Showing posts with label to-read pile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label to-read pile. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2025

Another dent in my to-read pile

Agent 9 (Self-published; 2015) Unlike all the other books in this post, I did actually read this one shortly after it was originally released, but, rather than writing about it and/or filing it away somewhere, I set it on my much smaller to-write-about pile. That pile was very near the to-read pile in my old apartment, however, and as the years passed, the two grew closer and closer until the to-read pile eventually absorbed the to-write-about pile. 

Which is fine, I suppose, since it has been a decade since I first read this comic; obviously I would need to re-read it before attempting to write about it anyway.

As you may be able to tell by the cover alone, given how distinct her style is, Agent 9 is the work of the great Katie Skelly, whose works include Nurse Nurse, Operation Margarine and My Pretty Vampire. (If you're not familiar with Skelly's work, I'd highly recommend it. This is her website, and thus probably the best place to start). 

This particular book seems to be a self-published mini-comic (although at 8-and-a-half-by-11-inches, it's actually larger than your average, full-size comic), one containing a short, horny, 18-page story that was originally published on Slutist.com (A site that is no longer there. I suppose that happens when you wait a decade to review a comic, huh?)

It was a gift given to me by my friend Meredith, who had bought it at a past SPX. She even had Katie Skelly sign it for me:
The story stars a blue-haired model—that's her on the cover—whose shoot abruptly ends when a young man with '70s-looking clothes and a clipboard interrupts, telling her photographer that their booking ended two hours ago.

The model strips off her dress and retreats to her dressing room, where she proceeds to smoke a cigarette and masturbate, the guy from the studio watching her until she calls out that she can hear him in the hall.

Later, she sees him walking as she's driving by, so she picks him up and takes him to the beach with her. As they have sex there, she hears "The Girl from Ipanema" playing on a radio and follows the sound to a pair of bespectacled women in matching red and green who might be twins.

They lead her into a cave, where she's sucked into some sort of weird...rock...thing, within which she seems to have an orgasm. On the last page, she is again posing for the photographer, but now her hair is red and she's wearing a red and green striped minidress like those the women from the cave were wearing.

"Great look!" the photographer says, while the word "Ciao" appears on the right-hand side of the page, and a little "fin", a heart and Skelly's initials appear in the corner. 

It was nice to see Skelly's art so big and colored so brightly after her first few books, which were rather small and in black and white, and, if the story seems rather sleight, it is only 18 pages long. It was collected along with other "sex-positive comics created for SLUTIST between 2014-2017" by Fantagraphics under the title The Agency in 2018 and again in 2023. The former, a trade paperback, is currently out of print, but it looks like the latter, a hardcover, is still available. I'll discuss that book as a whole here in a couple of weeks or so.


Batman '66 Vol. 4 (DC Comics; 2016) The most noteworthy inclusion of this hardcover collection is the comic book that comes at its end, one a reader would be unlikely to expect here based on the cover. That would be Batman: The Lost Episode #1, a one-shot special that featured Len Wein and Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez's 30-page adaptation of an unproduced script for the original TV series by science fiction legend Harlan Ellison (You'll note his is the second name listed on the cover credits, right after that of Jeff Parker).

Ellison's episode, "The Two-Way Crimes of Two-Face!", would have introduced that particular villain to the show's rogues gallery (and thus to American pop culture at large). In addition to the adaptation itself, the special included all kinds of interesting material, including all 30 pages of Garcia-Lopez's un-inked, unencumbered pencil art, some preparatory sketches and Ellison's original script, all under a fully painted cover by Alex Ross

In this particular collection, that one-shot follows six issues of the regular Batman '66 title, from near the end of the book's three-year, 30-issue run. This volume was the penultimate one collecting the regular series, although were one looking to read the series today, the best bet might be the 2018 omnibus that collects the entire series as well as The Lost Episode or perhaps waiting a few months for August's Batman '66 Compendium.

That said, there were a lot of crossovers published as well, and those that didn't feature DC characters aren't in either collection, so if you want to see this version of Batman team-up with Archie, The Green Hornet, The Man From U.N.C.L.E. or The Avengers (as in Steed and Mrs. Peel, not Iron Man and Thor), you might want to try back-issue bins and the shelves of your local comic shop.

Anyway, these issues of the regular monthly series come from a variety of creators, including writers Parker, Mike W. Barr*, Tom Peyer and Rob Williams and artists Dave Bullock, Richard Case, Sandy Jarrell, Scott Kowalchuk, Michael Avon Oeming, Joe Prado, Ruben Procopio and Leonardo Romero (of recent Birds of Prey fame!). Each of the included issues has a cover from Michael Allred, who handled those for the entire series, and is perhaps the ideal Batman '66 artist, managing images that seem perfectly balanced between modern comics art, the pop art aesthetic of the television show and seemingly effortless likenesses of its stars.

While often times modern DC comics can be spoiled by having too many cooks in the kitchen, here it's quite a virtue, given that the series is essentially an anthology one, with different creators handling different stories each issue. While the designs are all obviously taken from the source material—as are the style, spirit and sense of humor of the plots—there's a fairly wide variety in art styles, as you can probably tell if you're familiar with very many of those artists mentioned in the previous paragraph. 

There's quite a wide spectrum between the more realistic represented by Romero and Procopio and the more cartoony by Bullock and Oeming, but the shifts certainly keep things from ever getting boring. (I think my favorite were probably those last two; Bullock has long been a favorite artist of mine, although I seem to see his work too infrequently, and it was just plain interesting to see what Oeming would do with the characters). 

Popular special guest-villains The Joker, Penguin and Catwoman all put in appearances, as do created-for-the-show villains The Archer, Bookworm, Professor Marmaduke Ffogg, Egghead and King Tut. Perhaps the most exciting villain in these half-dozen or so issues, however, is Lord Death Man, who here gets Batman '66-ized (Though originally appearing as the more prosaically named "Death Man" in 1966 issue of Batman, Chip Kidd's 2006 book Bat-Manga! introduced American readers to manga-ka Jiro Kuwata's 1960s adaptations of American Batman comics, which included the artist's version of the character. DC would later collect and publish a few volumes of Kuwata's manga). 

In fact, one of the many fun aspects of this series has always been seeing the creators similarly introduce villains from the comics into the particular, peculiar world of the TV show, including the likes of The Scarecrow, Clayface, Killer Croc, Poison Ivy and even Bane and Harley Quinn. 

That's at least part of what makes the "Two-Way Crimes of Two-Face!" at the back of the collection so exciting. The version of the character we're introduced to in the story seems to be lifted straight from the comics, with no significant change to his look, origin or modus operandi. Sure, he's a little more gentle than his comics counterpart (as are all the villains), simply engaging in simple thievery rather than rampant murder, and he talks in the same manner all of the characters on the show do, but he's a pretty darn accurate Two-Face (Garcia-Lopez does not engage in any sort of fan-casting here, it may be noted, at least, not any that I could detect; Two-Face looks like a comic book character, while Batman, Robin and some of the other players look like Garcia-Lopez's versions of the actors playing those characters).

Given its length and its origins, the story probably hews a little more closely to the format of the television show than many of the other stories in the regular series and is thus something of a jarring outlier when read along with the stories that precede it in one sitting. 

I do wonder if it might have been too elaborate to actually ever have been filmed, though; there are a couple of rather big set pieces that seem more like something from a movie than a network television show of fifty-some years ago (There's a scene set in a peculiarly constructed lunar observatory that I will speak more of in a moment, a scene of the Batcopter chasing a speed boat, a scene of Batman swimming underwater and a climax set on what appears to be an old, derelict pirate ship in a huge cavern). All of it is easy enough for Garcia-Lopez to imagine and render, though.

Well...almost. The scene at the lunar observatory didn't really make any sense to me when I read (and then, confused, re-read it and re-read it). The scene is clearly set at night, with a moon visible in the dark sky of an establishing shot and the various vehicles involved in a high-speed chase leading all having their headlights on. But when Two-Face is about to blast Batman with a shotgun, the Caped Crusader temporarily blinds him by reflecting sunlight off the reflective buckle of his utility belt.

I didn't figure it out until I read Ellison's script later, but apparently the room the scene is set in is supposed to be an unusual one, with half of the room darkened to represent nighttime and the other half lit by artificial "sunlight" to represent the daytime (And, of course, the duality of Two-Face and the separation between good and bad). 

The floor of the room is obviously bifurcated in Garcia-Lopez's depiction, with one half white and one half black, but it's' not clear from the art that one side of the room is actually dark and one is brightly-lit. I suppose the blame for this lies with Garcia-Lopez (and believe me, I feel bad finding any fault at all in such a master artist's work!), and maybe colorist Alex Sinclair. I think a bigger, better establishing shot of the interior of the room might have solved this confusion, but perhaps there was no room for one.

Is it also worth noting that Garcia-Lopez's art is, at times, perhaps a little too good...? While his Batman is clad in the TV show costume, and his facial features are those of Adam West, his figure is a good deal bigger, more powerful and more athletic than that of the actor, and certain panels can look somewhat strange, as if the comic book superhero is merely borrowing West's costumes (Note, for example, Batman crashing through the skylight of the observatory in a classic comic book moment, his cape spreading out like batwings, or, perhaps the bulging muscles of his back, chest and arm in the panel when Two-Face strikes him from behind with the boom of the ship). 

Still, what kind of madman would really complain about 30 pages of Garcia-Lopez art? And, taken in total, the story is, like the rest of the book it's a part of, a lot of fun. 


Elseworlds: Justice League Vol. 1 (DC; 2016) Despite the title, this collection of various Elseworlds comics originally published between 1997 and 1998 includes everything that didn't have either "Batman" or "Superman" in the title, rather than ones that were specifically branded as "Justice League" comics.

And so only two of them are truly Justice League comics, Justice Riders (the cover of which is repurposed for that of the collection) and League of Justice. Of the other inclusions, two are labeled "Elseworld's Finest" books, one is a Wonder Woman story and the other a Titans comic. 

This being an anthology, it is probably best to take each comic in turn. I'll do my best to be brief.

Elseworld's Finest #1-#2 Written by John Francis Moore, pencilled by Kieron Dwyer and inked by Hilary Barta, this is neither a Batman solo comic nor a Superman solo comic, but a Batman and Superman comic, and that is, I suppose, enough of a distinction to qualify it for inclusion here (A pilot named Hal Jordan and an archaeologist named Dr. Carter Hall both make brief appearances though, and there's a passing mention of an Atlantean king who lost his hand in battle).

Moore sets his story in 1928, which I at first considered curious, as it was a good decade before Superman ushered in the age of comic book superheroes. Of course, that seems to be the whole point of the setting, allowing the narrative to be technically modern, but to take inspiration from and quite regularly reference the sorts of heroic fiction that pre-figured the superhero genre: Jules Verne and early science fiction writers, the pulps, newspaper comic strips and so on...I even wondered if there was a bit of Ernest Hemingway in there. (Today's readers will likely think of Indiana Jones, and perhaps the sort of pulp adventures that inspired the character's creation.)

The story is told via the diary entries of Lana Lang. Her professor father Thaddeus is in residence at a university in Metropolis when he is kidnapped by foreign agents with demon's head tattoos on their hands. They are apparently interested in his work translating directions to the lost city of Argos, which here has a double meaning that will be apparent to Superman fans. 

The only witness to the incident is 12-year-old paperboy Jimmy Olsen, who calls on the mysteriously strong Daily Planet reporter Clark Kent (who is not a superhero and, despite the cover, doesn't wear a costume yet; Lana tells us he's always been stronger and faster than the average Joe). 

After Lana arrives and reunites with her former Smallville sweetheart, they rush to Paris in search of the only man who could possibly help them find her father, freelance adventurer and soldier of fortune Bruce Wayne, who Moore writes as something of a rakish cad, and, in Dwyer's design, sports a thin moustache, day-old stubble and a prominent scar (Clark, by contrast, in both characterization and in design, is pretty much the same as ever). 

They manage to rescue Thaddeus from the clutches of desert bandit Ra's al Ghul (here drawn far sexier than usual), who wants to get his hands on the legendary society-destroying artifact said to be in Argos, although Wayne seems to give his life helping the others escape.

The Superman characters are then abducted by a big, red-bearded, Russian version of Lex Luthor, who seems modeled on Captain Nemo and who also wants the Argos artifact. He takes them with him to the Amazon jungle to find it. They do manage find the lost city of Argos...but not before Ra's and his men do. 

Before the artifact can fall into either madman's hands, however, Bruce Wayne arrives, now dressed in mystical bat-themed Egyptian armor he discovered in a cave while stumbling around dying, and the artifact springs to life, revealing itself to be from the planet Krypton, and, in the process, explaining Clark's true heritage, the secret of his great speed and strength and his Earth-conquering destiny. It also gives him a red, blue and gold costume.

Don't worry, everything works out.

Moore's globe-trotting script is obviously full of various tropes which, at this point, nearly a century after the story is set, might read like creaky cliches, but, well, cliches are cliches for a reason, and they are here satisfyingly compelling.  He also finds new and clever ways to insert the casts of both characters into this new old milieu, and mix them in unusual ways (Like, for example, having Ra's promise his daughter not to Bruce, but the obviously superior specimen of Clark).

In addition to the characters already mentioned, the creators also get in such members of the World's Finest's casts as Selina Kyle, Alfred, Perry White, a Kara and even Bibbo, as well as such unlikely cameos as The Newsboy Legion, Captain Marvel, Sugar and Spike and Fox and Crow. 

One could scarcely ask for a better art team to draw them all.

Read in 2025, I'm unsure of why this didn't become one of the more classic Elseworlds comics; my best guess is that perhaps it's hook wasn't as immediately apparent as, say, "Pirate Batman" or "Superman-as-Batman" (I was unsure of it myself until I was actually reading it). That, or its title and the fact that it was a Batman and Superman story rather than a Batman or Superman story meant it was relatively under-read compared to other such comics.

Justice Riders #1 Look, I know no one wants to read the work of Clinton Cash: A Graphic Novel writer and Trump voter Chuck Dixon, especially not now that Trump is destroying the post-World War II world order that benefited the United States, decimating the federal government, actively trying to remake American society in his image, trying to deport lawful immigrants based solely on their expressing opinions he doesn't like, sending immigrants to a prison in a foreign country with no due process and even openly discussing doing the same to American citizens, one of the very things that lead the founders to rebelling against England in the first place, but, well, if one is going to read or re-read DC comics published in the '90s, dude is kind of hard to avoid; he was all over the place (If you don't want Dixon getting any royalties from a purchase you make, maybe look for this collection at your local library? And/or just skip it?)

Anyway, this is by Chuck Dixon and the art team of J.H. Williams III and Mick Grey. As Elseworlds go, this one is a pretty simple and straightforward one, with Dixon transferring various Justice League characters into an Old West setting and then telling a basic heroes versus villains story. While Williams redesigns each player to fit their new milieu, their personalities, relationships and, in some cases, even their superpowers are kept intact.

Sherriff's deputy Oberon has locked up the insane-sounding Faust in the Paradise town jail, the latter predicting some sort of terrible cataclysm. It comes to pass, and the town is completely obliterated, every resident killed in the process and Oberon surviving just long enough to whisper cryptically about what has occurred.

Paradise's Sherriff Diana Prince, who happened to be out of town at the time of the mysterious tragedy, reckons railroad tycoon Maxwell Lord is responsible. As she rides to Helldorado, the town that Lord has built for himself and stocked full of clockwork gunmen, she picks up various allies. These are cowboy-ized versions of The Flash, Hawkman, Booster Gold, Blue Beetle, Martian Manhunter and Guy Gardner. 

During the climactic gunfight with Lord and his mechanical army, a few other unexpected villains that will be familiar to DC Comics readers make appearances. There's also a cameo from dime novel writer named Colonel Clark Kent.

And that's it, really. Williams and Grey's art is, as one might expect, excellent, and the character designs are all quite solid, with that of Wonder Woman perhaps being the most striking. It's a relatively early and rare example of Wonder Woman wearing pants, and it works quite well. 

League of Justice #1-#2 The cover for the first "stave" of this two-issue series suggests an obvious and straightforward premise, one that simply transfers the Justice League characters to a medieval fantasy setting (This would not be the last Elseworlds series to do so, either; 2001's Alan Grant-written Elseworlds book JLA: Riddle of the Beast would do the same). And, in a broad sense, that is what writer and penciller Ed Hannigan is up to here. 

What you can't tell from that cover, though, is that this is one of the crazier DC Comics published in my lifetime, a comic so bonkers that I'm actually kind of surprised that it saw print as is.

I suspect that part of the problem—and I do think it's a problem, given how incredibly hard to read certain passages are—is that Hannigan's story is just way too big for the space allotted it. 

Not only is the cast he's working with here fairly large, with some characters getting the room to be fleshed out (like Batmancer of the city of Goth), while others are named but barely explored (like The Atlantean, The Amazon Princess and characters Snappacaw and Hunkk'll, whom I just this very second realized are references to Snapper Carr and Ma Hunkel), but there is a lot of world-building to the book, so much so that it is conveyed in wordy info dumps and a few pages where the dialogue balloons fill as much or more of the panels than the drawings do. (There's a page in the first issue, wherein The Martian psychically imparts a creation story of the fantasy world to our protagonists where my first reaction was "You expect me to read all that?")

Hannigan, who is here inked by the great Dick Giordano, opens his story in Goth, with his Batmancer narrating. It's a pretty straight fantasy fiction version of Batman. He wears the skin of a giant bat as a costume, he tools around his big, crime-filled city in a chariot pulled by two giant bats, he works with "scientific detection, deductive ratiocination, dactylography" and such-like instead of sorcery to fight crime, he banters with his butler Alfred (here, a zombie) and he battles a sad version of The Joker named The Griever. He is the first of the book's many narrators. 

Four pages later, the scene shifts to Brattleboro, Vermont, in the present day, and the narrator changes to a young man named Neil, a camp counselor hanging out with two of his charges, Freddy and Alcy. When they see a long-haired junkie named Kenny who looks like he's trying to mug a not-entirely-present woman (she appears to be penciled and colored but not inked, giving her an illusory sense of presence), they intervene, and then the four modern Vermonters are all transported to a fantasy forest, where they are immediately rescued from bandits by a green-clad archer who talks funny ("Hummm! Tha must be from afar away indeed if tha doon't ken Longbow Greenarrow, keeper of Yuirth's Forest Lands...").

Yuirth is the world they have arrived in and, as the un-inked woman Bird Lady will explain to them shortly, it is under great threat from someone named "Sovereign", the book's Superman (who you can see on the cover of the second issue), "and the dark power behind him" (That power would be Luithorr, who discovered Sovereign as a baby and raised him into an obedient soldier/son).

The four people from Vermont are referred to by various characters as "Elseworlders" and "Unyetlings" (The latter because Yuirith is somewhere in Earth's distant past, many creations ago, meaning if it is destroyed our world won't come to be). Bird Lady, the book's version of Black Canary, assigns our Elseworlders a quest. 

They are given an indecipherable scroll which apparently names the various heroes they will need to gather together to defeat Sovereign; these are, in addition to the book's Green Arrow, versions of The Flash, The Atom, Martian Manhunter, Green Lantern John Stewart, Hawkman and Hawkgirl, Aquaman and Wonder Woman. Oh, and Bird Lady prophesies that, of the four of them, one of them isn't going to make it...or, as she puts it, "E'en should you prevail 'gainst Sovereign, one of your number shall not leave the world alive!"

After meeting the book's Atom, a wizard named "Atomus The Palmer", and then going through an unreadable two-page spread, our protagonists split up and begin encountering the various heroes, all of whom are individually endangered by Sovereign and Luithorr.

The two villains apparently dwell in Metropolis, a city atop a giant tower that moves through the land like a titanic chess piece, gouging a trail of destruction through the surface of the world as it does so. They also have a zombie horde. 

Not all of this world's League equivalents will survive, and four of them end up passing their powers to the Elseworlders by giving them some item or power of another. (Kenny, for example, is at first changed by whatever the hell happened when Atomus took them through the "realm Irrational!!", is then given the huge-headed Martian's cape. After donning it, he begins to lose his hair, turn green and transform into what looks like a bug-eyed, exposed-brain version of J'onn J'onnz...albeit wearing tiny denim shorts. You can see him here.)

The narration and dialogue heavy story seems to move faster and get more crowded as it goes on; I had the feeling that Hannigan had developed all of the superhero characters to the same extent he had Batmancer, but just didn't have room to devote to each as the story progressed and the page count dwindled. This really feels like it could have, should have been a 12-part maxi-series, or even an ongoing, rather than a two-issue miniseries. 

Also making it hard to read is the fact that almost every character has their own distinct speech style, just as the Green Arrow character used various archaic language, so some of the dialogue can be well, kind of irritating (Especially that of Atomus). 

Additionally, the narrator changes frequently, not just between Batmancer and Neil, but also Kenny and the kids, and it's not usually clear whose thoughts we're meant to be hearing when. Complicating things further, some of the narration boxes aren't narration boxes, but psychic messages sent between, say, Kenny-with-The Martian's-powers and his allies, or, later, Luithorr and Sovereign.

The art is nice, the designs mostly bonkers (here's the Hawkgirl character, for example), there's at least one really great deep cut (Luithorr commands a dragon that seems to be the one from the cover of 1961's Brave and The Bold #34) and Hannigan obviously has a big, ambitious epic he wants to tell, but, well, I'll be damned if it wasn't one of the hardest comics I've ever had to puzzle my way through that DC has published. 

(As an aside, the story features an Atlantis is at war with Amazonia, with this book's versions of Aquaman and Wonder Woman the last surviving members of each race, their battle interrupted by the arrival of our heroes. Is this the first time Aquaman and Wonder Woman's mythical homelands went to war against one another? Just wondering, as that is one of the plotlines that Geoff Johns used in his Flashpoint event series).

Wonder Woman: Amazonia There apparently were never enough Wonder Woman Elseworlds comics produced to give her a collection of her own, so this tale by writer William Messner-Loebs and artist Phil Winslade telling a new, potent and fairly brutal version of the basic Wonder Woman story gets collected here instead. 

I would say it was set in an alternate history version of Victorian England, but Victoria is definitely not England's monarch in the book, so I'm not sure saying so would be accurate. The various markers of time that Messner-Loebs alludes to, though (it's after P.T. Barnum's circus, Jack the Ripper's killings and the publication of A Tale of Two Cities), would seem to place it in the late 19th century.

Colonel Steve Trevor puts his young wife Diana on the London stage, where her great strength (and, one imagines, her relatively skimpy costume) attracts great crowds, including, on the first pages of the story, King Jack and his son Prince Charles (Remember, this is an alternate history tale). When Diana saves the royals from a would-be assassin, she and her husband are invited to dine with them at Buckingham Palace.

Before that, though, our narrator will tell us a bit of the history that lead us to this point, not just of Diana's childhood in the Whitechapel slums nor of how Jack came to be king after a terrible fire wiped out the queen and almost all her family and how British society changed under the new king, becoming even more of a patriarchy and having even greater divisions between men and women than existed at the time in the real world (How different? Well, women all seem to wear "ceremonial" chains). 

We also learn of Trevor's discovery of Amazonia, where he washes ashore following an airship disaster over the Atlantic. Learning of a lost civilization of Bronze Age women warriors from Trevor, the British seek to attack and conquer it. They succeed. 

Whether Diana knows that she was smuggled from there or not is a little unclear; she tells her daughters a bedtime fairytale about a similar island she calls "Kera" before she must go to bed herself and submit to the sexual advances of Trevor (Who is here very much a bad guy; this scene is quite tastefully told, though, with a panel of Trevor closing the bedroom door followed by a series of panels depicting parts of their house, as if the "camera" filming the comic were retreating from the room, through the house and to the street).

When the Wonder Woman's great strength and strange abilities are put to use defending the poor women of London's slums, who seem to suddenly be disappearing at an alarming rate, Diana finds out just how bad a man her husband is...and how bad the king is.

Ultimately, she finds herself chained in an Amazonian arena, surrounded by the other women of her homeland, while Trevor and other men rush at them, pick axes and weapons brandished to kill them for sport. 

Trevor and these others have just recently taken the king's "distillate of masculinity", which he claims "eradicates all trace of the feminine within us." (And here it seems to work more like Bane's Venom than, say, testosterone, as when we see the men they all look like big, muscular, hulking brutes, their chests and arms spilling from their too-tight shirts.)

The battle of the sexes so starkly rendered, with the epitome of womanhood and her all-female race engaged in hand-to-hand combat against a murderous patriarchy that have chemically altered themselves into a savagely pure manhood, the climax will seemingly answer the question of women's place in society. A pair of men whom Diana has touched with her generosity and kindness (and power and beauty) make small but decisive acts to tip the scale in Diana and the Amazons' favor.

There's a happy ending, which one imagines William Moulton Marston himself might have approved of, with the sad, super-sexist state of the society we're presented with throughout the comic being radically reformed, in large part due to the act of a particular man submitting himself to a type of ritual bondage to a woman.

While Messner-Loebs does a pretty remarkable job of distilling some of the basics of the original Wonder Woman stories to their essence and transporting them to a half-invented setting that only accentuates their themes, I imagine it's Winslade's incredible artwork that really sold this book to readers in the late 90s.

Highly detailed and realistically rendered, the many lines on each figure and object evokes the illustrations from newspapers of the era, resulting in a comic that looks like it could conceivably have existed in this form in, say, 1895 or so. (Even letterer John Workman's occasional onomotopeiaic sound effects are old-timey in their fonts, the BAR-OOM! of an elephant gun firing or the TRUUK! of a pickaxe striking the earth looking wholly of a piece with the setting.)

While some passages are quite wordy, particularly those devoted to scene-setting, world-building and  history-telling, they remain evenly illustrated, the words never overwhelming the imagery. And every panel is a true work of art, richly detailed to the point that Winslade seems to draw every single face in every crowd, every brick in every building, and the shadow of each contour in a cloud of billowing smoke.

This one's a real masterpiece. Not bad for a mostly male endeavor. (Patricia Mulvihill handles the colors; these are mostly dark and dull, befitting the setting, the reserved tones broken by the bright red of Diana's Wonder Woman costume.) 

Titans: Scissors, Paper, Stone One brilliant comic follows another, although the two could scarcely be more different from one another. This one is by the great Adam Warren, who writes, pencils and co-inks the 48-page one-shot. (Tom Simmons is his co-inker.) 

In its basic construction, the book looks fairly simple. In the far-flung future, a group of young adults with amazing powers battle "big, dumb, slavering monsters" that are imperiling their city, scenes of the battle being intercut with flashbacks in which the four heroes are introduced in turn, as their leader sets about recruiting them for this particular mission.

But Warren is engaged in something far deeper than that, the book filled with the sort of futuristic, scientific-sounding sci-fi elements associated with the now-disgraced Warren Ellis and practicing the sort of meta commentary on superhero comics usually associated with the works of Grant Morrison (Warren even prefigures the practical application of the "superheroes always win" trope into a superhero narrative that Morrison used a couple of times in his later JLA run).

It will be more than halfway through the book before it becomes apparent as to why this book is even branded a "Titans" comic, given that, unlike all of the other books in this collection, it does not transpose existing characters into a new or different setting. Rather, the heroes are all new, original ones of Warren's creation...although one, eventually assigned the name "Captain Thug", will be revealed to be kinda-sorta possessed by the downloaded personality of one of DC's greatest and most popular superheroes...who may or may not be fictional in the world of this story (It doesn't matter which, for the purposes of this comic).

The character driving the flashback action is Jamadagni Renuka, who will be assigned the name "Witchy-Poo" ("I've decided that we definitely need some muy absurd noms de guerre to be authentic superheroes...!" she tells her team once they have all been recruited and assembled). 

She is a "Nietzschean Genemage," which means she has the genetic ability to actualize any sort of magical ritual, no matter what it is and whether or not she believes in it. With an unspecified threat on the immediate horizon, she's attempting to use sympathetic magic, "recreating the mythic pattern of a particular team of superheroes", The Titans. 

She's the sorceress, and she's gathered "a tormented cyborg" (here a young woman whose brain was transferred into a full-body prosthetic, a super-advanced but decommissioned "bleeding-edge technology killing machine" she code-names "Prosthetic Lass") ,"a token alien" (the resurrected victim of an alien parasite capable of manipulating energy she dubs "Dead Prettyboy") and, in her boyfriend with a superhero personality downloaded into him, she gets a "Dick Grayson...a good-natured thug lacking super-powers, but well-armed with a positive attitude."

So just as Raven gathered Cyborg, Starfire and Robin to battle Trigon in the far-distant, now possibly fictional and "potentially commercial" mythic past (okay, and a few others, but this is only a 48-page comic), Jamadagni has her Titans ready to confront an impending "clysm" (Her term for "cataclysm" is one of the many bits of futuristic slang Warren peppers his characters' dialogue with; in addition to off-handed references to miraculous technological advances, they incorporate bits of foreign languages and at least one bit of profanity that is clearly a corrupted version of what people in our time exclaim, i.e. "Jeezus Rice!").

Her plan works, but with a side-effect she wasn't counting on, although the programmed superhero personality assures her it is actually a regular part of the superhero mythology, leading her to a last page exclamation that sounds like a sentiment that many comic readers would, in the coming years, most strongly associate with the sometimes cynical comics of Garth Ennis. 

So yeah, I've compared Warren's work here to that of Ellis, Morrison and Ennis, popular superstar writers that I don't think we tend to associate Warren with—perhaps because he's also an artist, perhaps because he often works in a comedic mode or perhaps because he doesn't seem to have ever had a hot direct-market hit like some of those writers' best-known works. But I think it's pretty clear he deserves to be thought of in the same breath as popular comics' better, most beloved writers. (This isn't a one-off, either; his Gen-13 work and his still-unfolding Empowered are pretty brilliant, too.)

Warren is often associated with his manga inspired style, and his character designs here are all, indeed, quite manga inspired (He seems to sneak in Kei and Yuri from Dirty Pair and Ryoko from Tenchi via one character's "vid shirt," which changes images in each panel in which it appears). The page layouts and thus the storytelling, however, are purely (and appropriately) Western style, although there are a couple of action sequences that are definitely more manga-like. 

This is distinct enough a work that it's easy to imagine it not having the word "Titans" in the title—Warren could have taken the name "Dick Grayson" and that of another superhero's identity out of the book entirely, excised the reference to the Titans and published this through pretty much any publisher quite easily. 

Oh, and as for the sub-title, it comes from the fact that Jamadagni says that, while explaining how her powers work, that she can use any system, even children's games like rock, paper, scissors. When fighting the monsters, she uses spells based on the Japanese version of the game, jan ken pon.

Given Warren's remarkably fleshed-out future and his riffing on the idea of ancient superhero culture inspiring future would-be heroes, I'm kind of surprised DC didn't ask him to pitch a Legion of Super-Heroes project after this (although I suppose it's possible they did, and it just came to naught), but then, I guess the LOSH is only a thousand years in the future, while this seems quite a bit further, more DC One Million than 30th Century. 

Anyway, as with Amazonia, this comic is reason enough to pick up this collection...if you can't find it in a back-issue bin, anyway.

Elseworld's Finest: Supergirl & Batgirl Despite the similarity in titles, this last comic in this collection has nothing at all to do with the first one, aside from the fact, I suppose, that they are both about team-ups from the members of the Batman and Superman families.

Most of the better Elseworlds have simple, easy to understand premises that involve either a single, dramatic change in an existent story that leads to a drastically different version of a hero, or a new setting, or even a combination of two stories (Batman + Green Lantern = Batman: In Darkest Knight, for example, or Batman + Frankenstein = Batman: Castle of the Bat).  

This one, however, has a whole bunch of changes, many of which seem random and unrelated. I guess the basic idea is that, instead of Superman and Batman, as is usually the case, what if each of their respective family of characters was headed by Supergirl and Batgirl...? Maybe...?

What I found the most interesting aspect of this particular comic was its credits. Writer Barbara Kesel, penciller Matt Haley and inker Tom Simmons all share a "co-plotters" credit. That's not unusual for writers and pencillers, and it makes sense if they spent a lot of prep work on the story together before setting about their individual tasks or if they made the book using the "Marvel method," but it seems quite unusual to me that the inker was involved as well.

In this particular tale, Barbara Gordon was orphaned when her police commissioner father and mother intervened to save the Wayne family from mugger Joe Chill after a movie one night. The driven Barbara was adopted by the Waynes and became Batgirl. Using her all-seeing Oracle Security System to protect the walled-off city-state of Gotham from all "paranormal" heroes and threats, she's set up a police state that one member of the group of superheroes known as the Justice Society refers to as fascist.

Having discovered her secret identity, womanizing playboy Bruce Wayne uses his wealth and wits to aid her, essentially acting like her Alfred.

Meanwhile, the last survivor of Krypton, Kara, was received on Earth by Wonder Woman and the Justice Society and became Supergirl. Based in Metropolis, she's Platonic best friends with the city's benevolent industrialist Lex Luthor.

Supergirl, Luthor and about a dozen members of the Society visit Gotham to help Bruce and Babs announce a new LexCorp clean energy initiative—after the superheroes all pass through Batgirl's incredibly stringent security protocols. Tthings go very, very wrong when Luthor is kidnapped by The Joker, here transformed and empowered by a version of Kryptonite-infused Venom given to him by Emil Hamilton. 

Batgirl refuses the Justice Society's help but reluctantly accepts that of Supergirl after she flies into Gotham airspace without permission. Together the pair break into Lex's Metropolis headquarters and learn the dark secret behind his solar power innovations, as well as an atrocity he committed in the past (Here's a hint: I haven't mentioned the baby that was rocketed to Earth from Krypton before Supergirl arrived yet, have I?). 

Fans of these two characters may enjoy seeing them remixed thusly. For me, the greatest pleasure the book offered was seeing the redesigns of all the heroes on this Justice Society's apparently massive line-up, which included what appear to be brand-new characters (Vectron, Revenant, Interceptor, etc), some unlikely inclusions (Civilian Tim Drake, Barda, Blue Devil, Green Lantern Abin Sur, Ambush Bug in an armored suit) and a pair Black legacy characters (Captain Marvel and Black Canary; a flashback shows the white originals).

While Wonder Woman and the two title characters have rather radically redesigned new costumes, flashbacks show them wearing their original costumes from their first appearances and, for Wondy, an intermediary costume at one point. 


Jerry Siegel's The Syndicate of Crime (Rebellion; 2021) While attaching "Jerry Siegel's" to the title was probably a marketing move, I imagine there must be some legal reason that publisher released the book as The Syndicate of Crime as opposed to The Spider, given that the latter is both the name of the feature it collects and the character who starred in it.

Originally published in British weekly comics anthology Lion between 1965 and 1967, the short, black and white strips were the work of writer Ted Cowan and artist Reg Bunn. Jerry Siegel, the famed co-creator of Superman, would replace Cowan after the first two storylines, "The Spider" and "The Return of the Spider," which means his work shows up about 56 pages into this this 144-page collection. 

The feature's star was a brilliant master criminal known as The Spider. He was a peculiar-looking figure, a big, athletic man with elf-like pointy ears, a severe widow's peak and a prominent nose; he looked more than a little like Captain Marvel's old villain Black Adam. Dressed in a tight-fitting black costume laden with his mechanical apparatus, The Spider could cling to the sides of buildings, descend from great heights on silken threads a thousand times stronger than nylon, and entangle opponents with his web-gun.

He also possessed a variety of other gimmicks, although these were not necessarily spider-themed: Miniature jet rockets, smokescreens and a gun that fires a knock-out gas that was, as Cowan had him often repeat variations of, "harmless...but effective!"

The Spider's ambition was, as Cowan first put it, to "build an empire of crime...crime on a scale of which no man ever dreamed," and, in Siegel's later telling, to become "the uncrowned king of crime." To that end, the first serial finds The Spider recruiting his two henchmen, expert safecracker Ray Ordini, whom he rescues from a rooftop as the police are closing in on him, and crooked scientist "Professor" Pelham, who he frees from prison after orchestrating a complicated mass breakout.

The trio would emerge from The Spider's castle headquarters in a weird-looking "helicar" of Pelham's invention to commit audacious crimes, always escaping no matter how dire the circumstances may look for them, thanks to the Spider's cunning (and, in a few cases, Siegel offering him obvious help, as when The Spider turns out to be a robot duplicate of himself, or when a conveniently placed princess saves him and his team).

Opposing them are bland, characterization-free police detectives Bob Gilmore and Pete Trask ("the pals," as Siegel's narration would oddly refer to them), but, by the second story in the collection, The Spider would start to find himself matching wits with other master-criminals more often than the law.

The first of these is The Mirror Man, who beats the Spider and his gang to a robbery of ten million in gold bullion in "The Return of The Spider." A big, jolly, bearded man who Bunn draws as a sort of evil Santa Claus, the Mirror Man used mysterious technology to create life-like illusions to seize the ship carrying the bullion, fool The Spider and law enforcement and, at one point, bring a city to its knees by projecting an army of dinosaurs destroying it. 

Siegel would follow up with two rival criminals of his own. The first of these was Dr. Mysterioso, a rather generic mad scientist type with a variety of fantastic inventions (a robot duplicate, a specially bred giant spider, a chemical formula that temporarily gives him Plastic Man-like powers and so on). 

He was followed by the much more unusual Android Emperor, a huge, bearded Hercules of a figure who had made an army of androids, none of which looked much like robots, but rather had fantastical shapes given an unsettling degree of realism by Bunn's unparalleled art (A favorite of mine is the bemused-looking ape with large, plate-like rocket boosters under the soles of his feet and buzzsaws for hands). 

Being a serialized comic strip rather than a full comic book, The Spider feature doesn't necessarily collect into a trade paperback all that cleanly. Each new installment, which came every two pages at the outset, would contain a box with a paragraph explaining the strip's premise and recapping what had come before, which is obviously unnecessary if one is reading the strips back-to-back like this (I learned quickly to just ignore these, which made the reading much easier once I did so). Additionally, that meant the stories had to have a dramatic climax, turning point or danger for the character presented every two pages or so, making for a rather clipped reading experience. 

Luckily, the feature's page count expands before too long, which has the result of both bigger panels, giving readers a better look at Bunn's gorgeous linework, and making for a smoother read. 

While it's Siegel's name that Rebellion included in the title, it's Bunn's work that really makes this a book worth reading. It's head and shoulders above what most of his American peers were doing in comic books at the time, highly realistic without ever looking stiff or over-referenced. Composed of many fine lines and an amount of cross-hatching that hurts my hand just to look at, it is truly beautiful stuff, more akin to a Golden Age newspaper Sunday strip or the illustrations that used to run in newspapers in the days before photography was common (which I also said about Phil Winslade's art above, I realize). 

Paul Grist, who writes a short five-paragraph introduction to the book, said Bunn's drawings "look as if they had been freshly woven out of spider's webs."

The result of this style when applied to the book's more fantastic elements is to accentuate their sense of the surreal. The Mirror Man's illusions couldn't look more real, even when what they were depicting were obviously fantastic (giant, hypnotic eyes filling the sky, a huge hand pointing the way, a parade of prehistoric monsters), and then there's the matter of the androids, one of whom looks perfectly human until its limbs fly off like rockets trailing grasping tentacles, while others resemble medieval monsters come to life. 

Being of British origin, I'm not sure how easy this book might be found at this point—I just checked the two library systems I have access to, and none of the libraries in either seems to have a copy—but if you should find it or be able to order it through your local comic shop, it's well worth a read. 

It certainly makes me want to see other British comics from that era, if only to determine how extraordinary Bunn's work really was. That is, was that level of skill and that particular style the standard for British adventure comics of the 1960s, or was Bunn as much an outlier as he seems?

The Spider's adventures would apparently continue through 1969. Rebellion has since published two more collections, Jerry Siegel's The Syndicate of Crime Vs. The Crook from Space and Jerry Siegel's The Syndicate of Crime Vs. The Crime Genie, in 2023 and 2024, respectively. 

Looking at the Amazon listings, it looks like all three collections are also available under slightly different titles, with the words "The Spider's" replacing "Jerry Siegel's" on some editions, so maybe whatever legal or marketing factors were at play, it depended on whether the editions were meant for American versus British consumption...?



Star Wars Omnibus: A Long Time Ago... Vol. 5 (Dark Horse Books; 2012) When the release of Return of the Jedi in 1983 brought about another surge of interest in the franchise, young fans like me seemed hard-pressed if they wanted more Star Wars

As I recall, in the years immediately following Jedi, "more Star Wars" meant Saturday morning cartoons Ewoks and Droids (both released in 1985) and a pair of made-for-TV Ewoks movies (released in 1984 and 1985). Even though I was part of the target audience for these projects at the time, being six years old when Jedi was in theaters, I recognized them as being baby stuff, not as thrilling, mature or, well, as good as the three feature films. 

Back then, I had no idea that Marvel Comics was regularly producing a comic book series that continued the adventures of the heroes from the films (not just the Ewoks and droids), nor that it was more in keeping in the tone and spirit of the films than the kid-friendly projects I could find on my TV set. 

Of course, between the ages of six and eight, I probably wouldn't have been ready for Marvel's Star Wars comics, which, while technically an all-ages comic, still had an awful lot of words in them for young Caleb. (I wasn't the greatest of readers as a little kid. I was probably in fourth grade before I started tackling prose, and, as I've mentioned before, I didn't start reading comic books regularly until I was 14.)

Now, as an adult reading these comics for the first time in the 21st century, long after the establishment of a sprawling Star Wars "Extended Universe" buttressed by a trilogy of film trilogies and more novels, video games, comics and TV shows than I could ever consume devoted to filling in whatever blanks might remain in franchise's saga, I find these early Marvel comics particularly fascinating. 

That is, of course, because they were being made at a time when so many of those blanks had yet to be filled in, and there was so much open space in which the creators could play (This 2015 Tegan O'Neil history of Marvel Star Wars will likely be of interest; O'Neil does a good job of articulating exactly what made various points in the original Marvel ongoing book so compelling...especially when read now). 

As I mentioned in the previous post tackling my to-read pile, which included a review of A Long Time Ago... Vol. 4, I was particularly interested in the post-Jedi period of the comic, of which there were 27 issues spanning two years. 

After all, here Marvel and its creators were free to do pretty much whatever they wanted with the characters and concepts, as the "official" story of Star Wars was over, its main villain gone, its core rebels vs. Empire premise resolved and no real canonical future yet established in tie-in media like that of the novels.

That fourth omnibus included the first five post-Jedi issues of the series, in which Jo Duffy and a few other writers were apparently casting about for a new direction, and a couple of those issues feeling an awful lot like re-purposed inventory stories.  

This volume is, obviously, all post-Jedi

Duffy writes all but two of the issues; the two she didn't write are done-in-ones written by Archie Goodwin and then-editor Ann Nocenti. 

The series finds the former rebel alliance, now referred to as the Alliance of Free Planets or simply the Alliance, based on Endor, the heroes embarking on various diplomatic missions, attempting to recruit ambassadors from various planets to join them in organizing a democratic, post-Empire system of government for the galaxy. (Contrary to the post-Jedi stories told in the prose novels and later Dark Horse comics, Luke is here quite adamant about not training anyone else in the ways of the Jedi, and the Han/Leia romance is basically frozen in place.)

Imperial holdouts including stormtroopers and officers are occasionally encountered, sometimes seeking to hold on to power, other times working with various bad guys, and, intriguingly, Duffy introduces a pair of Vader replacements. 

One of these lasts but an issue. This is Flint, who we met in 1983's annual (collected in the previous omnibus), when he joined the Empire as a stormtrooper, seeking the power Vader had promised him. Here he is an apparent dark lord of the Sith, with a light saber, mastery of the Force and an incredibly cool, medieval-looking suit of black armor (designed by the issue's guest artist, Jan Duursema, who would go on to draw a lot of Star Wars for Dark Horse decades later). It's kind of a shame this issue is also the last we see of him. 

The second Vader replacement is Dark Lady Lumiya, who we first meet as a cyborg enforcer working with the aristocratic oligarchs on a planet Mon Mothma and Leia visit. She will later ally herself with the new threat to the galaxy that Duffy will gradually introduce in the coming issues.

These are the Nagai, a race of particularly cool-looking, white skinned, black haired space goths from a neighboring galaxy that seek to conquer this one, now that the empire has been vanquished (One of them looks an awful lot like a particular Vertigo character, who I assume we will all pretend never existed, thanks to the actions of the writer who created him).

After one of their number, named Knife, is introduced in an issue set on Kashyyk, where he is trying to reinstate the slave trade of Wookiees, the Nagai will come to the fore, dominating the last year or so's worth of the series. 

As the series winds down, Duffy will increasingly focus on some of her own creations that have been added to the expanded cast, including the red-skinned Zeltron Dani, the water-breathing Kiro and the psychic Hoojib Plif, plus new additions made in these issues, like the half-Corellian giant Bey, who apparently grew up with Han Solo, and a group of teenage Zeltron males, who are assigned as attendants to the Zeltron-adverse Leia, who has long loathed Dani.

These last issues will contain a greater bit of humor (Han Solo sighing "I hate being tortured..!" was a highlight, I thought). One entire issue, #94's "Small Wars", is purely comedy. The done-in-one story features the cute but savage Ewoks declaring war on the even-cuter comics-original race of small, fluffy, bunny-like Lahsbees, part of the machinations of the cartoon bug-like Hirog, whose race the Hiromi have ambitions of conquest. 

Other stories will contain comedic elements, like C-3P0 screwing up the packing of various missions, so that Leia's Zeltron aides will have to whip-up a gaudy half-dress, almost as revealing as her slave get-up, for her to wear at a diplomatic party.

As the series reaches its end, Duffy will pen an issue in which Leia and her aides meet a wounded Nagai soldier and begin to sympathize with them a bit, and she will introduce another new, even more evil alien race: the Tof, large, cruel soldiers who look like gamma-irradiated classic 17th century pirates. The Tof are invading the galaxy pursuit of their enemies the Nagai, who are apparently only here seeking to escape from the Tof.

After being teased int the Leia/Nagai soldier issue, the Tof are introduced in a fun couple of issues set on Zeltros, in which the Nagai, the Tof and the somewhat silly Hiromi all target the planet of fun-loving, perpetually horny red people for conquest at once, our heroes being caught in the middle.

All is resolved in a final issue, which seems to take place after a time-jump of unknown length (shirtless commander Luke Skywalker has much longer hair than usual, anyway, and the Nagai no longer seem like such a major threat). Our heroes have now allied themselves with both the Nagai and former Imperials in a final battle against the Tof, seeking to capture their monarch and force a peace.

It's a rather rushed but action-packed issue, ending with Luke declaring in the final panel that, "For the first time in a long, long time, all of us, as races and as individuals, have a fair chance at making peace. And I hope...no I know...we can do it!"

Much of the first half of the omnibus maintains the Tom Palmer finished and inked, realistic style of the previous volume, although Palmer is but one of the several artists involved: Bob McLeod, Ron Frenz, Al Williamson, Bret Blevins and the aforementioned Duursema (inked by her fellow Kubert School graduate and eventual husband Tom Mandrake) will all provide some art.

The majority of the second half of the book is drawn by Cynthia Martin, whose style is a such a sharp contrast to so much of what came before, especially just before, that it looks like a radical shift. 

Martin has a simpler, more angular, more expressive and more dynamic style than Palmer and the artists providing pencils or breakdowns for him. She seems to be drawing the characters, rather than the actors playing the characters, which is a subtle but important distinction when it comes to comics based on mass-media properties like this; that is, one doesn't necessarily see drawings of Harrison Ford on the pages, although Martin's Han still has a bit of Ford's expressions and attitudes to him.

She's also particularly adept at the humor that Duffy increasingly indulges in (It's particularly difficult to imagine, say, the cartoony Hiromi in a more realistic style, as they have a dashed-off quality to their visuals, and her design work is incredible. 

The Nagai are, as stated, pretty cool-looking characters, and each of Martin's Nagai looks distinct and individual, rather than looking monolithic in appearance as some races of Star Wars aliens tend to. 

Her Nagai ships are also amazing. 

There's a scene where their fleet arrives and fills the sky of a splash page (see the badly-scanned image above), and the ships look both cool and like nothing we've seen in Star Wars before. Most ships and vehicles in the comics have always been either based on the designs from the films, or more generic rockets and spaceships that could have come from any generic comic from the mid-twentieth century. These look completely original, and completely alien to Star Wars, as befits ships from beyond the galaxy. 

It's kind of a shame that the book was canceled when it was, as it would have been interesting to see Duffy's plans for the Nagai and Tof play out over months or years, rather than being hyper-compressed into three or four issues after so much build-up of the Nagai as a new and particularly pernicious threat, one completely divorced from the Empire. 

Just as it would have been fun to see how she would keep the heroes occupied in the long-term. And we certainly didn't get enough of Cynthia Martin's Star Wars

Reading these final issues of Marvel's first time around with the Star Wars license, I wondered why it was canceled at all, as quality certainly wasn't an issue (Although I could easily imagine Martin's art being such a departure that it might have chased away long-time fans). 

According to that O'Neil piece I linked to above, it was apparently low sales that lead to cancellation. As hard as it is to imagine now, I guess there really was a point where there wasn't enough interest in more Star Wars to justify one new issue of a comic book per month...

At any rate, beyond the "interesting" I expected for such an early, post-Jedi take on the franchise, the Duffy/Martin comics are truly great ones. 

While this particular omnibus is probably well out of print at this point, surely Marvel has recollected and republished these comics in some form or another since regaining the license; hopefully you have a helpful local comics shop that can help you navigate the confusing world of Star Wars comics collections to find these.



*As is far too common a story in comics today, Barr has had some pretty severe health problems of late, and if you would like to help him, you can do so here.

Thursday, March 20, 2025

Another dent in my to-read pile

The Complete Peanuts 1993-1994 (Fantagraphics Books; 2014) This is one of those books that has no need of any sort of review or reaction from me. After all, what can I say about Charles Schulz's fifty-year long masterpiece of a comic strip that hasn't been said before, perhaps even in this very series' introductions? 

This is, after all, the 22nd volume of Fantagraphics' beautiful collection of the strip, which means they have at this point had 22 different people write introductions to the books, each doing a pretty good job at getting at what makes Schulz's work on the strip so special. 

In this volume, that introduction comes from journalist and TV host Jake Tapper, who does a fine job with the 20 or so paragraphs he's allotted, despite Tapper not exactly being what we might consider a "comics" guy. I'm not sure I have much to add.

The strips collected herein are, as the years on the cover indicate, from relatively late in Peanuts' lifetime. I was in high school at the time they original ran, and an avid newspaper reader...at least of the comics pages and film and music reviews. 

These strips are therefore in the style and on the subject matter that I tend to think of when I think of Peanuts, with the character designs all so fully formed and perfected that they are as familiar as the letters of the alphabet, and Schulz's linework approaching maximum squiggliness, each strip looking almost effortless dashed-off in the manner of a signature.

In that regard, this collection isn't the sort of revelation that the earliest volumes of the series were, wherein we see that the big-headed kids and the first iteration of Snoopy are downright cute in design, with more solid linework, and that the characters hadn't yet evolved into their more popularly recognized forms, with Linus and Sally, for example, still being babies.

As Tapper points out, there is here, as in so much of Schulz's Peanuts, a sort of timelessness, so that even though these strips are now over 30 years old, for the most part they read just as relevant today as they would have in the '90s...just as a reader in the '90s could read the strips of the '60s and still find the humor and even the few cultural touchstones ever mentioned relevant. 

(Tapper does point out a few strips that will seem dated, as they make somewhat rare references to current events or pop culture. These include a couple of strips that mention Sandra Day O'Connor and Senator Joe Biden, in reference to Snoopy, wearing a bowler hat and carrying a brief case as the "world famous attorney," perhaps seeking to fill a vacancy in the Supreme Court. The other is what I assume is the only appearance of Snoopy as "Joe Grunge". Hey, I laughed.)

During its 50-year lifespan then, Peanuts managed to be remarkably consistent with its timelessness, focusing on the core aspects of childhood that never change much, rather than the more transient, surface level aspects. 

I do wonder if the advent and omnipresence of the smart phone marked a change that upsets Peanuts' ability to feel like it is set in an eternal now. After all, I was somewhat surprised to see how many strips in this collection involved the characters talking on the phone to one another, the adult-sized receivers looking huge in their little hands, with a big, coily cord reaching off panel. Surely that's something today's kids can't relate too, and the change in telephone technology seems to be one drastic enough that it confines many Peanuts strips to a twentieth rather than twenty-first century setting (I've tried, but I can't really imagine Charlie Brown or even Snoopy holding a smart phone; I suppose most of the characters are too young to have their own anyway, and Snoopy is, of course, a dog.)

These collections do point out one of the more remarkable aspects of the strip. All cartoonists working in the field tend to have a handful of running gags that they (or their successors, in the case of so many of the legacy strips filling up what's left of the newspaper comics page) return to over and over for new riffs. Think Dagwood and his sandwiches, running into the mailman or getting interrupted in the bathtub, or Garfield and his love of lasagna, hatred of Mondays or disinterest in chasing mice.

Schulz obviously had wells he returned to over and over again over the decades, and you probably unconsciously think of some of them when you think of Peanuts, like Lucy pulling away the football or Snoopy vs. The Red Baron or the kite-eating tree and so on. 

What's different with Peanuts though is that Schulz had developed so many running gags, in such a wide variety and rich depth, that readers would come to see many of them as ongoing struggles in the lives of the characters (especially in the case of Charlie Brown), or indicators of their personalities and inner lives (in the case of Snoopy, for example). 

How many such subjects did Schulz have to return to for inspiration? Well, the book contains an index. It contains entries on different characters and cultural references (mostly of classical music and literature), but also types of gags, like "bed time existentialism" (on 11 pages), "blanket" (22), "mailbox" (12), "suppertime" (15) and so on. 

This isn't to imply that Schulz was or could produce the strip on autopilot—indeed, it may actually be harder in some cases to come up with new gags based on decades-old set-ups like Peppermint Patty vs. her teacher or Lucy resting her head on Schroder's toy piano as he plays—but it certainly shows how rich and varied the strip could be. It also demonstrates, I think, how the strip evolved, as there are entries in the index here that wouldn't have been in previous volumes, like that of new character "Royanne (great-granddaughter of Roy Hobbs)", appearing on nine pages of the collection. 

Two strips herein really struck me, both because they seemed to break, or at least press up against, long established "rules" of the strip. Both are Sunday strips. 

In one, a three-panel strip with one caption reading "June 6,1944, 'To Remember'" (That's the date of the Normandy invasion), the bulk of the strip consists of a huge horizontal panel in which we see Snoopy in a soldier's helmet and backpack, crawling ashore while big, x-shaped, "hedgehog" obstacles are in the background, and troop carriers are along the horizon. The second panel features a half-dozen soldiers, seen above and from behind, so all the reader can see is the backs of their helmets and their shoulders. Still, it seems to be a rare instance of an adult human appearing in a Peanuts strip.

In the other, we see Snoopy chasing and fetching a variety of thrown objects—a ball, a frisbee and then a stick—while an off-panel voice encourages him with "Get it, boy!" and "Get it, pal!" in each panel. The last panel features Linus, Charlie Brown and a frazzled looking Snoopy all leaning against a tree trunk. Linus asks, "What did you do for your dad on Father's Day, Charlie Brown?" and he replies, "I let him play with my dog," seemingly indicating that the off-panel voice in each of those preceding panels was that of his dad. This would, of course, be a very rare instance in which we saw actual dialogue from an adult in a word balloon, rather than just having their dialogue implied by the reactions of the kid characters.

...

Huh. I guess I did have some stuff to say about this collection after all. Now, whether or not I had anything of value to say, well I suppose that's an entirely different question...


Disney Donald Duck Visits Japan! (Tokyopop; 2022) Manga-ka Meru Okano sends Disney comics' easy-to-anger everyman Donald Duck to Japan for a short, accessible culture clash comedy, one in which Donald is charged with unlocking the secrets of the Japanese concept of "Omotenashi." 

What that is, exactly, is never defined in Okano's book. When Donald asks a Japanese waitress, "Hey, so, what is omotenashi exactly?", she merely replies, "The 'O' is a polite way of saying 'Motenashi'," which, obviously, doesn't do him much good. (I ultimately looked it up online and discovered it is a Japanese term referring to hospitality and mindfulness, which tracks with the book's proceedings.)

Donald does not go on this journey alone. Rather than his usual comics traveling companions of Huey, Dewey, Louie and sometimes Uncle Scrooge, he's joined by his fellow "Caballeros", Jose Carioca and Panchito Pistoles, who co-starred with Donald in the 1944 film The Three Caballeros (and would, like most Disney characters, occasionally pop up in various iterations over the years, including in a pair of 21st century Don Rosa comics and, most recently, in a 2018 episode of the rebooted Duck Tales cartoon.)

Though it was something of a surprise to see them show up in a Donald Duck manga, the pair's presence actually makes a lot of sense here, given that they were each originally created to serve as cultural ambassadors (for Brazil and Mexico, respectively), and their original teaming with Donald was in what was essentially a propaganda film, exhibiting goodwill to Latin America. 

Who better, then, to join Donald Duck in a narrative that serves as a sort of crash course in Japanese customs and culture for young, Western readers...?

Here Donald, who Okano draws far simpler, cuter and more duck-like in build than he is usually depicted, has a monotonous office job with the Duck Furniture manufacturing company, with his friends Jose and Panchito working under him. After one too many screw-ups—most likely the time they took the company president's car for a joy ride—they are banished to the newly-created Asia Relations Department. 

The only catch? Duck Furniture has no business in Asia, so Donald spends his days playing solitaire on the computer, his employees performing similar time-wasting activities. Then suddenly one day the phone rings, and the president summons them to his office. He finally has an assignment for the trio: He's going to send them to Japan for a year, where he expects them to learn about omotenashi first-hand, research the company will then translate into new furniture designs. (And, secretly, he hopes the experience will whip them into shape, making them decent employees.)

Their research takes an unexpected form, as they are given entry-level menial jobs at a traditional Japanese Inn, where they work under the watchful eye of a scary and tyrannical Madam Wolf (who, despite her name, is actually an anthropomorphic cat, as are seemingly all the employees at the inn and, indeed, all the Japanese characters). 

Donald and friends are tasked with folding 500 origami cranes, cleaning the long hallways with only brooms and wash cloths, washing dishes and so on, gradually learning more about customer service and the benefits of the inn's traditional ways of doing business. 

Along the way, they also get to go sight-seeing, adjust to Japanese culture and food, learn about Japanese ghost stories and Donald is even given a chance to try his hand at making sushi....which he is terrible at.

I think the book meets its goals effectively, although honestly the most fun part of the book for me was seeing Okano's drastically different take on the classic Donald Duck design and the way his attitude and emotions get translated into and then depicted in manga rather than Western-style comics.


Sasquatch Detective Special #1 (DC Comics; 2019) One of the oddest DC Comics releases in recent memory, this $7.99, 64-page one-shot features Tonya Lightfoot, a Los Angeles police detective who also happens to be a sasquatch. The character is the original creation of stand-up comedian, storyteller and comedy writer for television (and other media) Brandee Stilwell

It is, of course, a comedy, a kinda sorta parody of cop show tropes...once it actually gets going, anyway.

It should go without saying that it is very much not the sort of thing that DC Comics usually publishes, especially these days, as the publisher's output continues to contract more and more to their core model of telling stories either featuring their long-lived superheroes and other IP or set in the shared-universe/continuity or, preferably, both.  (The publisher's last remaining imprint Vertigo, which would occasionally still publish creator-owned and non-superhero fare in its waning days, shut down in 2020...although last I heard, DC was hoping to revive it.)

Sasquatch Detective seems like the sort of comic that might we have seen from a smaller, more diverse, more adventurous publisher, one that specializes in lighter-hearted fare and comedic comic books. So how did it end up at DC anyway?

Well, Stilwell pens a brief five-paragraph introduction to this special, which is comprised of both new material and previously published shorts. The character was originally conceived of on an improv stage, she writes, becoming a "go to character...on stages all over town, eventually anchoring a grad show at Second City Hollywood." (As to where the idea for the character came from, Stilwell writes that her inspiration was essentially Charlie's Angels + a yeti.)

Apparently, several DC Comics employees saw Stilwell preforming the character on stage (DC moved to California in 2015, remember), and the publisher eventually invited her to transform the Sasquatch Detective bit into a series of short comics. Drawn by Gustavo Vazquez, these appeared as a back-up strip in Mark Russell, Mike Feehan, Mark Morales and company's 2018 six-issue series Exit Stage Left: The Snagglepuss Chronicles. 

Back-up strips can be awkward in 21st century serial comics publishing, now that just about everything that gets published as a comic book series ends up getting collected and re-published as a trade paperback later. Often such strips don't quite fit in with the feature stories of the title they were originally published in and thus don't always end up in the same trades. (I never flipped-through the Snagglepuss collection, so I don't know with certainty that Sasquatch Detective wasn't collected at the back of it, but it doesn't appear that it was, from what I see online.)

So what was DC to do with Stillwell and Vazquez's comics after Snagglepuss finished its run? They apparently decided to attach the 30-ish or so pages worth of shorts to a brand-new 30-page origin story and publish them as a big, fat, expensive special which is, of course, what we're looking at here. It seems like a somewhat half-hearted strategy. 

If they just wanted to collect the back-ups they already had, after all, they could have released a 32-page comic. If they wanted new material, they could have commissioned a Sasquatch Detective mini-series...or perhaps moved the strip into another book to serve as its back-up. This just seems like something of an odd compromise of strategies, and a publishing decision all but guaranteed not to succeed, at least not from DC, which doesn't have the best track record of books that don't feature their heroes or other IP in some form. (Stilwell does seem to make a few attempts to situate her character in the DCU proper in the shorts; Wonder Woman appears in a few panels in one of them, while Catwoman and Alfred make unlikely cameos in another.)

Now, if you read EDILW religiously, then you know I did not read Snagglepuss (or else you already would have read my review of it), and thus this was my first exposure to Stilwell's character and the resultant comic. I, naturally, read the comic straight-through, from beginning to end, as it was published, although I'm not sure that order necessarily served the material best, as we get a very long origin story, five times longer than each of the original strips, before we get to the re-presentation of those strips, which actually seem to work better not knowing Tonya's origin. 

After all, the very absurdism of the concept, spelled out in the title, is the strongest joke on display here. There just randomly being a detective who is also a sasquatch works better without knowing where Tonya's interest in police work came from or what her life as a regular, jobless sasquatch was like. (The central joke is especially effective since Tonya's police career seems to involve a lot of undercover work, despite the fact that she's eight-feet tall and covered in hair.)

Fourteen years ago, a caption tells us, Tonya and her family were hanging outside a forest ranger station, watching the likes of Law & Order, Reno 911! and CSI through the window. The sasquatch family, who can all talk and all wear bits and pieces of people clothes, then head to a nearby country club where they meet up with other forest animals (all of whom also talk and wear people clothes) and they all play tennis and golf together.

It's a pretty peaceful, idyllic life, despite the occasional interactions with humans, like the campers Tonya's dad scares off in one scene (he seems to ditch his pants and sweater vest before doing so, of course), or the hunters who capture her dad and briefly hold him captive in the back of their pickup truck until Tonya, her mother and her brother rescue him.

Then one day 14 years later, Tonya and her pigeon friend (who can talk, but doesn't wear clothes) catch the news on the ranger station TV, and a Los Angeles policeman says the following: "I want the best of the best for my Los Angeles police force. The best men, the best women. Hell, I'd even take a sasquatch. I don't care as long as they're the best!"

Tonya takes this unusual statement as a sign to apply and, lo and behold, she gets the job, striding confidently (and naked) into the Los Angeles police academy.

Thus ends the origin story, entitled "Origin Story" and drawn by Ron Randall rather than Vazquez. From there, the second half of the book picks up a year later, with Tonya and partner Detective Berkass already on the job and reminiscing about their many adventures. 

Tonya solves a cold case and has terrible bowel distress after eating a two-day-old egg salad sandwich. She attempts to interview a witness but runs afoul of a Fish and Wildlife rep. She goes undercover, first at a spa, and then as a magician's assistant.

The main character was apparently designed by artist Ben Caldwell—the book ends with a four-page section labeled "Concept Art and Sketches by Ben Caldwell"—who also contributes the cover to the special. His sasquatch is much slimmer than the sort one generally sees sasquatches depicted as in various media, and original artist Vazquez follows through with those design choices, giving us a sasquatch who is very tall and hairy, but not too terribly squatchy. She's particularly lithe, sports four clawed digits on her hands and (regularly sized) feet, and has a full head of long hair, in addition to the fur all over her body.

Randall, drawing Tonya and her family in the opening origin story, gives us a quartet of sasquatches that are similarly tall and thin, with long hair atop their heads, and they look a little like big-eyed lion people with almost fox-like limbs.

Overall, I like the design quite a bit for how different it is, and Vazquez seems to have fun cramming it into the generic LA cop settings and stories in the back-half of the book, drawing Tonya nearly folded in half as she squeezes into the passenger seat of her partner's car, dwarfing her regular-human peers when she stands at full-height, or barely changing her look when she goes undercover, donning a blonde wig or floppy sun hat and heels.

Whatever DC's plans for the character and the material might have originally been, they seem to have stopped with this special, as there has been no reappearance by Tonya in the last six years. Perhaps she lives on as a character in Stilwell's stage work...? 


Star Wars Omnibus: A Long Time Ago... Vol. 4 (Dark Horse Books; 2011) It has been many years since I left off reading Marvel's original 1977-1986 Star Wars series, which I was doing via Dark Horse's 6-by-9-inch omnibus collections of it (And which I had hurriedly bought all of when it was announced Marvel was going to be getting the license back, as I was afraid the material might not be collected, or at least not collected in a format I liked once Marvel became its steward again). 

Luckily, it was easy enough to pick it right back up, largely because the first issues collected in this particular volume fall somewhere between The Empire Strikes Back and The Return of the Jedi. In fact, the first issue, #68, reads like it might have been set immediately after the end of Empire, with Luke, Leia, Chewbacca, Lando and the droids divvying up leads on various bounty hunters to start their search for the lost Han Solo. 

And because of the nature of the comics (and other media, really) set in between the installments of the original trilogy, there's only so much narrative progress the creators could really make; readers like me know, of course, that they're not actually going to succeed in finding and freeing Han in any of these issues. Instead, the comics writers would simply be giving them issue after issue of busy work and side quests to keep the comic going during the three-year wait until Jedi

It's David Micheline who writes that first issue, as well as the next, a two-parter which sends Leia on a mission to Mandalore (And, as always, it's interesting to how these earlier Star Wars adaptations deal with aspects of the lore that will not yet have been solidified in the ways they later would be, meaning these Mandalorians don't act all that much like those we'll get to know decades later in things like, say, The Mandalorian show). 

After that, Jo Duffy, credited as Mary Jo Duffy in the credits for issue #70, takes over, and she will script the majority of this collection's 500 or so remaining pages. Most of these pages will be drawn by Tom Palmer, credited with either finishes or inks and mostly working over breakdowns by Ron Frenz. 

Other familiar names pop up in the credits, too. Klaus Janson draws and colors Star Wars King Size Annual #3, a complete Duffy-written story about two adventurous young locals who ultimately take two completely different paths after the war between the Empire and the rebels comes to their home planet. David Mazzucchelli pencils one issue (which Palmer inks), though I can't say his work was particularly recognizable as his, and Tom Mandrake shares a "finishes" credit with Palmer on one issue, and his style did seem a little more recognizable to my eye, although that might just be because I'm more familiar with his work. 

For the most part, Duffy's plots are split between the main characters looking for Han and running various missions for the alliance, many of these involving tracking down a lost rebel with important information. One is an extended flashback, featuring Han along with the rest of the characters.

In these, she introduces several original characters who would recur throughout her run, including a three-person crew of rogues, a water-breathing character from an ocean world, and an old enemy of Lando's named Drebbel, whose presence and enmity with Lando would lead to a pretty great pay off in the final issue in this collection. 

Duffy does a fine job of keeping the series going and the characters convincingly engaged in other adventures despite the fact that we all know these comics are essentially just killing time, waiting for Jedi. Palmer's art is consistently great, as he's able to achieve pretty remarkable likenesses of the actors playing the stars without them ever seeming overly stiff, unnatural or not of a piece with the art they are part of. 

It's also fun in the way these early Star Wars comics so often are; with so few adaptations extant at that point, creators had a lot more freedom to invent whatever kinds of aliens, ships, droids, planets and technology they wanted, meaning this version of Star Wars can look and feel delightfully off or, if you prefer, new or original (Though not quite so much as the earlier comics, like some of those discussed below). 

This collection includes Marvel's official four-issue comics adaptation of Return of the Jedi, adapted not by the regulalr comic's creative team, but by Archie Goodwin and artists Al Williamson and Carlos Garzon. I had actually read this in a magazine format as a very young child—I would have been six when it came out in 1983, so it was probably among the earliest comics I had ever read. It's...not very interesting, and I ended up skimming through it here. It's obviously quite faithful to the movie, but the action's condensed, and the artists don't do anything particularly cool or fun with the material, instead presenting it as straight as possible (Which, one imagines, was what they were supposed to do). 

After Jedi, the series continued, of course, and here is where I think the comic should prove particularly fascinating again. With no new films on the horizon, and George Lucas apparently done with them (and relatively few novels establishing what might happen next), Marvel seemingly had pretty free reign to do whatever they wanted with the characters and established lore, this series presenting some of the earliest "more Star Wars", unencumbered by the need to wait for plotlines to be resolved.

There are only five post-Jedi issues collected in this volume, though, and they seem rather all over the place, as Marvel and Duffy seemed to still be casting about for a new direction. 

The first issue following the Jedi adaptation hews pretty closely to following up on the events of the film. The rebels are still based on Endor, and Han Solo and Leia travel to Tatooine to try to unfreeze Han's bank account, which was suspended when he was in suspended animation. There, we learn that Boba Fett was spit out from the Sarlacc pit, found and collected by Jawas who think his armor means he's a droid and, by issue's end, winds up back in the Sarlacc pit. 

Two other stories read like they might have been inventory stories. One is a solo Lando story (by writer Linda Grant and McLeod) that, based on the designs and nature of the story, could have been a Flash Gordon or Buck Rogers story, the other (by writer Roy Richardson, Mazzucchelli and Palmer) features Han Solo hunting for treasure; this a rather fun story as it involves him exploring an ancient temple, calling to mind Han Solo-as-Indiana Jones. 

The other two involve the various characters taking on missions throughout the galaxy, their new goal being inviting planets to attend a big meeting to form some kind of new, post-Empire galactic government. In these, Duffy brings back characters introduced earlier in the series and gives us a couple of payoffs.

There's one more volume left in the A Long Time Ago... series, which will collect the remaining 21 issues of the original series. I'm really looking forward to that, as its contents will be entirely made up of these post-Jedi stories. 

Hopefully it won't take me a decade or so to get to reading it...



Star Wars Omnibus: Wild Space Vol. 1 (Dark Horse; 2013) This collection hails from the too-brief period in which Dark Horse was re-packaging and re-publishing swathes of their licensed material in slightly smaller, 6-by-9-inch, white-covered omnibuses, including, obviously, a bunch of the thousands of pages of Star Wars comics they had published by that point.  

The organizing principle for this particular omnibus seems to be stuff that didn't fit in thematically with any of their other Star Wars collections, leading to a, well, wild selection of comics, most of which hadn't originated with or been previously collected by Dark Horse. 

That means there's a great deal of original material from Marvel UK's Star Wars Weekly, Star Wars Monthly and Empire Strikes Back Monthly, circa 1979-1982, as well as comics from the pages of Marvel's Pizzazz and Scholastic's Star Wars Kids magazine (from the late '70s and late '90s, respectively), plus three issues of the not-very-good Star Wars 3-D from publisher Blackthorne Publishing, a handful of mini-comics that appear to have been pack-ins with a '90s toy line and even a four-panel comic strip that ran on a box of Kellogg's cereal. 

What had originally attracted me to this collection wasn't that I was a Star Wars comics completist or anything. (This was the only Star Wars Omnibus I had purchased aside from the various A Long Time Ago... collections of the original Marvel comics). Rather, it was the name Alan Moore on the back cover. His was perhaps the most prominent of several rather famous names listed there and, given both his reputation and the quality of just about every comic of his I had managed to read, I was more than a little curious to see what he might have done with the Star Wars characters. 

As for the other creators involved with the comics in this collection, it's a real who's who of comics talent, including Mike W. Barr, Howard Chaykin, Chris Claremont, Dave Cockrum, Alan Davis, Tony DeZuniga, Gary Erskine, Archie Goodwin, Carmine Infantino, Klaus Janson, Steve Moore, Ron Randall, Walt Simonson, Ken Steacy, John Stokes, Roy Thomas and Len Wein. 


If you are a fan of any of the gentleman listed above, particularly of the artists, please be advised that, for the most part, this is work from pretty early in their careers with Marvel, so while the promise of a Howard Chaykin or Walt Simonson Star Wars comic is exciting, they aren't necessarily working at the height of their powers here, and their rather brief contributions to the book don't find them at their Howard Chaykin-est or Walt Simonson-est. (Carmine Infantino is an outlier here; he contributes hundreds of pages, and they are both amazing and recognizably his, rather than mundane work for hire bound by drawing celebrity likenesses and studio-approved vehicles and settings).

As for the Moore material, which is perhaps among the best written here, it is, obviously, not exactly the Star Wars equivalent of he and Dave Gibbons' Watchmen...and not just because he wasn't working with Gibbons. 

Rather his stories—three drawn by John Stokes, one by Alan Davis and one by Adolfo Buylla—are all mostly quite short, four of the five ranging from five to six pages each.

As such, there is not entirely too much to these, and they amount to usually clever strips with either quite a bit of writerly narration or, in one case, quite a bit of dialogue, much of it approaching the purple (In this volume, it's instructive to compare Moore's work with that of Chris Claremont, as they share some similarities, although I don't think many ever find occasion to group those two writers together). 

They are also relatively light on Star Wars content, although they star Darth Vader, Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia and C-3PO and R2-D2. The characterization involved is generally one of types, for example, presenting Vader as the blackest, most unconscionable sort of villain, or focusing on Luke's nature as a prototypical hero figure. The one featuring Leia and some Storm Troopers running across some space gods is only incidentally a Star Wars story; almost any characters could have been used in their place. 

For the most part, these shorts—which Dark Horse had actually colorized and reprinted along with Moore's single, longer story in 1996 under the title Classic Star Wars: Devilworlds #1 and #2—basically read like some of Moore's earlier works for British anthology comics or, perhaps more directly, the various DC Comics shorter works most recently collected in 2015 as DC Universe by Alan Moore. (One story even prefigures Moore and Gibbons' famous Green Lantern short "Mogo Doesn't Socialize", featuring as it does a sentient planet coming to life to defend itself from hostile invaders.)

As for that longer story, it is the 15-page "The Pandora Effect," in which Leia, Han Solo and Chewbacca find themselves captive on a strange, extra-dimensional ship crewed by evil-worshipping occultists who intend to torture and kill them, until Chewbacca releases a prehistoric otherworldly demonic entity that the bad guys had imprisoned. It's notably mature for a Star Wars story of this era, but, again, it's not so much a Star Wars story as a rather generic sci-fi story in which the Star Wars characters are dropped in. 

Another particularly strong story in the collection is from another Moore, Steven Moore. This is "Death-Masque," in which the Empire releases an incredible, terrifying weapon upon Luke, a small creature that looks like a monkey with a skull for a head, lights glowing from its empty sockets. The creature, which is kept hooded like a hawk, is basically an alien answer to folklore surrounding sleep paralysis, as it squats on the chest of its victim, projecting nightmares into the victim's head. Here, that means Luke wandering around a Stokes-drawn planet filled with skulls of various sizes and bone trees while watching his friends die and ultimately dueling against a skull-faced Darth Vader.

Again, it's not too terribly Star Wars-y a story...but then, that is a large part of the fun of the earliest years of Star Wars comics. With what we now think of as the established lore of that fictional universe then so scant and pre-formed—limited, as it was, to just what was in that first movie—the writers and artists had no real choice but to make up things as they went along. Planets, aliens, droids, ships, costumes, even the characters' histories and inter-personal relationships...at that point, it was all still up for grabs, and so the creators had to more-or-less treat the characters as types, and send them into the sorts of space and fantasy adventures of old Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials, the very things George Lucas had taken his own inspiration from (The serial nature of comics, of course, proved the most perfect vehicle for such stories, even if the emerging Star Wars novels offered better, more rewarding reading). 

I take great pleasure in these wild, untamed Star Wars comics, especially now that the fictional setting has been so rigorously chronicled, standardized and mapped out, seemingly every conceivable empty space or opening filled in (And, after the third trilogy scrambled so much of what was previously regarded as canon, re-filled in). 

We find such stories aplenty here, mostly in the form of what I guess must have been strips original to Marvel UK's titles, written first by Goodwin and then, later, by Claremont, all drawn by Infantino in his own slightly strange style, with off-kilter action, blocky figures and seeming complete disregard for likenesses or the film's design (Infantino's Chewbacca especially, like almost everybody's at the time, is often quite off-model. The only way to really guess his Luke is Luke is his answering to the name and occasionally wielding a light saber, and Infantino's extremely curvy version of Leia is mostly identifiable by her signature hair style, taken from the original film and worn almost religiously throughout the comics he draws here).

These are even more fun when Goodwin does attempt to address the continuity of the film, as in one story set immediately after the destruction of the Death Star, in which the "toasts" came "often and exuberantly" and "there may have been moments when the partying threatened to get completely out of hand..." 

That last bit of narration comes in a panel of Leia kissing Han, followed immediately by a panel in which she kisses Luke, who of course Goodwin and company didn't know (and Lucas himself probably didn't know at that point either) would end up being brother and sister (That's not the only time they kiss in these comics either).

Oh, and Leia also gives Chewbacca his medal after the kissing; so there's that curious loose end from the film tied-up, all the way back in 1979!

Goodwin and Infantino also tell us of the Kessel Run and just how Leia got to be such a crack shot with a blaster (given that she was a princess/senator from a pacifist planet), before Claremont replaces Goodwin and comes aboard for a rather epic story that adds a Black female rebel to Luke, Leia and the droids' small crew and then sends them all to a volcano planet where they are forced to ally themselves with an contingent of Imperial commandos. 

Once we hit the late '80s and the pages give over to American comics that now have a whole, completed trilogy (and its various mass media tie-ins) to work with as source material, the comics tend to get a little less crazy...and less fun.

The three-issue 3-D series written by Len Wein, and here presented in black and white, features stories in which Luke returns to Tatooine to find someone new to run the family moisture farm; Luke, Han, Chewbacca and the droids scout out Hoth for a possible rebel base; and Luke being seduced to the power of the Dark Side by Vader from afar.

Here we see not only an adherence to plotlines from the films, but even the types of aliens have settled into the now-familiar races, with a group of bandits on Hoth all made-up of various races introduced in Return of the Jedi

And by the time we get to the Star Wars Kids comics, everything seems to be produced to fit into a by then tightly regulated canon. 

Seen as a supplement to A Long Time Ago... (and a chance to see Infantino's Star Wars art in glorious black and white, where you can appreciate the linework of the artist and his partners like Gene Day and Steve Mitchell more), or a chance to see what Alan Moore might have done with the storied franchise or simply as a collection of some of the most oddball Star Wars comics that one can't find anywhere else, it's a particularly rewarding collection.

Um, too bad it's now been out of print so long now (Maybe I should have read and reviewed it sooner than a dozen years after it was published, I guess). 

I'm not sure if Marvel has republished any of this material since they reacquired the Star Wars license, and, if so, where, but it looks like this omnibus may still be available via Kindle, if you don't mind supporting Amazon in these trying times of ours.