I've recently discovered this new webcomic that mixes Westerns, steampunk, and horror. Written and drawn by Luke Varner, it's a lot of fun and I'm enjoying reading it. It's available on Instagram, and you can find it here. Here are a couple of early Sunday strips you should be able to click on to read.
Thursday, June 19, 2025
Western Webcomic: The Ranger and the Spectacular Steed - Luke Varner
I've recently discovered this new webcomic that mixes Westerns, steampunk, and horror. Written and drawn by Luke Varner, it's a lot of fun and I'm enjoying reading it. It's available on Instagram, and you can find it here. Here are a couple of early Sunday strips you should be able to click on to read.
Monday, December 30, 2024
Manhunter: The Deluxe Edition - Archie Goodwin and Walter Simonson
In the summer of 1973, I drove up to Denton, Texas, to look for an apartment because I was attending what was then North Texas State University and didn’t want to live in the dorm again when the fall semester started. While I was there, I stopped by Fultz News Agency on the square downtown to check out the comic books and paperbacks. One of the comics I picked up was an issue of DETECTIVE COMICS with a new back-up feature: MANHUNTER, a revival of an old Golden Age character brought to the current day and enmeshed in a thriller/espionage plotline. It was written by Archie Goodwin, a writer whose work I enjoyed, with art by Walter Simonson, a relative newcomer.
I became a fan immediately, and since I was already buying DETECTIVE on a
regular basis to read the Batman stories in it, I followed the Manhunter story
as well and thoroughly enjoyed it. But it was designed to be a limited
storyline, and after half a dozen backup stories and a full-length crossover with
Batman, that was it. The whole thing came to an end, and while I remembered it
fondly, I never reread it in the more than five decades since then.
However, recently I noticed that the digital version of the collected edition
was on sale, so I picked it up and read the whole thing again. Sometimes that
proves to be a mistake. A while back on Kindle Unlimited I noticed another
series I’d read 50+ years ago that was written and drawn by one of my favorite
comics creators (who shall remain nameless), so I revisited it. I read part of
the first issue, said to myself, “This makes no sense at all”, and returned it.
Sometimes you just had to be there when it was new.
Thankfully, that’s not the case with MANHUNTER. I still thought it was great. I
love the way Goodwin and Simonson tied it in with the original Golden Age character.
The plot is maybe a tad bit thin, but the scripts move right along and Simonson’s
art is excellent. The crossover with Batman is handled well. There’s an
epilogue by Simonson published after Goodwin passed away, a silent story with
no dialogue but using the plot Goodwin and Simonson worked out, and it’s quite
good, too. I was glad I gave this one another try. If you read it back then,
maybe you should revisit it, too. If you’ve never read it but enjoy Silver Age
DC, it’s well worth checking out.
By the way, I did find an apartment on that trip to Denton. It was a crappy little place on Normal Street, for those of you familiar with Denton. I lived there for a year, which was the only time of my life I could say with any justification that I lived on Normal Street. I didn't care for apartment living and commuted for the rest of my college career, even though it was a pretty long drive. I do have a few good memories from that year to go with the noisy neighbors and lousy plumbing.
Monday, November 25, 2024
Review: Convict Commandos: Frenzy of Fear (Commando #4571) - Alan Hebden
With the exception of Private "Jelly" Jakes -- the unit's resident coward -- the Convict Commandos were among the most fearless fighters in the British Forces. So why were they running in terror from a unit of Germans leaving their quaking comrade behind in their haste? Something was badly awry, something had happened to throw the Convict Commandos into a Frenzy Of Fear.
A few years ago I read a bunch of digital issues of COMMANDO, the long-running British war comic, and some of my favorites were in a series called Convict Commandos, created and written by legendary comics author Alan Hebden with art by Manuel Benet. As you might guess from the series title, these stories chronicle the exploits of three criminals recruited to be commandos -- strongman Titch Mooney, knife expert Smiler Dawson, and burglar and explosives expert Jelly Jakes -- and the officer who leads them on their mission, Lt. Guy Tenby. I've decided to pick up where I left off and read the rest of the series, starting with this one from 2013, which is still available on Amazon. It's a fine yarn with a particularly good plot, as the Convict Commandos set out to destroy a Nazi radar jamming operation in occupied Greece, only to encounter a menace that forces them to act nothing like their usual selves. It's a clever, very entertaining tale, and if you're a fan of war comics, I give it a strong recommendation.
Thursday, September 19, 2024
Review: Conan the Barbarian: Thrice Marked for Death - Jim Zub and Doug Braithwaite
When the latest incarnation of the Conan comic book series began being published, I decided to read the individual issues as they came out, just like I did in the old days—the difference being that I read them digitally instead of on cheap newsprint. (For the record, I prefer cheap newsprint over digital, but I prefer digital over slick paper.) After finishing the first story arc, however, I decided to wait for the collected edition of the next arc. It just seemed simpler that way, plus I get to read the stories one right after the other.
CONAN THE BARBARIAN: THRICE MARKED FOR DEATH reprints issues #5-8 of the series
and deepens Conan’s involvement with the mysterious and deadly Black Stone. It’s
written by Jim Zub and the art is by Doug Braithwaite. The story begins with
Conan in the city of Shadizar, mourning the death of Belit, the pirate queen
and great love of his life, who Conan met in Robert E. Howard’s classic story “Queen
of the Black Coast”. Short flashbacks to Conan’s time with Belit run throughout
these stories. The main storyline, however, involves Conan being hired along
with several other thieves to steal an artifact from one of the local temples.
Things go wrong. Evil ensues. Lot of people die. And Conan is left in a heap of
trouble.
Despite the dreaded “To Be Continued” at the end of this book, I enjoyed THRICE
MARKED FOR DEATH quite a bit. Jim Zub’s script is fast-paced and packed with
action, and more importantly, he writes a version of Conan that is recognizably
REH’s character. Really, that’s what you’re looking for in a Conan pastiche.
Doug Braithwaite’s art is excellent, with good storytelling and a gritty quality
that really works well with the story.
All of this is leading up to a big crossover event featuring numerous Howard
characters besides Conan. I’m not that fond of the idea of doing that, but given
Zub’s track record, I’m cautiously optimistic that he can pull it off. I
certainly intend to continue reading in order to find out. In the meantime,
THRICE MARKED FOR DEATH is an entertaining yarn and is available in e-book and
trade paperback editions.
Wednesday, August 07, 2024
The Savage Sword of Conan #2 - Jim Zub, Richard Pace, Patrick Zircher
For a while there, I was reading all the new Conan comics from Titan, as well as the new prose stories, and I read and enjoyed the first issue of the new SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN. Then I kind of just stopped. Not intentionally. I just wandered away as I have a tendency of doing. But it’s time to get caught up on them again, so I started with the second issue of THE SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN.
Most of the pages are taken up by a long Conan yarn called “Leaving the Garden”
written by Jim Zub with artwork by Richard Pace. It begins with a badly wounded
Conan waking up after having been buried alive following a battle. Naturally,
he doesn’t stay underground. A flashback establishes that he was traveling with
a merchant caravan ambushed by inhuman attackers. The rest of the story deals
with him recovering and seeking vengeance for what happened to his companions.
This is a good story with plenty of action broken up by the occasional poignant
moment. I’ve enjoyed everything I’ve read by Jim Zub so far. My only complaint
about this script is that “Leaving the Garden”, while it fits, isn’t the sort
of dramatic title I’ve come to expect on a Conan story. I also have to say that
the artwork isn’t to my taste at all. I suspect it’s the kind of art that
either resonates with a reader or it doesn’t. It didn’t in my case.
This issue also features the second installment of a Solomon Kane serial
written and drawn by Patrick Zircher, an adventure that finds Kane battling a
supernatural menace in his native England. Art and script are superb on this story.
So far it’s one of the best Solomon Kane comics stories I’ve read.
Despite the reservations mentioned above, there’s enough to like about this
issue of THE SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN that I don’t hesitate to give it a strong
recommendation for Conan and Robert E. Howard fans. It’s available in both
print and digital editions.
Monday, April 01, 2024
The Steel Noose - Arnold Drake
I’ve been aware of Arnold Drake’s work as a comic book writer for a long, long time, having been a fan of one of his best-known creations, the Doom Patrol, ever since those stories began appearing in DC’s MY GREATEST ADVENTURE comic more than half a century ago. In the Seventies, I was also a regular reader of his GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY series for Marvel. But I had no idea he was also a novelist until Black Gat Books reprinted THE STEEL NOOSE, originally published by Ace Books in 1954. It’s an Ace that I just never came across over the years.
THE STEEL NOOSE is narrated by fast-talking, wise-cracking New York gossip
columnist Boyd McGee, who moves in a world of cabbies, tycoons, gamblers,
chorus girls, gangsters, and cops. An item he includes in his column inadvertently
gets him mixed up in multiple murders and the hunt for half a million dollars
in blackmail loot. Boyd gets beaten up more than once but dishes out some
punishment, too. And of course, there are also several beautiful women involved
in the convoluted plot.
Drake could have played this pretty straight, and in some stretches he does, but for a lot of the novel, the genuinely funny banter dished out by Boyd as he navigates this labyrinth of crime puts me in mind of something else. It’s like reading the novelization of a Bob Hope movie that was never made. Boyd McGree isn’t exactly cowardly like the characters Hope usually played, but every quip he made, I heard it in Hope’s voice. To a Bob Hope fan like me, reading THE STEEL NOOSE was a hugely entertaining experience. I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if Drake had Hope in mind while he was writing this. And it’s fitting, at least to me, that a decade later, Drake was writing DC’s THE ADVENTURES OF BOB HOPE comic book, which I read occasionally in those days, although not as much as I should have because I tended not to pick up anything except superhero, Western, and war comics. I’m sure I missed some good stuff.
As far as I know, THE STEEL NOOSE is Arnold Drake’s only novel. That’s kind of a shame because it’s really good and he might have given us more like it. On the other hand, if he’d been a successful novelist, we might never have had the Doom Patrol and the Guardians of the Galaxy. I’m not sure I’d make that trade, but I’m very glad Black Gat Books decided to reprint this one. You can pre-order it on Amazon, and I give it a high recommendation.
Monday, March 11, 2024
The Savage Sword of Conan #1
There’s a lot of nostalgia involved with me reading a new issue of THE SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN. I remember quite well buying issues of the original magazine of that title back in the Seventies at Lester’s Pharmacy, walking across the highway to my house, and reading great stories by Roy Thomas, John Buscema, and Alfredo Alcala, as well as articles about Robert E. Howard and his work by Fred Blosser, who I’m privileged to call a friend all these years later. I read SSOC for many years after that.
So when I heard that Titan Comics was bringing back THE SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN, I
knew I’d have to give it a try. This time, however, I read the digital version,
something I never would have dreamed possible fifty years ago when I read the
original magazine. It looks excellent as an e-book, too.
There are several variant covers for this first issue of the revived magazine.
The one that came up when I opened it is the primary one, I think. It was painted
by Joe Jusko, and it’s superb. I really like it.
After a foreword by Roy Thomas (and I’m always glad to read anything Roy has to
say), the Conan story, which takes up most of the book, is “The Dragon Horde”,
written by John Arcudi with art by Max Von Fafner. Arcudi’s name is familiar to
me, although I don’t think I’ve ever read anything by him. Von Fafner is
brand-new to me. But I enjoyed both of their contributions here. Arcudi’s
script, which finds Conan serving as a mercenary general in the army of a
Hyrkanian prince trying to overthrow his brother, is violent and fast-paced
with a few effective twists and turns. Von Fafner’s art, while it doesn’t
appeal to me as much as Rob de la Torre’s in Titan’s color Conan comic, is
suitably gritty and his storytelling is solid for the most part. I did have to
look at a few panels a second time to make sure what was happening. Overall, “The
Dragon Horde” is an entertaining yarn and definitely reminiscent of the
original SSOC.
“Sacrifice in the Sand” is a short prose story about Conan by Jim Zub, the
scripter of the above-mentioned color comic. It’s good for what it is, but the
length keeps it from developing any more than the most basic plot. It’s
certainly well-written and entertaining enough that I’d be interested in
reading more Conan prose stories by Zub.
The highlight of the issue is “Master of the Hunt”, part 1 of a serialized
Solomon Kane story written and drawn by Patrick Zircher. This tale of a monster
breaking through the barrier between worlds and terrorizing a remote area of
Wales is a terrific yarn. Zircher captures Solomon Kane very well both visually
and in his lean, fast-paced script. I’m really looking forward to the next part
of this story.
So I’m very pleased to see that THE SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN is back, and I think
everyone involved in this issue did themselves proud.
Wednesday, December 06, 2023
Violet Rising #1 - Tony Petry, Rodney Jean-Etienne, Ihuoma Nnabuchi, Tuyi Ekes
I admit I don’t keep up with modern comics very well, but from what I’ve seen I have no interest in what the big companies are doing these days. But there are still good comic books being produced, you just have to know where to look for them. VIOLET RISING #1, from Alp Comics and Tony Petry, is the first issue of what looks like will be an excellent series in the classic superhero style.
Homicide detective Toya Robinson is haunted by the unsolved murders of several
family members including her father and her husband. She’s raising her young
son with some help from her mother. Then her twin brother, who’s a championship
boxer, is kidnapped, and hard on the heels of that, Toya’s son James
disappears, as well. This leads her to some family secrets that change
everything, as she discovers the mysterious project that her scientist parents
were working on . . .
The script by creator Tony Petry and Rodney Jean-Etienne is top-notch, packed
with action and a few humorous touches and plenty of drama. The artwork by
Ihuoma Nnabuchi and Tuyi Ekes does a good job of storytelling with some really
effective perspectives on the action. This is a solid production all the
way around and made me eager to read the second issue, which I hope will be
coming along soon.
You can buy a digital edition of VIOLET RISING #1 here. Print copies are also
available by contacting Petry at petry(underscore)tony(at)yahoo(dot)com or on X
(formerly Twitter) @TonyPetry3. It’s good stuff whether you’re a new comics fan
or an old-timer like me.
Thursday, November 16, 2023
Batman & Superman in World's Finest: The Silver Age, Volume One - Edmond Hamilton, Bill Finger, et al.
When I was a kid I was a sporadic reader of the Superman and Batman team-ups in WORLD’S FINEST. I only had so much money to spend on comic books. Now there’s lots of stuff I never read back in the day that I can catch up on. For the past couple of months, I’ve been reading BATMAN & SUPERMAN IN WORLD’S FINEST: THE SILVER AGE, VOLUME ONE, which reprints the first meeting of Superman and Batman from SUPERMAN #76 in 1952 and then the regular Superman/Batman series from WORLD’S FINEST #71-94, from 1954 to 1958 . . . which was before I could read, so I couldn’t have read them anyway. Most of the stories were written by Edmond Hamilton. Several are by Bill Finger, the co-creator of Batman. The art is mostly by Dick Sprang, the regular Bat-artist in the Fifties. A few stories were drawn by the great Curt Swan, the iconic Superman artist as far as I’m concerned. It’s an entertaining volume, especially the story where Luthor and The Joker team up.
But . . . these short (12 pages), gimmicky, stand-alone stories don’t have much impact. The villains are mostly petty crooks with stupid schemes, and there’s never any real sense of danger for our heroes. I can understand why, after a steady diet of stories like this, the stuff that Stan Lee, Jack Kirby, and Steve Ditko came up with over at Marvel just a few years later was like a punch in the gut to the comics readers of the time. The difference is really stark (no pun intended). Despite that, I enjoyed this collection and already have the second one on my Kindle. For long-time comics fans, it’s worth reading. Available in paperback and e-book editions.
Friday, October 06, 2023
The Avengers: War Across Time - Paul Levitz and Alan Davis
One day in September 1964, I woke up too sick to go to school. I was in sixth grade, although that’s not really relevant to this post. But I started feeling better as the day went on, so by that afternoon when my mother announced that she was going to the drugstore, I asked if I could come along.
Well, of course, you know how she reacted. She glared at me and said, “If you
were too sick to go to school, you’re too sick to go to the drugstore.” I
explained that I was getting over whatever was bothering me and just wanted to
get out for a little while. I didn’t mention what I actually wanted, which was
to check the comic book and paperback spinner racks at Tompkins’ Pharmacy
because I hadn’t been there in a while.
I talked her into it—I could be very persuasive where reading matter was
concerned—and during our trip to the drugstore that afternoon I bought several
comic books, one of which was THE AVENGERS #8 featuring the debut of a villain
who would prove to be iconic, Kang the Conqueror. How do I know I picked up that
particular comic on that particular day? I can’t explain it other than to say
that I have a trick brain for some things, and knowing where and when I bought
a certain book or comic book is one of those tricks.
Now, the point of all this reminiscing is that I recently read a collection of a new mini-series from Marvel Comics (the first thing I've read from Marvel in ages) called THE AVENGERS: WAR ACROSS TIME, which is set in the classic Marvel era (or as I call it, my childhood) and is a direct sequel to THE AVENGERS #11 and features Kang the Conqueror as the villain. It was written by Paul Levitz, his first script for Marvel after literal decades as a writer/editor for DC, and drawn by Alan Davis, one of the latter-day comics artists whose work I like quite a bit.
Levitz’s script hits all the right beats from that era: the Avengers battle their former member The Hulk, they encounter the menacing Lava Men (who first appeared in THE AVENGERS #5, bought by me off the spinner rack in Trammell’s Pak-a-Bag Grocery—there’s that trick brain again), and a king of the dwarves steals Thor’s hammer, which he can do because he helped forge it, causing Thor to turn back into Dr. Don Blake. Kang is behind all this, and in the course of their struggle against him, the Avengers see bizarre visions of their future, most of which will turn out to be true.
This is just great fun for an old comics codger like me. Thor spouts mock-Shakespearean dialogue. Captain America, who hasn’t been an Avenger for long after being thawed out from the ice, is brave and stalwart. The Wasp spends most of her time in flirtatious banter but is courageous and capable when she needs to be. Iron Man and Giant Man alternate between being science nerds and walloping bad guys. To be honest, Alan Davis’s artwork isn’t quite as good as I’ve seen it in the past, but it’s still worlds better than most of what you’ll find in modern comics, and he can draw a story so that you know what’s going on, again something that’s lacking in a lot of comics these days.
So, is THE AVENGERS: WAR ACROSS TIME as good as vintage Lee/Kirby? No, but I never expected it to be. For one thing, I’m not eleven years old anymore. The best modern comics can do is remind me of that time, not recreate it. But this one certainly does remind me of those days, and I had a fine time reading it. If you have good memories of that era, too, I give it a high recommendation. You can find it in trade paperback and digital forms on Amazon.
And hey, any excuse to wallow in nostalgia, right?
Friday, September 08, 2023
Tex: The Lonesome Rider - Claudio Nizzi and Joe Kubert
Joe Kubert was one of the first comic book artists whose style I could recognize immediately, based on my reading of his Sgt. Rock stories in OUR ARMY AT WAR and then a little later the Enemy Ace stories in various DC war comics. I loved his work in those comics and then later when DC began publishing TARZAN and Kubert both wrote and drew the stories.
A recent discussion on the WesternPulps email group about Western comics published
in Europe reminded me that about twenty years ago, Kubert illustrated a long
graphic novel about Tex Willer, a Western hero who’s been appearing in Italian
comics for more than fifty years. TEX: THE LONESOME RIDER is one of the few Tex
Willer stories that’s available in English, and I’d been meaning to read it, so
I found an affordable copy on-line and ordered it.
Tex is both a Texas Ranger and an honorary chief of the Navajo tribe, but that’s
really all I know about him. In this book, he’s out of his usual bailiwick
since he’s going to visit some old friends of his, a married couple with a
beautiful daughter. But when Tex arrives at their ranch, he discovers that the
whole family has been murdered by four hardcase drifters. He sets off on their
trail after burying his friends and vowing to avenge them.
The script by veteran TEX writer Claudio Nizzi plays very much like a Spaghetti
Western movie (well, duh) or a Piccadilly Cowboys paperback from the Seventies.
Tex trails one of the killers to a town run by the outlaw’s brother and a
corrupt sheriff. Another section of the book takes Tex to a showdown in a ghost
town, and then he ventures into an Apache village where he winds up fighting
for his life against another of his quarry. There’s nothing in this story that
Western readers haven’t seen many, many times before, but of course, how well
it’s executed means everything.
And this is where Kubert comes in. His art is extraordinary and lifts a
competent script into an excellent Western graphic novel.
TEX: THE LONESOME RIDER is printed in black and white, which allows Kubert to
make very effective use of light and shadow and contrast. His storytelling is
fantastic, which you’d expect from someone with many decades of experience in
the comics business. With some comics artists, I have to look at a page
multiple times and ask myself what’s happening there, but not with Kubert. The
action flows clearly and effortlessly from panel to panel. His close-ups,
especially in scenes where Tex steps out of the shadows to confront his
enemies, are very effective. I expected to like the art in this book, and I
certainly wasn’t disappointed.
I suspect that as an introduction to Tex Willer, THE LONESOME RIDER isn’t very
typical of the character, but I enjoyed it very much and think it’s well worth
reading for Western comics fans. I already have several more English-language
collections from the Italian comics and I’m looking forward to reading them so
that I can get a sample of Tex’s regular adventures.
Wednesday, September 06, 2023
Conan the Barbarian #2: Bound in Black Stone, Part 2 - Jim Zub and Rob de la Torre
I've read the second issue of the new CONAN THE BARBARIAN comic book and continue to be very impressed. This is Part 2 of the storyline "Bound in Black Stone", which finds Conan, still a relatively young mercenary and adventurer, and his companion, the Pictish female scout Brissa, on the run from and battling a horde of undead warriors flooding north from Aquilonia into Cimmeria.
Jim Zub's script is very good, striking a perfect balance between dialogue and captions. I'm no expert on modern comics, as I've said many times, but my impression is that captions are somewhat frowned upon by many of today's writers. That makes Zub's effective use of them very refreshing to me. I grew up reading Stan Lee, remember, and Stan wrote great captions. So did most of the other comics scripters of the Sixties and Seventies.
Rob de la Torre's art continues to be fantastic. His storytelling and attention to detail are excellent. Like Zub's writing, de la Torre's art really fits this character.
If I have one quibble, it's a very minor one. The necessity to write story arcs that can be reprinted in trade paperbacks sometimes leads to a slower pace than I like. So far this hasn't been a real problem in this series, but I do feel that the story could move along just a little faster. But that feeling hasn't detracted from my enjoyment, and based on the three issues I've read so far (I read the Free Comic Book Day prequel but didn't blog about it), I give CONAN THE BARBARIAN a very high recommendation directed at long-time fans and newcomers alike. I read the digital edition of the second issue, and I've already pre-ordered the third issue.
Wednesday, August 30, 2023
Red Sonja: The Ballad of the Red Goddess - Roy Thomas, Esteban Maroto, and Santi Casas
Back in my comic book reading days, I was never a big fan of the character Red Sonja. Not really a Robert E. Howard character but more Howard-adjacent, let's say, she was very loosely based on the character Red Sonya in Howard's historical adventure yarn "The Shadow of the Vulture". So in reality she was actually created by scripter Roy Thomas and artist Barry Windsor-Smith, with her visual appearance being revamped early on by artist Esteban Maroto. Mind you, these are not bad things. Roy Thomas is one of my all-time favorite comics writers, and Maroto and Windsor-Smith are top-notch artists. But when Red Sonja got her own book, I read it only sporadically, and although I had copies of all six novels by David C. Smith and Richard Tierney that featured the character, I never got around to reading them before they were lost in the Fire of '08. These days copies of the novels tend to be pretty expensive, so I've never replaced them.
All that said, when I came across a digital version of the graphic novel RED SONJA: THE BALLAD OF THE RED GODDESS available on Kindle Unlimited, I didn't hesitate to download and read it. Maybe it was time to reevaluate the character, I told myself. And with a script by Roy Thomas and art by Esteban Maroto, the two guys who basically came up with the character, it seemed like a good bet whether it turned me into a Red Sonja fan or not.
The jury is still out on that, but I really enjoyed this graphic novel done originally for a Spanish publisher several years ago. Thomas's script is an origin story with a framing sequence. It covers ground that has been covered to a certain extent in previous stories but fleshes it out in an enjoyable fashion. The tale even provides a reasonable explanation for the infamous chain-mail bikini the character wears, over and above the idea of appealing to horny male comic book readers in the Seventies. (Hey! I resemble that remark!) The action is good, Sonja is a likable character, and while this doesn't break any new ground, it's a perfectly acceptable sword-and-sorcery yarn that entertained me quite a bit. Maroto's art is very good (I've always liked his work) and the art in the framing sequence by Santi Casas is good as well.
There are e-book editions of other Red Sonja collections that reprint the original comics run from the Seventies. Might be time to check them out, too.
Monday, August 07, 2023
Conan the Barbarian #1 - Jim Zub and Roberto de la Torre
I was a regular reader of the comics CONAN THE BARBARIAN and THE SAVAGE SWORD OF CONAN back in the Seventies and Eighties. I still remember how excited I was when I spotted a copy of CONAN THE BARBARIAN #1 on the comics rack in a little convenience store in my hometown. In those days we didn’t know months in advance what comics were coming out. I didn’t even know Marvel had a Conan series in the works. But being a huge fan of Robert E. Howard’s work, I grabbed that issue and thoroughly enjoyed the story by Roy Thomas and the art by Barry Windsor-Smith, although he may have still been billed as Barry Smith at that point. (As an aside, I don’t recall ever purchasing another comic book at that particular store. I didn’t stop in there very often.) When SSOC came out, I bought most of the issues at Lester’s Pharmacy, my main comics source. Great stuff all around, including the articles about Howard and his work by a guy named Fred Blosser, who I’m honored to call my friend all these years later.
When Dark Horse started publishing Conan comics 18 years ago (That long?
Really?) with scripts by Kurt Busiek and art by Cary Nord, I read and enjoyed
the trade paperback collecting the first several issues. My review of it is
here. But I didn’t continue reading that version and haven’t even sampled any
of the issues from other publishers since then. I was out of the loop, as they
say, when it comes to Conan and comics.
But then, having seen several mentions of it, on a whim I picked up a digital
copy of the first issue of a new Conan series from Titan Comics. CONAN THE BARBARIAN #1 is written
by Jim Zub, an author I know nothing about, with art by Roberto de la Torre,
another unknown to me, and a main cover (there are numerous variants) by Dan
Panosian, whom I’ve at least heard of. Now that you’ve waded through all the
obligatory nostalgia above, what did I think of this new comic, you ask?
Well, I liked it. Quite a bit, in fact.
Zub’s script finds Conan still a relatively young man but with several years of
mercenary experience behind him, heading back to his homeland of Cimmeria for a
visit. He’s still in northern Aquilonia, stopping over at a tavern where he
gets in a fight with the captain of the mercenary company he belongs to, and
then a Pictish warrior woman shows up with the unhappy news that a horde of
demon-possessed Picts are about to swarm over the place and kill them all. Much
hacking and slashing ensues before the issue ends on a cliffhanger of sorts.
I get the feeling that Zub’s Conan isn’t quite REH’s character, but pretty
darned close. Don’t ask me for specifics, it’s more of a gut feeling, but although
I’m confident that Zub has read the original stories, his Conan seems filtered
through all the previous Conan comics stories by Roy Thomas, Chuck Dixon, and a
dozen or more other writers. But as I said, he comes close, close enough that I
found the character believable and engaging. De la Torre’s artwork is very
influenced by John Buscema, but there’s nothing wrong with that. Buscema’s
Conan is the definitive comics version of the character. Honestly, even when I’m
reading Howard’s original stories, Buscema’s Conan is who I see in my head. So
I’m pleased with de la Torre has done here. The variant covers, many of which
are included with the digital edition I read, are very good, too.
Overall, I found the new CONAN THE BARBARIAN to be the equal of any of the
previous versions not written by Thomas or Dixon, and I enjoyed it enough that
I’ve already pre-ordered the second issue. If you’re a fan of Conan comics, you
definitely should check it out.
Friday, July 21, 2023
Creepy Archives, Volume 1 - Archie Goodwin, et al.
The black-and-white Warren horror magazines just didn’t show up on the newsstands where I grew up when I was a kid. The first Warren magazine I remember seeing was VAMPIRELLA #27 in 1973. I picked it up, enjoyed it, learned of the existence of CREEPY and EERIE, and began seeking them out. I enjoyed them all. In fact, one of the first times my writing ever saw print was a fan letter published in an issue of EERIE. But I was very late coming to these magazines and never saw the early issues, although I came across an occasional reprint of a story from them.
Now those early issues are being reprinted in very handsome volumes, so out of
curiosity more than anything else, I picked up Volume One of the CREEPY ARCHIVES, which reprints issues #1-5 of the flagship Warren title. They have
great covers by Frank Frazetta and Jack Davis. The artwork on the stories themselves is by
Reed Crandell, Gray Morrow, Angelo Torres, Al Williamson, Joe Orlando, Jack Davis, and Alex
Toth. It’s just magnificent, stunning, however you want to describe it. Just
great stuff, story after story.
Most of the scripts are by Archie Goodwin, who was also the editor of the
magazine. Otto Binder contributes the scripts for two installments of an
adaptation of his pulp series about Adam Link, Robot, and there are a few other
stories by various hands. And here’s where I’m going to annoy some fans. As
much as I love Archie Goodwin’s work (the Manhunter series he and Walt Simonson
did is fantastic, and he wrote a lot of other great comics), I didn’t care much
for the stories in this volume. These short, twist-ending tales are very
formulaic and predictable, and even spacing them out over several months, as I
did, the sameness bothered me. I know, I’m being hypocritical. Anybody who
loves the Spicy pulps as much as I do shouldn’t be complaining about anything
being formulaic. But that’s the way this book came across to me, great art but
mediocre stories. Quite possibly you had to be there, and if I’d been buying
the individual issues at the drugstore and reading them when they were new, I
might feel completely differently about them.
Anyway, if you’re a fan of these magazines, this is a beautiful book and
probably well worth your time and money. Whether I’ll continue picking up these
Archives editions, I don’t know. I might give the second volume a try.
Wednesday, June 07, 2023
The Saint Settles a Score - Keith Chapman
When I was in junior high, it would have been difficult to decide who was my favorite fictional character: the Saint, Doc Savage, or Ben Grimm. I'm sure it depended on what I was reading at the time. But I loved all three of them and still do. I've written before about how I discovered the Saint and told the story again in the introduction I provided for the most recent reprint of THE SAINT IN MIAMI, which is available in an inexpensive e-book edition and can even be read for free if you have Kindle Unlimited.
So I don't know how I missed "The Saint Settles a Score", a 16-page Saint comic book story from the early Sixties written by Keith Chapman, an old friend of this blog. It was reprinted on Gary Dobbs' Tainted Archive blog a number of years ago, but I'm just now catching up to it. And I'm glad I did, because it really takes me back to those days when I was devouring Saint stories as fast as I could get my hands on them.
"The Saint Settles a Score" is very much influenced by Leslie Charteris's early stories about the character. Simon Templar answers a call for help from an old friend, a professional burglar who's opposed to violence. The fellow is in trouble, and it catches up to him quickly when he keeps a rendezvous with Simon. He's gunned down by some thugs and lives just long enough to put Simon on the trail of his killers, an investigation that involves wealthy art dealers, a beautiful blonde, a fabulously valuable painting, and some deadly double crosses.
Chapman's script is swift, humorous in places, and has plenty of action. Its light yet adventurous tone matches up very well in comparison to Charteris's Saint yarns. The art, furnished by an unknown Spanish artist, does a pretty good job of capturing Simon's personality and conveying the action. All in all, this is a very good story and I really enjoyed reading it.
If you're a Saint fan and missed this one like I did, you can find all 16 pages in two posts on the Tainted Archives blog, here and here. Be sure and read the comments, too, as they contain further information about the story and Chapman's involvement with the character. Check out this post, as well, for more background. It's great stuff.
Monday, September 12, 2022
Rio: The Complete Saga - Doug Wildey
I was eleven when JONNY QUEST premiered in 1964, about the right age to start wondering if I was too old to be watching cartoons. Now I know, of course, that you’re never too old to watch cartoons if you enjoy them. Back in those days, it didn’t take me long to realize that JONNY QUEST was one cartoon I certainly needed to watch, because I thought it was great. Jonny’s globe-trotting adventures reminded me of the Rick Brant novels, my all-time favorite series of boys’ adventure books. At the time, I had no idea that the series was created and developed by a writer/artist named Doug Wildey.
In time I became aware of Wildey’s involvement in the series and learned that
he had a significant career in comic books and comic strips as well as
animation. But if I ever knew he produced a Western comic book called RIO for
various publishers in the Eighties and Nineties, I’d forgotten it, until a
friend mentioned on Facebook that he was reading a complete collection of
Wildey’s Rio stories. That sent me in search of a copy, which proved to be
surprisingly easy to obtain since there’s an ebook edition that’s available on Kindle Unlimited. Since I’ve come to enjoy reading comics digitally (yeah, that
surprised me, too), I grabbed it immediately.
Rio is a former outlaw and gunfighter who has gone to work as a troubleshooter
for President Ulysses S. Grant. He’s been promised a pardon if he carries out
the missions Grant assigns to him. The first one involves taking on a cruel
railroad baron and his hired guns in “The Hide Butchers”. That’s the first part of a
three-part story that continues in “Satan’s Doorstep”, in which Rio clashes
with the U.S. cavalry, and “Robber’s Roost”, in which he ventures into a
Mexican village that’s been taken over by outlaws.
In another long, three-part story, “Mr. Howard’s Son”, Wildey fills in more of
Rio’s background and reveals that he once rode with Frank and Jesse James and
their gang. Rio encounters Jesse again, as Old West outlaw history buffs will
realize pretty early on, and the events in this story foreshadow the famous
owlhoot’s real-life fate later on.
Rio encounters another old friend, Doc Holliday, in “Hot Lead for Jonny
Hardluck”, as a trail that begins with a botched stagecoach robbery ultimately
leads Rio to San Francisco. From there, still in company with Doc Holliday, Rio
pays a visit to Tombstone in “Red Dust in Tombstone”, a tale that also involves
Wyatt and Virgil Earp and Buckskin Frank Leslie. Finally, the volume concludes
with “Reprisal”, an unfinished story Wildey was working on at the time of his
death, in which Rio tangles with Mexican revolutionaries who are after a load
of gunpowder smuggled over the border.
I really enjoyed reading RIO: THE COMPLETE SAGA. Wildey’s artwork is superb all
the way through, and his scripts have a gritty tone to them reminiscent of
Spaghetti Westerns and the novels written by the Piccadilly Cowboys in the
Seventies. The historical aspects seem reasonably accurate, and I think fans of
traditional Westerns would enjoy these stories, as well. It’s an excellent
collection, a lot of fun to read, and I give it a high recommendation.
Monday, January 03, 2022
All of the Marvels - Douglas Wolk
Douglas Wolk had a really great idea for a book: read all of the superhero comics published by Marvel since FANTASTIC FOUR #1 was published in 1961 (approximately 27,000 comic books through 2017) and then write an overview of them, considering them all to form one single, self-contained story, the largest work of fiction ever published. It’s exactly the sort of thing that a long-time (since Christmas Day, 1963) Marvel Comics fan like me would find fascinating.
The execution of that really great idea? Well, that’s something else again.
Good news first. ALL OF THE MARVELS is about 90% of a great book. When he’s
actually writing about the comics, Wolk is top-notch, summarizing them well and
doing an excellent job of fitting everything together. He fills in the
historical background well and is affectionate and even-handed in his treatment
of the creators of those comics. It doesn’t hurt that he devotes an entire
chapter, and a long one, at that, to MASTER OF KUNG FU, my favorite comic from
the Seventies. He gives a lot of love to FANTASTIC FOUR, my all-time favorite
comic book, and also to THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN, which is also very high on my
list. Best of all, when he’s writing about the Sixties and Seventies, the book
makes me feel like I’m there again, walking across the highway to Lester’s
Drugstore to pick up the new issues every week.
Unfortunately, before he gets to that point, Wolk spends a lot of time early on
lecturing the reader and making it clear that he dislikes long-time comics fans
(you know, the ones who plunked down their nickels and dimes and quarters every
week for years so that there would still be a Marvel Comics for him to
write about) and considers any of us who don’t care for Marvel’s current comics
to be horrible people. He comes across as smug, arrogant, and very morally
superior to anybody who disagrees with him.
Luckily, as I said, most of this is very early on. If you’re a long-time fan
and/or have no interest in what Marvel is publishing these days, I’d advise
skimming the first two chapters and skipping Chapter 3 completely. Heck, if
you’re a long-time fan, you can probably just start with Chapter 4, which
focuses on, appropriately enough, the Fantastic Four. There are a few brief
shots at older fans later on, but they’re easy enough to ignore.
Don’t get me wrong. Overall, I enjoyed ALL OF THE MARVELS quite a bit and
consider it well worth reading. Yeah, there were a few times when I felt like
throwing the book against the wall, but mostly I raced through it, flipping the
pages eagerly, having a great time reliving some fifty- and sixty-year-old
memories. Just know what you’re getting into if you were there at or near the
beginning, like I was.
Monday, June 14, 2021
Chronos Commandos: Dawn Patrol - Stuart Jennett
A friend of mine mentioned this the other day and compared it to the old DC Comics series The War That Time Forgot, so I had to check it out. I'm definitely the target audience when it comes to anything about World War II G.I.s fighting dinosaurs.
I was pleased to find that this five-issue comic book series is pretty good. It's been reprinted in trade paperback and as an e-book and is worth reading. The concept is that a combined scientific and military force called The Watchmakers, led by Albert Einstein, is tasked with traveling through time to foil the plots of Nazi time travelers. The leader of one of the field teams is a tough non-com called only The Sarge, who, along with his men, is in prehistoric times with his men as this yarn opens.
Through some bad luck, The Sarge and one other soldier are the only ones who make it back to the present (well, the middle of World War II, which is the present as far as this series is concerned) only to find that things are in even worse shape there. Nazi agents have infiltrated the Watchmakers, wrecked their headquarters, and stolen a vital component of their time traveling equipment, escaping into prehistoric times with it. The Sarge and a new squad are sent to recover it and prevent the Nazis from changing the course of history.
All of that is set up in the first issue, and the rest of the series is nearly non-stop action. If you enjoy G.I. vs. dinosaur battles, Albert Einstein with a tommy gun fighting Nazi agents, and mind-bending time travel paradoxes, CHRONOS COMMANDOS is for you. Stuart Jennett's script is excellent. I'm not as big a fan of his art, but he's a decent storyteller and the art, by today's standards, is not bad at all. Taken together, Jennett delivers a very enjoyable yarn that I enjoyed quite a bit. Recommended.
Monday, April 26, 2021
The Complete Torpedo, Volume One - Enrique Sanchez Abuli and Jordi Bernet
I remember reading a few issues of an independent comic book called TORPEDO 1936 back in the Eighties, but I hadn’t thought about it for years until one of this blog’s readers mentioned it in a comment on a recent post. After doing some checking, I was a little surprised to see that the book’s entire run has been reprinted and is available in digital form, so I picked up the first volume to revisit it.
The protagonist (you can’t call him the hero) of TORPEDO 1936 is Luca Torelli,
a killer for hire who plies his deadly trade in New York during the Depression.
He works for the mob but also takes on private commissions, and he’ll kill just
about anybody as long as the price is right. Unlike other hitman characters
such as Lawrence Block’s Keller and Max Allan Collins’ Quarry, Torelli has no
redeeming qualities whatsoever. He’s every bit the despicable character you’d
expect a professional killer to be. The only other continuing character is his
sidekick/assistant/comedy relief, an oafish gangster known as Rascal.
Originally this series was supposed to be written by Will Eisner, creator of
The Spirit and other acclaimed comics. How much input he might have had, I
don’t know, but he never wrote any of the stories. The scripts are all by a
Spanish comic book writer, Enrique Sanchez Abuli. Legendary comics artist Alex
Toth drew the first two stories, then left the series, supposedly because he
didn’t like the violent, nihilistic bent of Abuli’s scripts. Jordi Bernet took
over the art, and his work on this series is fantastic. His style reminds me
very much of Joe Kubert’s artwork.
THE COMPLETE TORPEDO, VOLUME ONE is very episodic, with each tale serving as a
separate short story, another killing that Torelli sets out to accomplish. Some
have clever plot twists. Torelli isn’t infallible, and sometimes he gets
outwitted. Some are darkly humorous, but most are just bleak. A couple are
flashbacks to Torelli’s life as a young Italian immigrant, maybe designed to
give him at least a semblance of humanity, but if that was the goal, I’m not
sure they succeed. He still comes across as extremely unlikable.
Which is not to say the stories are bad. The plots are repetitive enough that
it’s best to read them spaced out, but they’re pretty effective when you tackle
them that way. The ones where Torelli is up against low-lifes who are equally
bad or even worse than he is are the ones that work the best. Overall, I
enjoyed the book. Whether or not I’ll continue reading the collections, I just
don’t know yet. Bernet’s art is gorgeous, and I’m curious to see if Abuli ever
gives Torelli any real character development. So I’ll probably revisit TORPEDO
1936 again in the future. We’ll see.