Category Archives: Comics

Books read from various series

BASIL OF BAKER STREET by Eve Titus is the novel that inspired The Great Mouse Detective, with Basil and Dr. Dawson coming to the rescue when the child-napping Terrible Three try to force the mouse residents of 221B Baker Street out into the cold so they can take over the property for crime. Amusing, and I do like that Basil is an intentional Holmes imitator, living in 221 so that he can model himself on the master detective.

COUNT CROWLEY: Amateur Monster Hunter by Dave Dastmalchian and Lukas Ketner is V2 in the series. In the first TPB, protagonist Jeri got a gig as a midnight-movie host only to discover the gig also involves monster-slaying. Here she has to deal with a possibly friendly werewolf, a definitely hostile vampire, going to AA meetings and her predecessor’s stubborn resistance to mentoring a woman. Enjoyable, with more 1980s period references than the first book.

Mae, the Korean American protagonist of THE DARKEST NIGHT: Witch Queen #1 by AD Starrling kicks off her series facing the kind of power Harry Dresden didn’t encounter for a half-dozen books or more, making me wonder if the baseline for urban fantasy has shifted (much like comics where cosmic battles are almost routine). Like The Girl Who Sees it’s very heavy on exposition and for the same rationale — even though Mae is the Witch Queen destined to rule over the magical world, she knows nothing about magic so she needs to have it all explained to her. While I give Starrling credit for squeezing in a lot of action (way more than most such info-dumpy novels do), the exposition killed my interest. I did like the Korean aspects Starrling worked into the book though.

Dave Robinson’s Doc Savage pastiche, DOC VANDAL: Against the Eldest Flame gives the protagonist an origin that’s owes as much to Edmond Hamilton’s futuristic Doc Savage, Captain Future — Vandal was raised on a lunar base by an alien computer — and a colorful dieselpunk setting that includes airships, talking gorillas and Nazi zombies. In this kickoff adventure, Nazi gorillas kidnap Doc and his team, taking them not to Germany but to a lost city of dinosaur people where a living-flame being plans to take over Doc’s body to escape it’s current prison. This starts slow but picks up steam as it goes along, though it’s at best comparable to mid-level Doc Savage novel.

While many of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ tales take place in the same universe (The Moon Maid, the Carson of Venus series, Barsoom, Tarzan and Pellucidar, at a minimum), his only full-on crossover was TARZAN AT THE EARTH’S CORE. In a direct sequel to Tanar of Pellucidar, Burroughs’ friend Jason Gridley heads into Pellucidar via the polar opening in hopes of rescuing David Innes from the Korsars. Knowing Pellucidar is largely jungle, he logically recruits Tarzan to help navigate the landscape; however it turns out that in the perpetual sunlight of the inner Earth, even Tarzan can get lost, as does Jason himself. Can they survive, let alone reach David?

Watching the cast battle cave bears, lizard people and barbarians (not to mention a flying stegosaurus!) is lively fun, though Burroughs only gets back to the nominal mission at the end, and relies as he so often does on coincidence — digging out of a cave prison, Jason literally emerges under Tarzan’s feet, for instance.  Fun, even so, but the black cook’s Stepin Fetchit characterization and dialog is painfully racist (having the Noble Savages of the Waziri along doesn’t help). This walks back the ending of Pellucidar even more than the previous book, establishing Innes’ empire is a mere fraction of Pellucidar’s land surface. The ending, with one of Gridley’s team still missing, leads straight into the next book, Back to the Stone Age.

#SFWApro. Cover by Frank Frazetta; all rights to images remain with the current holders.

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Infantino on Batman

Over at Atomic Junk Shop I’ve been rereading and blogging about Silver Age comics for a couple of years now. Among other things it’s given me greater appreciation for the New Look Batman era, in which Julius Schwartz and his regular contributors — Gardner Fox, John Broome and artist Carmine Infantino — soft-rebooted the Caped Crusader. You can read about the New Look at the link (or this link, or several others) but today I’m focusing on Infantino’s flair for designing eye-catching, must-buy-it covers.#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.

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Assassins kill! Nineteenth century women unite! Books read

CORPORATE GUNSLINGER by Doug Engstrom is set in a dystopian future where debt to corporate America gets you de facto enslaved and where citizens who can’t get justice when corporations screw them over have one last recourse: dueling with a trained gunman to decide the outcome of their case. Kira, the protagonist, is up to her eyeballs in debt but turning herself into Death’s Angel, an icy corporate assassin lets her keep her head above water. But becoming a professional killer takes a toll she may not be able to pay … This is much more entertaining painting a brutal, corporate-dominated future than Vigilance but it doesn’t stick the landing: it reads like Engstrom suddenly realized he’d been asking us to sympathize and side with someone making unethical choices and he got cold feet about it.CROWDED, by Christopher Sibela and Ro Stein, is set in a world where someone whipped up an app for crowdsourcing assassinations, a way to take out particularly bad politicians. Only inevitably it’s broadened beyond that, as Charlie Ellison discovers when someone uses the app to target her for death. Charlie hires Vita off a bodyguarding app but can they survive the swarm of wannabe shooters? And who put out the hit on Charlie? This was a lot of fun.

For some reason 19th century women in fiction seem to be forming lots of secret societies. I read The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels a while back, I saw an add for another recently and here are a couple more, though neither clicked with me as much as Wisteria Society.

In AN EARL, THE GIRL , AND A TODDLER: Rogues and Remarkable Women Book 2 by Vanessa Riley the society is The Widow’s Grace, a group of women who do things like rescue wives consigned by their husbands to madhouses (a common ploy to get an inconvenient woman out of the way). One of the leads is a Jamaican amnesiac member of the society, the other a black aristocrat and barrister, who together break the society’s rules on getting involved. I like the concept and I like having POC as the leads but this relied too much on having read Book One: I felt, reading it, as if a couple of key chapters of exposition had been cut out. I didn’t finish. I’m used to feeling lost when I pick up a mid-series book but this was worse than usual.

While I also didn’t finish A PERFECT EQUATION: The Secret Scientists of London Book 2 by Elizabeth Everett, the story of a secret cabal of female scientists fighting against efforts to shut them down didn’t leave me confused, it just didn’t work for me. For both books keep in mind romance isn’t my go-to genre so YMMV.

#SFWApro. Cover by Stein, all rights to image remain with current holders.

 

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Christopher Chance, mecha, and roller derby queens: graphic novels read

To my surprise Tom King and Greg Smallwood stuck the landing on V2 of their HUMAN TARGET 12-issue series. Chris Chance is dying, he and Ice have figured out how did it but can they settle the score and resolve their feelings before time runs out? Although it draws on a Justice League era I’ve never been fond of, it still works.MECH CADET YU Vol 1 by Greg Pak, Triona Farrell and Takeshi Miyazawa is a cheerful anime-mecha style series that doesn’t reinvent the wheel but makes the wheel work well. Only elite space-force cadets are supposed to bond with the mysterious mecha arriving on Earth, which makes protagonist Stanford, the academy cleaning-lady’s son, an outcast when he bonds. But of course, when the aliens arrive, he and a few other misfits are our world’s last hope …  Thumbs up.

ATHENA VOLTAIRE AND THE SORCERER POPE by Steve Bryant and Ismael Canales doesn’t reinvent the wheel either but the story of the eponymous relic hunter helping two British agents recover an occult McGuffin was much less engaging — I’ve seen this kind of adventure too often and it doesn’t have the energy of an Indiana Jones film or a good movie serial.

GODSHAPER by Simon Spurrier and Jonas Goonface, is more imaginative. In the 1950s, technology dies and everyone gets a small personal patron deity. Ennay is one of the exceptions, possessing no god but having the power to reshape the powers and forms of other deities. This is, of course, of interest to the wrong sort of people … Intriguing but the ending really rushes to make everything work out well.

HEART HUNTER by Mickey George and V. Gagnon is set in a realm where everyone lives forever unless they meet their soulmate; while some welcome the chance to die, others hire heart hunters to kill their soulmate and ensure immortality. Psyche, a heart hunter, accepts a hit from the ruler but of course discovers this particular job is more complicated than it looks. Good but I completely lost the plot threads midway through. However Gagnon’s Kay Nielsen-inspired art is a pleasure to see.

Jessica Abel’s TRISH TRASH: Roller Girl of Mars didn’t work for me at all: the story of a blue-collar worker trying to bust out of her drab life by entering the roller derby doesn’t gain anything but being set on near-future Mars.

PRISM STALKER Vol. 1 by Sloane Leong is one that’s more interesting than enjoyable. Vep is one of the a group of alien exiles taken in by other aliens. The price is serving as the front-line force colonizing an alien planet; Vep’s conflicted about doing so but refusing will have bad consequences. One where I might read V2 but I won’t make an effort.

Like Mech Cadet Yu, EVERYDAY HERO MACHINE BOY by Irma Kniivila and Tri Vuong is geared for a juvenile audience but it worked for me anyway. In what I presume is a deliberate Superman riff, the protagonist crashes to Earth, killing an old man but the man’s wife, realizing machine boy is innocent, raises him alone. When he goes off to school he makes a friend, unleashes a giant mecha and discovers worse things waiting in the wings. I was in the mood for something warm and affectionate and this did the trick.

#SFWApro. Art by Dick Giordano (t) and  Gagnon, all rights to images remain with current holders.

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From the Inner Earth to Asgard: books read in various series

It took Edgar Rice Burroughs 15 years after Pellucidar to return to the hollow earth with TANAR OF PELLUCIDAR, which I presume means it didn’t sell as well as Barsoom or Tarzan; perhaps that explains why instead of focusing on David Innes, protagonist of the first two books, the central character is Tanar, an ordinary (for Pellucidar) young man in Innes’ inner-earth empire.

Like the previous book, this one has a great opening. Jason Gridley, a new resident in Burroughs’ suburban community of Tarzana (yes, it’s a real place), is a radio buff whose experimental radio frequency, the Gridley Wave, reaches Abner Perry in Pellucidar — a shock to Gridley, who’s been rolling his eyes at ERB’s insistence the stories of Pellucidar are true. This leads into Perry narrating the story of Tanar, captured by the piratical Korsars and undergoing the usual Burroughsian hairbreadth adventures, escapes and True Love. Pretty good, and some effective moments such as Pellucidarians freaking out when David leads them to the polar opening at the edge of the world — why doesn’t the horizon keep rising the way it does in Pellucidar? Contrary to my memory, it also mentions the Mahars, now even more beaten down by the attacks of the Korsars. This ends on a cliffhanger setting up a crossover with Tarzan in the next book.

GHOST DANCE JUDGMENT: A Novel of Golgotha by Rod Belcher returns to that weirdest of Weird Western towns after spending time in the wider world in Queen of Swords. In addition to the usual bizarre details such as a house that eats people, the residents, particularly the core cast, are caught between the ghost dance — a shamaness is literally raising a ghost army to massacre white settlers — and the Army showing up in force, intending to use the ghost dance as an excuse to go genocide.

Using the ghost-dance movement didn’t work for me. I’m not sure anyone could make it work because while Native Americans have grounds for an uprising against the US, I don’t want to see the white settlers butchered either; that’s a hard needle to thread. Plus we know the tribes aren’t going to win and the book’s efforts to end on a hopeful note didn’t satisfy me either. On the plus side, the usual weirdness of the series still works, as does the plot by Wyrm cultists to exploit the chaos and free their dark god. Overall I enjoyed even though it’s a mixed bag.

ARCHER AND ARMSTRONG: American Wasteland by Fred Van Lente and Pere Perez is chronologically the finish of the series, as the final volume consists of flashbacks (or so I understand). Searching for Archer’s birth mother, the heroes go up against the Church of Scientology (with the serial numbers filed off) who are apparently keeping her captive. It turns out that avatars of every iconic figure are also trapped in the church, from Elvis Presley to a legion of Lee Harvey Oswalds (one is a lone gunman, one’s a KGB assassin, one’s a CIA patsy). This ends on an ambivalent note about what’s coming next for the guys (“All I’m saying is, you’ve got to choose.”) but I think it sticks the landing.

MARVEL MASTERWORKS: THOR Vol. 5 by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby continues their amazing mid-sixties run on the series. We open with Thor confronting the alien Colonizers who are about to add Earth to the possessions. When they realize Thor’s power, however, they strike a deal to spare Earth if Thor will battle Ego, the Living Planet, then we’re back on Earth where Jane has been captured by the High Evolutionary, then there’s a war with the trolls — and in the middle of all that, Jane Foster gets her chance to become a goddess of AsgardAs I noted at Atomic Junk Shop that issue stinks in several ways but clearly Lee and Kirby wanted to move on, leave Jane behind and bring in Sif as the new love interest. Overall, though, this is cool stuff.

#SFWApro. Art by Roy Krenkel, Michael Walsh and Jack Kirby (top to bottom), all rights to images remain with current holder.

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Women and extra virginity: books read

When I read KC Hunter’s Curse of the Shinigumi last year I said I liked it enough to try one of the Kana Cold series novels (it was a prequel). Unfortunately I didn’t enjoy  KANA COLD: The Deception of Seraphim Asylum as much as I’d hoped. After Kana picks up a couple of new cast members on a mission in Africa, the FBI recruits her to find the villain of her previous book; meanwhile her sidekick AJ discovers his dad has fallen victim to the family curse and tries to break it. Wouldn’t you know the two plotlines turn out to tie together?

There are some elements here I like such as AJ’s father being a thorough villain who disposed of threats to his clients by dosing them with psychedelics, then geting them locked up in Seraphim Asylum. Hunter’s writing, however, plods in the quiet scenes and drags down the action; I can’t say I have any urge to read further.

Barbara Hambly’s MOTHER OF WINTER is one I missed despite being a fan of Hambly and her Darwath series (this was book four). In the aftermath of banishing the Dark from the world, everyone is trying to figure out the new status quo. However winter is coming (ROFL) and it looks to be brutal; worse, a mysterious fungus is wiping out food supplies and mutating anything or anyone who turns to it for sustenance. Can Gil, Rudy and Ingold save the world again?

Hambly has written about what a Lovecraft fan she is and it’s well on display here. The fungus is kin to the mutated horrors of “Color Out of Space” and the whole book is a successful mashup of fantasy and horror. Plus Hambly’s an excellent writer.

As I’ve written before I don’t like much of Tom King’s work. Human Target has been an exception and now I have to add SUPERGIRL: Woman of Tomorrow by King and Bilquis Evely (who provides the cover here). The narrator, Ruthye, seeks revenge on Krem, the thug who killed her father. By lucky chance she meets Supergirl, visiting Ruthye’s world because it has a red sun so she can feel the effects of alcohol. Helping Ruthye out draws her away from the bar scene and before long they’re going planet to planet, battling evil along the way, but with Krem staying one step ahead.

I can’t quite pin down what made this the best Supergirl arc of the 21st century; admittedly the competition isn’t much but this was genuinely good. Where King can’t stop getting darker and darker in his Batman books, here he gets the right mix — things are grim but Supergirl isn’t giving in to it. If he wants to do another volume I hope DC lets him.

EXTRA VIRGINITY: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil by Tom Mueller show olive oil’s role in European history is much larger than I ever guessed. When people needed oil, it was usually olive oil: holy oil for church anointings, an unguent for Greek athletes, fuel for lamps, the basis for early perfumes and, of course, a major role in food, contending over the centuries with Northern Europe’s enthusiasm for butter. Extra virgin olive oil is the top quality, virgin in the sense it has been adulterated or heavily treated. Unfortunately, as Mueller details, fraud is rife in the industry as various producers or wholesalers substitute cheaper oils for olive or take crap oils and treat them to the point they can pass as quality stuff. This squeezes out some of the genuine quality product because it’s so much cheaper. Equally unfortunate, most regulatory bodies either don’t care — if it’s not going to kill anyone, they’ve got bigger fish to fry — or they’re under the thumb of the big companies invested in keeping the fraud going. Interesting though none of the oil producers and farmers Mueller profiles were terribly memorable.

#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.

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A productive week for some definitions of “productive”

First the good news; Wisp’s bandage came off Wednesday. They applied some topical steroids to her foot so her cone had to wait another day. Here she is Wednesday afternoon, snoozing with me.Now she has the next  couple of weeks to strengthen her leg while staying indoors. If everything goes smoothly we don’t need to bring her back to the vet. And while she’s sleeping better, which means I sleep better, if I get up to pee, that’s her cue to get lively. So it’s about three to 3.5 hours a night; better than when this started, still not ideal.

Worse this week because I didn’t get my usual sleep on the weekend when TYG takes all the pets. Friday night TYG was out until late and I woke up when she came home (not her fault — I’m a light sleeper). Saturday night I took an Ambien and slept alone in the spare bedroom. Trixie, however, puked on the master bed and while TYG changed the bedclothes Plushie decided to come and paw at the spare bedroom door until I let him in. Without those two good nights of sleep I felt exhausted for much of the week. At Tuesday’s Zoom writer’s group, I fell asleep during the final reading.

So while I put in a full week of work, that’s partly because I counted a lot of stuff, like blogging, as writing hours, that I don’t normally do. That said, I got various household tasks (e.g. calling contractors) done; got a little more written on Let No Man Put Asunder; did some editing on a collaborative anthology I’m in; and got a little done on Savage Adventures. Plus taking cats to appointments and having tea with a friend (I budget part of my writing time for weekday socializing).

I reread the redraft of Oh the Places You’ll Go that I finished last week and it looks much better than I thought. The ending still feels off, though. I want the ending to feel like a resolution: character arcs settled, plot issues resolved. As written it resolves them, then raises more questions, like it was Part One of a larger work. It’s not and I don’t see it becoming one. I can’t get rid of the questions but I need to write the ending so that even with questions it feels finished.

The largest chunk of time went to work for The Local Reporter. Figuring out how to manage the work and fit it in with my own projects has been challenging, partly because I’ve been bouncing from lead to lead trying to develop a steady stream of stories. But I got one done this week (not out yet), I have another ready except for a final proofing and a couple more in progress. If I can get it down to about six hours work a week in most cases, I’ll be satisfied. But that wasn’t this week.

Meanwhile, over at Atomic Junk Shop, my Silver Age reread looks at editor Jack Schiff’s retirement and the characters who vanished with him, from Animal Man and Immortal Man— to the Green Glob and Automan in Tales of the Unexpected.

#SFWApro. Covers by Carmine Infantino (t) and Jay Scott Pike, all rights to images remain with current holders.

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Batman in the Silver Age (and other comic-book characters)

BATMAN: The Silver Age Omnibus Vol. 1 by multiple different creators shows that much as I like 1950s Batman, by the time this volume starts in 1956 (skipping a couple of years since the last Golden Age volume — fortunately the gap will be plugged later this year) the decline that would lead to New Look Batman had begun. True, we get the original Batwoman and I’m fond of her, but we get more and more trips to uninteresting alien worlds, more and more aliens showing up in Gotham City — and editor Jack Schiff wasn’t a good SF editor. There are still some excellent stories, such as “Prisoners in the Batcave” (the Dynamic Duo are trapped in their lair with no way to get evidence to Commissioner Gordon in time to stop an innocent man’s execution) but the ratio of good to bad is getting steadily out of whack. Though i bought this and I’m sure I’ll buy the next one.

Maria Llovet’s PORCELAIN boasts some great art but a story that doesn’t make enough sense to work. A teenager finds herself trapped inside a mysterious house where the sinister Dollmaker eventually turns all her guests into dolls — can our protagonist make it out in time? It says a lot about what dissatisfies me that while there’s a big emphasis on whether to use the Thanatos Door or the Eros Door to attempt an escape, it doesn’t seem to add up to anything.

I’m not sure STARGIRL: The Lost Children by Geoff Johns and Todd Nauck is out in TPB yet but it’s only a matter of time, so … this has Stargirl and Red Arrow (Oliver Queen’s half-sister Emiko) traveling to a lost island where the sinister Childminder has plucked countless kid sidekicks out of time, some familiar (Dyna-Mite, Wing, the Newsboy Legion) and some new (Cherry Bomb for the Human Bomb, Molly Pitcher with Miss America). Can Stargirl get them back home? Given the sad fates that await some of them, should she? There are things I like about this such as the opening, where Dyna-Mite explains sidekicks weren’t abused or exploited, they were neglected orphan kids with nothing to live for; the heroes gave them a purpose.

The downside? Invoking lots of DC history loses its punch when history’s been so shredded: Wing was an adult, Dyna-Mite wasn’t an orphan, for instance. The ending is way too rushed to work especially as it’s going to have repercussions in the regular DC universe, and some of the sidekicks don’t work (Cherry Bomb and Dr. Fate’s sidekick Salem the Witchgirl).

THE SHADOW/GREEN HORNET: Dark Nights by Michael Uslan and Keith Burns has the two 1930s crimefighters join forces when the Shadow’s old foe Shiwan Khan, having launched WW II just as he brought about the First World War, targets America with a scheme to disable its industries and to obtain the Shadow’s fire opal ring for its secret mystical power. He knows he’ll have to deal with the Shadow but assumes the Green Hornet — who poses as an underworld figure eliminating his rivals — will be a convenient ally.

This is fun and Uslan does a great job capturing both heroes’ personality. However I could have done without Shiwan Khan as the villain. Not only is he a straight-up Yellow Peril type (a descendant of Genghis Khan, he will conquer the world like his ancestor! Genghis Khan descendants in fiction always want to conquer the world) but he’s way overused. Yes, he’s the Shadow’s archnemesis but as I’ve mentioned before, he still only appeared in four Golden Age stories. Having him show up in every comic book run from Archie Comics —— to both DC’s series —— is a bit much.

#SFWApro. Covers top to bottom by Sheldon Moldoff, Hauck, Paul Reinman and Michael Kaluta, all rights remain with current holders.

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The Other Doc Savage: The First Wave Again

I wasn’t impressed by DC’s First Wave reboot of Doc Savage but I was disappointed not to be able to read the spinoff Doc Savage series set in the same universe, where pulp heroes, Batman, the Spirit and the Blackhawks exist in a vaguely present-day setting. Then I searched the DC app a few months ago and lo and behold! I’m not impressed by this 17 issue run either, partly because the book suffers from constantly shifting writer.

The opening five-issue arc by Paul Malmont involves a mysterious criminal bombarding New York with terrifying lightning storms (which also happened in Marvel’s black and white Doc Savage magazine) and framing Doc Savage for it (which happened multiple times in the old novels). It has a real pulp feel and there’s an interesting reveal late in the story. It turns out the bad guys’ agenda includes kidnapping Monk and putting his chemical genius to work for … the Crime College! Obviously not Doc’s own brainwashing facility, so what is it?We never learn At the end of the arc Doc heads out of town (leaving Pat Savage behind — she gets less play here than in most comics adaptations) to get captured by bad guys in a two parter by B. Clay Moore. The Crime College is forgotten. Then we’re in an adventure in a war torn area, “The Zone,” by Ivan Brandon, involving Doc’s long-lost best friend. This ran a half-dozen tedious issues; blank pages would have been more engaging.  Things pick up in the final arc by Jeff G. Jones, who also provided the covers seen here. We have Johnny turning up an archeological relic sinister people want, Neanderthals and dinosaurs, a kick-ass Russian woman and it’s all good. Only the book ends with the penultimate issue, missing the conclusion. I won’t lose any sleep over it but it’s still disappointing.

#SFWApro. All rights to images remain with current holders.

 

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Graphic novels, most of them disappointing

But a couple of them were terrific, starting with the first volume of KATIE THE CATSITTER by Colleen A.F. Venable and Stephanie Yue. All Katie wants to do is earn enough money catsitting for her upstairs neighbor to join her BFF Bethany in summer camp. But the cats are uncanny, including master thieves, ace hackers, martial artists and acrobats; the neighbor may be the supervillain Mousetress; and Bethany seems to be changing into a different person while they’re apart. Can Katie hold it all together? I’m hardly the target demographic for a middle-grade graphic novel but I liked this one. And I loved the parody of Batman’s origin in which a superhero talks about the tragic day he lost his parents (“Son, you only lost sight of us for five minutes.”).

GIRL GENIUS: The Second Journey of Agatha Heterodyne — Queens and Pirates by Phil and Kaja Folio is fun, as the series always is: while Agatha’s Mom begins terrorizing Europe, Agatha and most of her supporting cast wind up in England where they get some help from its immortal queen, though possibly with strings attached. Fun, but unsatisfying: this lays the groundwork for what feels like a dozen future story arcs without enough stuff paying off in the here-and-now. Still, it was nice to see Krosp and Gil again.

BRITISH PARANORMAL SOCIETY: Time Out of Mind by Chris Roberson and Andrea Mutti (Dark Horse credits Mike Mignola too, but he’s not on the cover as a creator) is also unsatisfying and nowhere near as much fun. Set in the Hellboy Universe, this has Simon Bruttenholm and new character Honora Grant visiting the small village of Noxton where the standing stones are sinister and the summer festival is creeper than Honora expects. This wasn’t bad but it’s interchangeable with a long list of charming English villages with creepy undertones.

FOR WHOM THE DOORBELL TOLLS by multiple creators has the interesting idea of adapting Ernest Hemingway stories for Disney characters — though the adaptations are more inspirations to the point I wouldn’t recognize the connection if they didn’t spell it out (in fairness, I’ve read little Hemingway). The stories include Goofy as a blues singer struggling to go country, Scrooge McDuck reliving his glory days and Mickey realizing a life of adventure can be a good thing. I’m not enough of a fan of Disney comics to get into this.

WILDING WILLOWS: Where the Wild Things Are by Dave Elliot and Barnaby Bagenda is a Victorian-character mashup in which Alice (of Wonderland) is the daughter of Dr. Moreau, who’s genetically engineering flying monkeys for the Wicked Witch of the West while Dr. Doolittle’s son discovers Mowgli is the kid he didn’t know he had and Frankenstein’s creature squares off against Peter Rabbit. It’s been a long time since I reacted to things like this with “Holy shit, a mashup!” rather than “what, another one?” — not that a good one doesn’t work for me, but this left me completely uninterested in reading V2.

#SFWApro. Cover by Yue, all rights to image remain with current holder.

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