I know, two
different posts reviewing comics within just a few days of each other is pretty
unusual for me, but these are all pretty new, and I have just started reading
them, and I wanted to take advantage of that. They vary in content and probably
in target audience, but I will try and give some impressions.
Rocket
Girl, written by
Brandon Montclare, art by Amy Reeder (Image Comics)
Dayoung
Johansson is a teenage cop from an alternate reality 2013, sent back to 1986 to
prevent that alternate reality from happening. I guess it is sort of like the
second Terminator movie, except instead of Arnold the protagonist is a freckle-faced
girl, and so far there is no Robert Patrick. (And why it's more like the 2nd
instead of the first has to do with some issues of how the technology
develops.)
I'm not
sure that's a good description, or that I would be interested in it from the
description, but I wanted to see more by Reeder, and this seemed like a good
chance. Her artwork soars, so having her work on someone who flies with a
rocket pack was inspired.
Currently
on the second issue, they are building some interesting relationships among
characters, but the establishment of Dayoung has been the most important part.
She is passionate, impulsive, and stubborn, so very 15. You can relate to others who are frustrated
with her, and still root for her. Those are not the qualities we look for in
cops today, but in the alternative 2013 that is what is necessary, and that
should be what carries the day.
Many of the
other books being reviewed are more adult, but this one should be safe for
teens, and really good for them to get into.
Red
Sonja, written by
Gail Simone, art by Walter Geovani (Dynamite)
This one is
a little more adult, in terms of scanty clothing, violence, and general mayhem.
I think it would still be fine for teens though; certainly for older ones.
What I
appreciate most about it is the character of Sonja herself. She is impatient,
but will put up with a lot, and is loyal. She is certainly given to excess, but
even hung over she will try to give people options for not needing to be killed
by her. So many refuse to take her up on that, but she still tries, and there
is a humor about it all that makes her very likable. You understand why she
inspires the same loyalty that she gives.
This is
again only two issues in, so it would be easy to catch up. Gorgeous colors done
by Adriano Lucas.
Pretty
Deadly, written by
Kelly Sue DeConnick, art by Emma Rios (Image Comics)
And this
one is the most adult, with more violence, more sex and nudity (in a brothel),
and also strange elements, like a rabbit skeleton telling the story to a
butterfly. It's not for everyone, but it is fascinating.
I cannot
tell in any way where this is going. I think I kind of understand the central
conflict after the second issue, so that is big progress (for me) from the
first. I'm not sure that matters though; it's something where you ride with it.
Perhaps the riding is more literal, because there are horses journeying across
the Western landscape here. Anyway, it gets under your skin, and I think it is
the most visually inventive work I have seen to date. If nothing I have said
about it already causes you to object to it, then you should probably check it
out.
Demeter, story, art, and publishing by
Becky Cloonan
You could
view this as a stand-alone comic, or as part of a trilogy with Wolves
and The Mire, or if we get lucky, it could be more, because I read
recently that Cloonan is getting more ideas that could relate.
Of the
existing three, none of them need to be read for any of the others to make
sense, but taken together common themes emerge, where the environment exerts its
own force, and no deceptions or betrayals can stay buried.
Cloonan has
described these works as "the stories between the pages". I initially
interpreted that as between the pages that she does on other series (Killjoys
and Swamp Thing just to start). That can still be true, but I would also
buy it as one where the plot points of the stories do not all happen on the
page. The reader gets glimpses, but there is much that is hidden, and the
apparent meaning may shift.
(I know
this is very similar to my other review, but the works are related: http://sporkful.blogspot.com/2013/01/comic-review-wolves-and-mire-by-becky.html)
I go back
to the pages, trying to understand them, but also because Cloonan's artwork is
beautiful, and I can get lost in it again and again.
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