sensationalism; you’ll find
more class on The Jerry Springer Show. And, no matter how much the
writer tries to spin his portrayal of Starfire in Red Hood and the
Outlaws, it’s still an insult to the character, her creators, and
her fans.
There were “New 52" titles I found enjoyable and/or interesting:
Batgirl, Men of War, Swamp Thing, Resurrection Man, Batman, and
Wonder Woman. Assuming I continue to find them so, I will continue
reading them as long as the generous pal who loans me his comics
keeps buying them.
There were titles that had enough merit that I’d read more issues
of them to see if they improve: Detective Comics, Batwoman, Legion
of Super-Heroes, Blackhawk, Justice League Dark, and Voodoo.
Legion lacked the grandeur and sense of hope I was hoping would be
restored to the title. Blackhawk needs to introduce its concepts
and protagonists more surely. Voodoo, which was very well-written
and drawn, needs to establish a, let’s call it “moral foundation,”
for me to stick with it.
Batwing was in a class by itself. Though the writing is woefully
inadequate, I like the character, the concepts, and the setting of
this book. Batwing, an agent of Batman, Incorporator, is a police
officer in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He was a boy soldier
in his youth and is now one of a handful of policemen trying to do
their jobs within their corrupt police department. Grant Morrison
created the character. I’ll continue reading the book for a while,
but the writing has to rise to the potential this title is showing.
I hope that happens.
There are a large number of debut issues that didn’t do a thing for
me. I know I’m a harder sell than most DC readers, but I couldn’t
find anything exciting or particularly well handled in Hawk & Dove,
O.M.A.C., Batman and Robin, Stormwatch, Grifter, Legion Lost, Birds
of Prey, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom, Superboy, Supergirl, Batman the
Dark Knight, The Flash, I Vampire, Savage Hawkman, Teen Titans, or
Justice League. They struck me as mediocre super-hero comics, no
better and in some cases much worse than their predecessors.
Then there were the tragic disappointments: Animal Man, Fury of the
Firestorms, Mister Terrific, Nightwing, and Static Shock. Each one
of these could and should have been good.
The most interesting element of Animal Man was Buddy Baker as a “D”
list hero bouncing from gig to gig, whim to whim, and his family’s
having to go along with it. Unfortunately, that element soon gave
to way to a not particularly interesting Vertigo Lite motif. This
book can’t be both DCU and Vertigo and, giving the character’s DCU
origins, I would prefer it struck to that sensibility.
With top creators like Gail Simone and Ethan Van Sciver on board,
I was expecting a lot from Fury of the Firestorms: The Nuclear Men.
But the first issue spent too much time on too trite villains and
an equally yawn-inducing conspiracy and not enough making me care
about either of the two young leads.
I was also looking forward to Mister Terrific and Static Shock as
I have more than a passing interest in super-hero titles starring
African-American leads. The former was somewhat uneven and didn’t
bring anything new to the table; I’m still hoping for better stuff
in future issues.
As for Static Shock, it was about as generic a teen super-hero book
as you can imagine. It was a mistake to move the title character
from his house and neighborhood in the interesting city of Dakota
to the overused Metropolis. They even had him working part-time at
S.T.A.R. Labs. It’s as if DC editorial either never read the great
Milestone series or deliberately chose to ignore all the wonderful
material published in that sorely-missed series.
Nightwing #1 was a “blah” debut, disappointing because Dick Grayson
should be one of the most interesting characters in the DCU. Not
only did he have the same traumatic origin as Batman - seeing his
parents murdered before his eyes - but then he ends up being raised
by a man who, in the current misguided DCU “Bible,” is more than a
little crazy himself. There were good touches: a reunion with the
circus he used to perform with and his choice to live in a Gotham
City neighborhood that is much less than upscale. But, overall, it
could and should have been a better comic book.
When I reviewed these debut issue at somewhat greater length in my
blog, I received the usual “right on” responses to my comments and
the usual “I disagree with your assessments” comments. Which is as
it should be. I write reviews, not commandments.
DC’s “New 52" was the big comics-industry story, but there were a
number of others worth noting. For example, despite the apparent
success of DC’s bold and maybe desperate relaunch of its super-hero
titles, the company still trailed far behind Marvel when it came to
movie and TV success.
Marvel scored three hit movies in Captain America, Thor, and X-Men
First Class. All were very entertaining. It also had the launch
of an Avengers animated series that quickly became one of my all-
time comics-to-cartoons favorites.
DC had one mediocre movie in Green Lantern and failed to get their
Wonder Woman TV show on the air. Batman: The Brave and the Bold
continued to be great fun and Young Justice has been a good but not
great series. Gotta give this one to Marvel.
On a personal note, 2011 marked my return to comic-book writing for
the first time in a decade or so. I never stopped writing, but the
closest I came to comic-book writing was writing newspaper comics.
Which is close but no cigar. Not even a Segar.
When the fine folks at Ardeen/Atlas offered me the opportunity to
write Grim Ghost, I took the gig because I was amused to be asked
to again write a character I’d written just once in the mid-1970s
and because I wanted to prove to myself that I could still write a
darn good comic-book script.
If I may be immodest, Grim Ghost #1-6, the first story arc, proved
that to my satisfaction. It gave readers interesting characters,
lots of surprises, and a full six issues worth of story. None of
this stretching out a one-issue tale to fit a trade. The readers
and my editors liked it as well. Winning!
The first Grim Ghost story arc will be collected in trade paperback
before the end of the year. It’ll be followed by a second arc in
2012. I’m pretty happy about that.
That’s my comics year in review. I hope yours was as exciting an
fulfilling...and that 2012 is even more so!
Happy New Year, my friends!
******************************
ADDENDUM:
This CBG reprint should have run last month, but the chaos of the
new year knocked me out of whack. As you probably realize, I wrote
the above after reading the first and only the first issues of “The
New 52.” Further reviews of these titles will be spotty, reserved
for those I truly enjoy or those which suggest a pertinent comment.
If you must have more “New 52" reviews, I suspect you can find them
quite easily elsewhere on the Internet.
The question I’m most frequently asked these days is when my second
Grim Ghost story will begin and when the trade paperback collection
of my first story will be published. Sadly, the only answer I can
give you is...I don’t know.
I’m completely out of the loop re: all things Atlas. I’d hoped to
start work on my second story late last year. That didn’t happen.
I have submitted proposals for that second story and for a second
Atlas title. When I know something and as soon thereafter as I can
tell you something, I’ll do so.
What I can do today is reveal something that’s been a wildly open
“secret” in the industry. Despite a second writer being listed in
the credits of Grim Ghost #1-6, and outside of the usual editorial
input, I did all the writing on those issues. The other credit was
a contractual matter from before I was hired to write the series.
I’ll likely discuss this in greater detail in the future, but, for
now, that’s what you get.
If you enjoyed the writing on Grim Ghost #1-6, that’s me. If you
didn’t enjoy it, well, that’s on me, too. I wouldn’t have it any
other way.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
“Old times” never come back and I suppose it's just as well. What
comes back is a new morning every day in the year, and that's
better.”
- George E. Woodberry, American literary critic and poet (1855-
1930)
“The Year in Review” is the theme of this month’s CBG, though I’m
confining my remarks to the comic-book industry. If I attempted to
review the 2011 world outside of comics, I’d need the entire issue
and then some, though I could sum it up with Lord Byron’s “And if
I laugh at any mortal thing, 'tis that I may not weep.”
The biggest comics story of the year has to be the success of DC’s
“New 52" relaunch of all its DC Universe titles. The first month
of the releases marked the first time in decades that DC had more
market share than Marvel. DC has repeated the feat with the second
month of the relaunch.
That’s almost certainly not the end of the story. Retailers have
been buying these comics on a returnable basis. While that won’t
be the case down the line, at the moment, we can’t know for certain
how many copies of these books have actually been sold and how many
will eventually be returned to the publisher.
Many of the first month sales were likely made to the curious and
to the reemerging comics speculators. We don’t know how long the
former will stick with these titles or how long it will take those
speculators to bail on the comics as they have always done in the
past. More unknown factors to be considered.
What I can and do hope for is that these books do prove to be very
successful, enriching the creators who worked on them and giving a
shot in the arm to DC and the rest of the industry, especially the
long-suffering comics retailers. The retailers are on the front lines
of our business and deserve our thanks.
From a non-business standpoint, reaction to the “new 52" titles has
been mixed. Some readers loved them and some hated them. I have
heard from CBG readers excited about DC Comics titles for the first
time in years and from readers who have now ended their decades of
buying DC titles. My own reactions were mixed.
My favorite of the “New 52" debut issues was All-Star Western. I
wasn’t surprised by this. Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti’s Jonah
Hex was my favorite “Old DCU” title. While Hex generally featured
sharp done-in-one stories, All-Star Western #1 was the first part
of an extended story in which Jonah comes to Gotham City and kind
of sort of teams up with medical doctor and budding student of the
human mind Amadeus Arkham. There’s a “Jack the Ripper” murdering
women of easy virtue and a conspiracy of the rich and the powerful,
but the writers make the transition from done–in-one to story arc
with nary a seam to be seen.
My biggest disappointment with these “New 52" debuts? None of them
were done-in-one stories. Is that really such a lost art in modern
comics writing?
If I had to pick my “Top 10" of “The New 52":
1. All-Star Western
2. Aquaman
3. Action Comics
4. Justice League International
5. Superman
6. DC Universe Presents (Deadman)
7. Green Lantern
8. Green Arrow
9. Demon Knights
10. Frankenstein, Agent of S.H.A.D.E.
Geoff Johns’ Aquaman is the best and most relatable version of the
hero in decades. I think I prefer the Aquaman of Batman: The Brave
and the Bold by a hair, but that take on the Sea King would never
work in the DCU of the comic books.
The Superman of Action Comics is the cocky, dismissive of authority
hero of the earliest Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster stories. I like
that guy better than the mostly respectful Boy Scout and superstar
Kal-El would later become. I’m hoping the modern-day Superman seen
in Superman #1 will keep some of his early sass.
Dan Jurgens delivered a solid super-team book with Justice League
International #1. The C-list characters were fun and likeable, the
behind-the-scenes stuff with the United Nations was clever, and his
Batman was not the [rhymes with Rick] than is his usual portrayal
in today’s comics.
In DC Comics Presents #1, writer Paul Jenkins gave readers the best
version of Deadman since the earliest years of the character. I’d
rather see this Deadman in an ongoing title than being part of the
mediocre Hawk and Dove.
Green Lantern is one of the titles that has picked up from the old
DCU, something I think defeats the purpose of the relaunch. But,
despite that, I enjoyed the first issue and look forward to seeing
where it goes from there. On the down side, I can’t come up with
a single good reason why anyone needs all those other Green Lantern
titles. Nothing says “boring” to me more than 7000 heroes with the
same power and their hundreds of multi-colored counterparts...who
also have the same power. Yawn!
I hated Green Arrow. He was a womanizer and a murderer. Various
DC writers had turned him into the most unlikeable hero in the DCU.
The new Arrow is younger and not unlike Tony Stark is his style and
use of his resources to fight evil. That similarity aside, I could
relate to him much better than I could to the old Arrow. However,
it appears writer J.T. Krul is not staying on this title and that
does not bode well for its future.
The quirky Demon Knights and Frankenstein, Agent of S.H.A.D.E. were
unexpected delights. It paid off for DC to bring some weirdness to
the new DCU lineup.
On the way down side, there were several of the “New 52" titles I
found utterly repulsive: Deathstroke, Suicide Squad, Catwoman, and
Red Hood and the Outlaws. The first two books were as mean-spirited
as they come. Catwoman avoided everything good ever done with the
title character as a pretext to sexual sensationalism; you’ll find
more class on The Jerry Springer Show. And, no matter how much the
writer tries to spin his portrayal of Starfire in Red Hood and the
Outlaws, it’s still an insult to the character, her creators, and
her fans.
There were “New 52" titles I found enjoyable and/or interesting:
Batgirl, Men of War, Swamp Thing, Resurrection Man, Batman, and
Wonder Woman. Assuming I continue to find them so, I will continue
reading them as long as the generous pal who loans me his comics
keeps buying them.
There were titles that had enough merit that I’d read more issues
of them to see if they improve: Detective Comics, Batwoman, Legion
of Super-Heroes, Blackhawk, Justice League Dark, and Voodoo.
Legion lacked the grandeur and sense of hope I was hoping would be
restored to the title. Blackhawk needs to introduce its concepts
and protagonists more surely. Voodoo, which was very well-written
and drawn, needs to establish a, let’s call it “moral foundation,”
for me to stick with it.
Batwing was in a class by itself. Though the writing is woefully
inadequate, I like the character, the concepts, and the setting of
this book. Batwing, an agent of Batman, Incorporator, is a police
officer in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He was a boy soldier
in his youth and is now one of a handful of policemen trying to do
their jobs within their corrupt police department. Grant Morrison
created the character. I’ll continue reading the book for a while,
but the writing has to rise to the potential this title is showing.
I hope that happens.
There are a large number of debut issues that didn’t do a thing for
me. I know I’m a harder sell than most DC readers, but I couldn’t
find anything exciting or particularly well handled in Hawk & Dove,
O.M.A.C., Batman and Robin, Stormwatch, Grifter, Legion Lost, Birds
of Prey, Blue Beetle, Captain Atom, Superboy, Supergirl, Batman the
Dark Knight, The Flash, I Vampire, Savage Hawkman, Teen Titans, or
Justice League. They struck me as mediocre super-hero comics, no
better and in some cases much worse than their predecessors.
Then there were the tragic disappointments: Animal Man, Fury of the
Firestorms, Mister Terrific, Nightwing, and Static Shock. Each one
of these could and should have been good.
The most interesting element of Animal Man was Buddy Baker as a “D”
list hero bouncing from gig to gig, whim to whim, and his family’s
having to go along with it. Unfortunately, that element soon gave
to way to a not particularly interesting Vertigo Lite motif. This
book can’t be both DCU and Vertigo and, giving the character’s DCU
origins, I would prefer it struck to that sensibility.
With top creators like Gail Simone and Ethan Van Sciver on board,
I was expecting a lot from Fury of the Firestorms: The Nuclear Men.
But the first issue spent too much time on too trite villains and
an equally yawn-inducing conspiracy and not enough making me care
about either of the two young leads.
I was also looking forward to Mister Terrific and Static Shock as
I have more than a passing interest in super-hero titles starring
African-American leads. The former was somewhat uneven and didn’t
bring anything new to the table; I’m still hoping for better stuff
in future issues.
As for Static Shock, it was about as generic a teen super-hero book
as you can imagine. It was a mistake to move the title character
from his house and neighborhood in the interesting city of Dakota
to the overused Metropolis. They even had him working part-time at
S.T.A.R. Labs. It’s as if DC editorial either never read the great
Milestone series or deliberately chose to ignore all the wonderful
material published in that sorely-missed series.
Nightwing #1 was a “blah” debut, disappointing because Dick Grayson
should be one of the most interesting characters in the DCU. Not
only did he have the same traumatic origin as Batman - seeing his
parents murdered before his eyes - but then he ends up being raised
by a man who, in the current misguided DCU “Bible,” is more than a
little crazy himself. There were good touches: a reunion with the
circus he used to perform with and his choice to live in a Gotham
City neighborhood that is much less than upscale. But, overall, it
could and should have been a better comic book.
When I reviewed these debut issue at somewhat greater length in my
blog, I received the usual “right on” responses to my comments and
the usual “I disagree with your assessments” comments. Which is as
it should be. I write reviews, not commandments.
DC’s “New 52" was the big comics-industry story, but there were a
number of others worth noting. For example, despite the apparent
success of DC’s bold and maybe desperate relaunch of its super-hero
titles, the company still trailed far behind Marvel when it came to
movie and TV success.
Marvel scored three hit movies in Captain America, Thor, and X-Men
First Class. All were very entertaining. It also had the launch
of an Avengers animated series that quickly became one of my all-
time comics-to-cartoons favorites.
DC had one mediocre movie in Green Lantern and failed to get their
Wonder Woman TV show on the air. Batman: The Brave and the Bold
continued to be great fun and Young Justice has been a good but not
great series. Gotta give this one to Marvel.
On a personal note, 2011 marked my return to comic-book writing for
the first time in a decade or so. I never stopped writing, but the
closest I came to comic-book writing was writing newspaper comics.
Which is close but no cigar. Not even a Segar.
When the fine folks at Ardeen/Atlas offered me the opportunity to
write Grim Ghost, I took the gig because I was amused to be asked
to again write a character I’d written just once in the mid-1970s
and because I wanted to prove to myself that I could still write a
darn good comic-book script.
If I may be immodest, Grim Ghost #1-6, the first story arc, proved
that to my satisfaction. It gave readers interesting characters,
lots of surprises, and a full six issues worth of story. None of
this stretching out a one-issue tale to fit a trade. The readers
and my editors liked it as well. Winning!
The first Grim Ghost story arc will be collected in trade paperback
before the end of the year. It’ll be followed by a second arc in
2012. I’m pretty happy about that.
That’s my comics year in review. I hope yours was as exciting an
fulfilling...and that 2012 is even more so!
Happy New Year, my friends!
******************************
ADDENDUM:
This CBG reprint should have run last month, but the chaos of the
new year knocked me out of whack. As you probably realize, I wrote
the above after reading the first and only the first issues of “The
New 52.” Further reviews of these titles will be spotty, reserved
for those I truly enjoy or those which suggest a pertinent comment.
If you must have more “New 52" reviews, I suspect you can find them
quite easily elsewhere on the Internet.
The question I’m most frequently asked these days is when my second
Grim Ghost story will begin and when the trade paperback collection
of my first story will be published. Sadly, the only answer I can
give you is...I don’t know.
I’m completely out of the loop re: all things Atlas. I’d hoped to
start work on my second story late last year. That didn’t happen.
I have submitted proposals for that second story and for a second
Atlas title. When I know something and as soon thereafter as I can
tell you something, I’ll do so.
What I can do today is reveal something that’s been a wildly open
“secret” in the industry. Despite a second writer being listed in
the credits of Grim Ghost #1-6, and outside of the usual editorial
input, I did all the writing on those issues. The other credit was
a contractual matter from before I was hired to write the series.
I’ll likely discuss this in greater detail in the future, but, for
now, that’s what you get.
If you enjoyed the writing on Grim Ghost #1-6, that’s me. If you
didn’t enjoy it, well, that’s on me, too. I wouldn’t have it any
other way.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
I GO LOGO!
Previously in this bloggy thing:
Entertainment giants DC Comics, Oni Press, and Bongo Comics all got
new logos which made entertainment microbe Tony Isabella get pouty
because he didn’t get a new logo. Hence a contest in which readers
of this bloggy thing were asked to DESIGN A NEW LOGO FOR
TONY. It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Heck, it is a good idea. Contest entries will be shown in the blog
as they arrive. The best three to five logos will win prizes for
their creators, namely autographed copies of 1000 Comic Books You
Must Read or Grim Ghost. All prizes will come with a certificate
of authenticity confirming the items come from my Vast Accumulation
of Stuff. Okay, not great prizes, but I’m on a tight budget here.
To enter the contest, e-mail me your logo with your permission to
run it in this blog. I’m not buying or seeking any rights to your
work beyond being able to use it in this contest. Should I want to
make further use of your logo, we’ll negotiate an agreement for it.
Today’s logo submissions come from Robert Lloyd, also known as Late
Night Ferengi, and comics legend Mark Evanier, one of my best pals
for over four decades. You can join their stellar company if you
send me a logo by the contest deadline of February 18.
Let’s see what else I have for you today.
******************************
DC has announced the creative teams for its Watchmen prequels and
I can’t wait to read the J. Michael Straczynski Dr. Manhattan and
Nite Owl mini-series wherein the heroes start at different ends of
the country and walk towards the middle. And I’m sure the series
written by Brian “Mister Sunshine” Azzarello will inspire me with
life-affirming parables on the nature of heroism.
Serious now. If both Watchmen creators Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons
were against these prequels, I’d be against them as well. However,
though I definitely lean towards the contribution of the writer in
this instance, Moore has never, to the best of my knowledge, denied
Gibbons’ status as a co-creator. Two creators I respect immensely.
One of them is okay with the prequels. I’m not going to decry that
DC is publishing them.
Will I read them? That depends on whether or not the good friend
who lends me his comic books buys them. I was dropped from the DC
comp list last year, so the only new DCs I see are those I get from
my friend. Way down the road, if he doesn’t buy them, I might be
able to get the collected editions through my library.
There has been much discussion of these prequels on line. I think
my favorite comment was this tweet by Joe Caramanga:
“Just imagine if people cared half as much about health care and
poverty in America as they do about preserving the integrity of
WATCHMEN...”
Amen, brother.
******************************
More notes on recent Archie Comics digests...
Jughead Double Digest #175 [$3.99] has a new Captain Hero adventure
by Tom DeFalco with art by Ron Frenz and Al Milgrom. Also featured
in the story are The Big E (Ethel in her own super-hero identity)
and the villainous Rebound. It’s a fun tale and it’s backed up by
amusing stories by Craig Boldman, Frank Doyle, George Gladir, and
Dick Malmgren.
DeFalco, Frenz, and Milgrom reunite for Jughead Double Digest #176.
“The Christmas Challenge” is a warm-hearted story wherein Jughead
is torn between his brotherly love for Jellybean and competing in
a cupcake-eating contest against the comely Toni Topaz. There are
lots of spiffy reprints as well with the highlight being a 21-page
“Hatman” parody by Rich Margopolous with art by the legendary Gene
Colan and inks by Rudy Lapick.
World of Archie Double Digest is my favorite of the Archie digests
because it has the best reprints. Issue #11 has two stories from
The Adventures of Young Dr. Masters by Robert Bernstein and John
Rosenberger along with 24 pages of She’s Josie hilarity from Frank
Doyle and Dan DeCarlo. Doc Masters is a handsome young doctor who
gets involved in dangerous situations while being utterly clueless
about the romantic rivalry between his snooty fiancee and his salt-
of-the-earth nurse. The Josie stories are pre-Pussycats and some
of the funniest teen humor stories of all time.
World of Archie Digest #12 has more Josie material by Doyle and DeCarlo.
It also has a selection of reprints from Madhouse by George Gladir,
Samm Schwartz, Joe Edwards, and DeCarlo. As with all these Archie
digests, you get a couple dozen entertaining stories, features and
gag pages for your four bucks. They are among the very best buys
in modern comics.
******************************
Sometime last year, on a mailing list, there was a brief discussion
of the use of “shit” as a synonym for “stuff.” That reminded me of
an incident from early on in my comics career.
Back in the mid 1970s, when I was writing Ghost Rider for Marvel,
I got raked over the coals by editors Len Wein and/or Marv Wolfman
for using the phrase "nickel-and-dime store crap" in Johnny Blaze’s
dialogue. Neither had seen it until the issue was published. None
of the proofreaders had thought there was a problem with my use of
the phrase.
Growing up in my West Side neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio, I knew
"crap" meant "cheap stuff" and was rarely used to denote excrement.
For that, we said "shit"...as God intended.
Len and Marv probably would have keeled over if I had tried to use
the word "shit" in a script.
This has been a Marvel moment.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Entertainment giants DC Comics, Oni Press, and Bongo Comics all got
new logos which made entertainment microbe Tony Isabella get pouty
because he didn’t get a new logo. Hence a contest in which readers
of this bloggy thing were asked to DESIGN A NEW LOGO FOR
TONY. It seemed like a good idea at the time.
Heck, it is a good idea. Contest entries will be shown in the blog
as they arrive. The best three to five logos will win prizes for
their creators, namely autographed copies of 1000 Comic Books You
Must Read or Grim Ghost. All prizes will come with a certificate
of authenticity confirming the items come from my Vast Accumulation
of Stuff. Okay, not great prizes, but I’m on a tight budget here.
To enter the contest, e-mail me your logo with your permission to
run it in this blog. I’m not buying or seeking any rights to your
work beyond being able to use it in this contest. Should I want to
make further use of your logo, we’ll negotiate an agreement for it.
Today’s logo submissions come from Robert Lloyd, also known as Late
Night Ferengi, and comics legend Mark Evanier, one of my best pals
for over four decades. You can join their stellar company if you
send me a logo by the contest deadline of February 18.
Let’s see what else I have for you today.
******************************
DC has announced the creative teams for its Watchmen prequels and
I can’t wait to read the J. Michael Straczynski Dr. Manhattan and
Nite Owl mini-series wherein the heroes start at different ends of
the country and walk towards the middle. And I’m sure the series
written by Brian “Mister Sunshine” Azzarello will inspire me with
life-affirming parables on the nature of heroism.
Serious now. If both Watchmen creators Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons
were against these prequels, I’d be against them as well. However,
though I definitely lean towards the contribution of the writer in
this instance, Moore has never, to the best of my knowledge, denied
Gibbons’ status as a co-creator. Two creators I respect immensely.
One of them is okay with the prequels. I’m not going to decry that
DC is publishing them.
Will I read them? That depends on whether or not the good friend
who lends me his comic books buys them. I was dropped from the DC
comp list last year, so the only new DCs I see are those I get from
my friend. Way down the road, if he doesn’t buy them, I might be
able to get the collected editions through my library.
There has been much discussion of these prequels on line. I think
my favorite comment was this tweet by Joe Caramanga:
“Just imagine if people cared half as much about health care and
poverty in America as they do about preserving the integrity of
WATCHMEN...”
Amen, brother.
******************************
More notes on recent Archie Comics digests...
Jughead Double Digest #175 [$3.99] has a new Captain Hero adventure
by Tom DeFalco with art by Ron Frenz and Al Milgrom. Also featured
in the story are The Big E (Ethel in her own super-hero identity)
and the villainous Rebound. It’s a fun tale and it’s backed up by
amusing stories by Craig Boldman, Frank Doyle, George Gladir, and
Dick Malmgren.
DeFalco, Frenz, and Milgrom reunite for Jughead Double Digest #176.
“The Christmas Challenge” is a warm-hearted story wherein Jughead
is torn between his brotherly love for Jellybean and competing in
a cupcake-eating contest against the comely Toni Topaz. There are
lots of spiffy reprints as well with the highlight being a 21-page
“Hatman” parody by Rich Margopolous with art by the legendary Gene
Colan and inks by Rudy Lapick.
World of Archie Double Digest is my favorite of the Archie digests
because it has the best reprints. Issue #11 has two stories from
The Adventures of Young Dr. Masters by Robert Bernstein and John
Rosenberger along with 24 pages of She’s Josie hilarity from Frank
Doyle and Dan DeCarlo. Doc Masters is a handsome young doctor who
gets involved in dangerous situations while being utterly clueless
about the romantic rivalry between his snooty fiancee and his salt-
of-the-earth nurse. The Josie stories are pre-Pussycats and some
of the funniest teen humor stories of all time.
World of Archie Digest #12 has more Josie material by Doyle and DeCarlo.
It also has a selection of reprints from Madhouse by George Gladir,
Samm Schwartz, Joe Edwards, and DeCarlo. As with all these Archie
digests, you get a couple dozen entertaining stories, features and
gag pages for your four bucks. They are among the very best buys
in modern comics.
******************************
Sometime last year, on a mailing list, there was a brief discussion
of the use of “shit” as a synonym for “stuff.” That reminded me of
an incident from early on in my comics career.
Back in the mid 1970s, when I was writing Ghost Rider for Marvel,
I got raked over the coals by editors Len Wein and/or Marv Wolfman
for using the phrase "nickel-and-dime store crap" in Johnny Blaze’s
dialogue. Neither had seen it until the issue was published. None
of the proofreaders had thought there was a problem with my use of
the phrase.
Growing up in my West Side neighborhood of Cleveland, Ohio, I knew
"crap" meant "cheap stuff" and was rarely used to denote excrement.
For that, we said "shit"...as God intended.
Len and Marv probably would have keeled over if I had tried to use
the word "shit" in a script.
This has been a Marvel moment.
I’ll be back tomorrow with more stuff.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
Monday, February 6, 2012
WE AIN’T THE ARCHIES WITHOUT THAT JUGHEAD BEAT
Archie’s Pal Jughead #10 hit the newsstands in December, 1951, the
month of my birth. That’s all I know about it.
Looking at the other Archie Comics titles published that month, I
see Archie and his friends hadn’t yet achieved the nigh-complete
dominance they would. The Riverdale gang are on the cover of Laugh
Comics and that’s it for the month. The other four Archie titles
are Sam Hill, Private Eye, which isn’t identified on the cover as
an Archie title, Super Duck, Suzie, and Wilbur.
These days, in addition to about a dozen Archie comics and digests,
Archie Comics also publishes Mega Man and two ongoing Sonic the
Hedgehog titles. They also ramped up their trade paperback library
to great success.
Regular visitors to this blog know of my affection for the Archie
characters and titles. Here’s a quick rundown on the comic books
and digests I’ve read recently...
Veronica #210 [$2.99] completes the four-issue Kevin Keller mini-
series with the best Kevin story yet. In “Taking the Lead,” Kevin
runs for Riverdale High class president. Writer/artist Dan Parent
doesn’t shy away from the undisguised bigotry Kevin faces from his
opponent, who insinuates Kevin is not a real man and whose planted-
in-the-audience supporters try to make it seem that President Kevin
would only focus on gay issues. It’s remarkably gutsy stuff for an
Archie comic book, though I think it’s becoming increasingly clear
that we need to revise our thinking on what Archie comic books can
and do present.
March will see the launch of Kevin Keller’s own series. I expect
Archie will continue to impress us. My request/suggestion is that
Kevin start dating. It’s the logical progression now that Kevin’s
fully a part of his new school.
Lots of other interesting stuff in Archie comic books...
Archie #626 [$2.99] guest-starred football player Michael Strahan
while #627 [$2.99] kicked off a serial starring legendary rock band
Kiss and featuring Sabrina the Teenage Witch. Fun stuff.
Archie & Friends #158 and #159 [$2.99 each] reprint tales from the
spry craze of the 1960s by Frank Doyle with art by Bob White. See
A.R.C.H.I.E. as “The Man From R.I.V.E.R.D.A.L.E” and B.E.T.T.Y. as
“The Girl From R.I.V.E.R.D.A.L.E” battling the sinister schemes of
C.R.U.S.H. If Archie keeps reprinting these stories, I’m gonna need
a lot more periods!
Betty #195 [$2.99] reprints Betty stories by Al Hartley (story and
pencils) and Dan DeCarlo (with an unknown writer) along with a very
funny Sabrina tale by Dick Malmgren with art by DeCarlo and inker
Rudy Lapick).
Betty and Veronica #256 and #257 [$2.99 each) offer some surprising
contrasts. “Camp Out Clout” by Tom DeFalco with art by Jeff Shultz
and Jim Amash is camping out the Veronica Lodge way. However, in
#257's book-length tale by Paul Kupperberg, Shultz, and Amash, we
get an adventure in outdoors survival. My pal Paul might well be
getting tired of hearing this, but he’s doing the best writing of
his career for Archie Comics.
Archie’s Pal Jughead #210 [$2.99] features the conclusion of a way
cool storyline in which Jughead has moved from his parents’ house
in the wake of an argument. He’s been living with one friend after
another and his nomadic journey concludes with a stay at the home
of Trula Twist, his arch-frenemy. A hilarious finale by the great
Craig Boldman with art by Rex Lindsey and Jim Amash.
Archie Comics digests continue to deliver great bang for four bucks
a pop. The clean lines and relatively sparse copy of the material
lend themselves to the smaller size. Here are some highlights of
recent issues...
Archie Double Digest #224 has a new story by Kupperberg with art by
Pat Kennedy and Jim Amash. It backs that up with six tales written
by Frank Doyle, my all-time favorite Archie scribe. One of these
drawn by the legendary Harry Lucey and two are Wilbur stories with
art by Dan DeCarlo and Rudy Lapick. Also notable in this digest is
a touching Christmas story written and drawn by Bob White.
Archie & Friends Double Digest #10 and #11 lead with Archie and his
pals and gals as super-teens. Issue #10 has Pureheart the Powerful
by Doyle and White. Also featured are stories by Bob Bolling, Chic
Stone, Paul Castiglia and Fernando Ruiz (Archie’s Weird Mysteries),
Samm Schwartz, Stan Goldberg, and others. Issue #11 has Archie as
Captain Pureheart by Doyle with Bill Vigoda and Mario Acquaviva.
In addition to the comic-book stories, the Archie digest also have
two or three Archie Sunday newspaper strips per issue.
Betty and Veronica Double Digest #195 had a new Halloween story by
George Gladir with art by Goldberg and Amash. Other highlights in
the issue were two Ginger reprints, one by Schwartz and the other
by Joe Edwards, and two Sabrina reprints by Gladir and Schwartz and
Malmgren and Lapick. You’ll find more Ginger and Sabrina tales in
#196, along with Katy Keene stories by the legendary Bill Woggon.
That’s all for now. I’ll be back tomorrow with more Archie digest
highlights, some reviews of comics from other publishers, and new
entries in the DESIGN A NEW LOGO FOR TONY contest.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
month of my birth. That’s all I know about it.
Looking at the other Archie Comics titles published that month, I
see Archie and his friends hadn’t yet achieved the nigh-complete
dominance they would. The Riverdale gang are on the cover of Laugh
Comics and that’s it for the month. The other four Archie titles
are Sam Hill, Private Eye, which isn’t identified on the cover as
an Archie title, Super Duck, Suzie, and Wilbur.
These days, in addition to about a dozen Archie comics and digests,
Archie Comics also publishes Mega Man and two ongoing Sonic the
Hedgehog titles. They also ramped up their trade paperback library
to great success.
Regular visitors to this blog know of my affection for the Archie
characters and titles. Here’s a quick rundown on the comic books
and digests I’ve read recently...
Veronica #210 [$2.99] completes the four-issue Kevin Keller mini-
series with the best Kevin story yet. In “Taking the Lead,” Kevin
runs for Riverdale High class president. Writer/artist Dan Parent
doesn’t shy away from the undisguised bigotry Kevin faces from his
opponent, who insinuates Kevin is not a real man and whose planted-
in-the-audience supporters try to make it seem that President Kevin
would only focus on gay issues. It’s remarkably gutsy stuff for an
Archie comic book, though I think it’s becoming increasingly clear
that we need to revise our thinking on what Archie comic books can
and do present.
March will see the launch of Kevin Keller’s own series. I expect
Archie will continue to impress us. My request/suggestion is that
Kevin start dating. It’s the logical progression now that Kevin’s
fully a part of his new school.
Lots of other interesting stuff in Archie comic books...
Archie #626 [$2.99] guest-starred football player Michael Strahan
while #627 [$2.99] kicked off a serial starring legendary rock band
Kiss and featuring Sabrina the Teenage Witch. Fun stuff.
Archie & Friends #158 and #159 [$2.99 each] reprint tales from the
spry craze of the 1960s by Frank Doyle with art by Bob White. See
A.R.C.H.I.E. as “The Man From R.I.V.E.R.D.A.L.E” and B.E.T.T.Y. as
“The Girl From R.I.V.E.R.D.A.L.E” battling the sinister schemes of
C.R.U.S.H. If Archie keeps reprinting these stories, I’m gonna need
a lot more periods!
Betty #195 [$2.99] reprints Betty stories by Al Hartley (story and
pencils) and Dan DeCarlo (with an unknown writer) along with a very
funny Sabrina tale by Dick Malmgren with art by DeCarlo and inker
Rudy Lapick).
Betty and Veronica #256 and #257 [$2.99 each) offer some surprising
contrasts. “Camp Out Clout” by Tom DeFalco with art by Jeff Shultz
and Jim Amash is camping out the Veronica Lodge way. However, in
#257's book-length tale by Paul Kupperberg, Shultz, and Amash, we
get an adventure in outdoors survival. My pal Paul might well be
getting tired of hearing this, but he’s doing the best writing of
his career for Archie Comics.
Archie’s Pal Jughead #210 [$2.99] features the conclusion of a way
cool storyline in which Jughead has moved from his parents’ house
in the wake of an argument. He’s been living with one friend after
another and his nomadic journey concludes with a stay at the home
of Trula Twist, his arch-frenemy. A hilarious finale by the great
Craig Boldman with art by Rex Lindsey and Jim Amash.
Archie Comics digests continue to deliver great bang for four bucks
a pop. The clean lines and relatively sparse copy of the material
lend themselves to the smaller size. Here are some highlights of
recent issues...
Archie Double Digest #224 has a new story by Kupperberg with art by
Pat Kennedy and Jim Amash. It backs that up with six tales written
by Frank Doyle, my all-time favorite Archie scribe. One of these
drawn by the legendary Harry Lucey and two are Wilbur stories with
art by Dan DeCarlo and Rudy Lapick. Also notable in this digest is
a touching Christmas story written and drawn by Bob White.
Archie & Friends Double Digest #10 and #11 lead with Archie and his
pals and gals as super-teens. Issue #10 has Pureheart the Powerful
by Doyle and White. Also featured are stories by Bob Bolling, Chic
Stone, Paul Castiglia and Fernando Ruiz (Archie’s Weird Mysteries),
Samm Schwartz, Stan Goldberg, and others. Issue #11 has Archie as
Captain Pureheart by Doyle with Bill Vigoda and Mario Acquaviva.
In addition to the comic-book stories, the Archie digest also have
two or three Archie Sunday newspaper strips per issue.
Betty and Veronica Double Digest #195 had a new Halloween story by
George Gladir with art by Goldberg and Amash. Other highlights in
the issue were two Ginger reprints, one by Schwartz and the other
by Joe Edwards, and two Sabrina reprints by Gladir and Schwartz and
Malmgren and Lapick. You’ll find more Ginger and Sabrina tales in
#196, along with Katy Keene stories by the legendary Bill Woggon.
That’s all for now. I’ll be back tomorrow with more Archie digest
highlights, some reviews of comics from other publishers, and new
entries in the DESIGN A NEW LOGO FOR TONY contest.
© 2012 Tony Isabella
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