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What are you reading right now? (June 2024)
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They are quick and easy reads, well written with very likable characters. there is also a lot of fun information (mostly sciency stuff), , some dry humor, a lil philosophy, with amazing art.
nothing not to like here.


Venom, Vol. 3: Dark Web ★★★
The first half of this was solid with some new revelations for Dylan and then Eddie's involvement in the Dark Web nonsense. Those issues are uneven because the setup for it isn't in this collection. Grrr.
Venom, Vol. 4: Illumination ★★★
I think it's ironic that this volume is called Illumination when this run has been anything but illuminating. The 2nd half of this arc does get more straight forward as Eddie finally returns to Earth and really amps up his power level. Now he finally feels like the new King in Black.
All Talk ★★
Some dummies in a street gang in Berlin try and up their game. This was kind of terrible with really bad art.
The Web of Black Widow ★★★★
A straight forward noirish story where Black Widow is trying to catch the person who is impersonating and framing her. Each issue has a cameo with a different friend of Natasha's.
Matt Wagner's Grendel Tales: Four Devils, One Hell ★★
The story of four Grendels whose stories converge in New Orleans. The story is disjointed and unfocused. The art is terrible.
Grendel Tales: Devil's Hammer ★
Some Grendels wipe out a village and leave one survivor who trains to be a Grendel so that he can exact his revenge one day. Not a very compelling story. The art is nothing special.
Grendel Tales: Devils and Deaths ★★★★
Grendel Draco has radiation poisoning and goes on one last mission to save the village from the monster eating livestock. The late Biuković's art works very well with the rustic setting and theme.
Grendel Tales: Devil in Our Midst ★★★
A suicidal Grendel washes up on the shores of Antarctica where he meets up with a team charged with protecting a large toxic waste dump. The crew are contracting a virus that makes then ultra-violent and bleed from the eyes in the shape of Grendel's mask. (Looks cool but doesn't make a lot of sense.) Borrows heavily from The Thing.
Grendel Tales Omnibus: Volume 1 ★★★
Daredevil: Gang War ★★★
Starts off pretty strong but starts to meander as it kind of just becomes check ins to what Elektra is doing during Gang War. Mainly she's randomly fighting The Heat who is a repurposed X-character we haven't seen for a while.
Luke Cage: Gang War ★★
A really weak tie-in to Gang War. Luke Cage is the Mayor of New York City now but there's that pesky anti-vigilante law in place that keeps him from helping stop criminals during the big gang war. So Cage gets a terrible new costume and then gets his wife and best friend to help out but they don't bother to wear masks. So dumb. Then they fight some generic Spider-Slayer robots.
Deadly Hands of Kung Fu: Gang War ★★★
Meh. Some standard ancillary story for Gang War. Shang-Chi tries to keep Chinatown safe while the ten rings are locked away from him.
Sabretooth & The Exiles ★★
The Exiles here are not your old Exiles traveling dimensions. They are the other mutants who were banished to the Pit along with Sabretooth. Now they are free and on the run from Orchis. This whole series is just kind of a mess with this team hitting up another Orchis station that gets ruined with each issue. The bad guy is a doctor with no ethics. A Dr. Mengele for mutants basically. The last issue does lead in to Sabretooth War over in Wolverine.
Wolverine, Vol. 8: Sabretooth War, Part 1 ★★★
Finally a Wolverine comic by Percy that's not about Beast. This is about Sabretooth out for revenge. You are going to want to make sure you read the 2 Sabretooth miniseries that Victor LaValle wrote. This spends directly out of that and X-Force #50. LaValle is actually a cowriter on this.
Wolverine, Vol. 9: Sabretooth War, Part 2 ★★★
The Krakoa era of Wolverine ends with this long fight between Wolverine and Sabretooth. It's OK. Healing factors don't mean much in this story. That's what you can say about the artwork and the backup stories in issue #50. It's all OK.
Pound for Pound ★★★
A female MMA fighter has to go after the cartel who took her little sister. There's a lot of twists and turns here, some of them not making the most sense. It's over the top graphic action. It reminded me some of Machete but less cheesy.
Snowpiercer - The Prequel: Part 1: Extinction ★★
Full of a lot of fluff for a 100 page story. It feels like it was padded out to get two volumes of content out of this. Adding in unnecessary historical things like the Krakoa volcanic eruption added nothing to the story except filling out that page count. Surely the story could have been made long enough just with these ecoterrorists and the lead up to the coming disaster. A better explanation for how this train stays operable and free of snow would be great too. Both my parents worked as engineers on the railroad and snow is an issue, especially when it's dozens of feet deep.
Hellsing, Vol. 7 ★★★
A volume all about Seras Victoria which was cool. It's also pretty much one big long fight. The panels though are so overfilled with crap that it's sometimes really hard to pick up what's happening. Sometimes less is more. I also can't get over how ridiculous the soldiers for the Catholic church look in their Klan robes.
X-Men by Gerry Duggan Vol. 6 ★★★
I'm not sure who at Marvel think this is a good idea. All of the X-titles at the moment seem to be all part of a puzzle where the pieces are all blank. You have no idea what order you are supposed to read them in and they all have spoilers for other titles. It really grinds my gears that all of these aren't numbered properly if they are more or less all part of one big crossover.
X-Men: The Wedding Special (2024) #1 ★★
I feel like this was a bit of a bait and switch. It's billed as the never before told wedding of Mystique and Destiny but it's really just a renewal of their vows. I wanted to see this be all about their original wedding. This is all just a bunch of fluff, padded out with two reprint stories to drive up the cover price.
Avengers: Twilight ★★★★
Kind of a by the numbers future Avengers story we've seen before with the current Avengers. And if you've read Captain America you've seen this same story multiple times. The O.G. Avengers have been outlawed after a day where a lot of people were killed. Now Iron Man and Wasp's kid work for an Avengers team run by the government. The government is fascist and what you see in the media is being controlled. Sound familiar?
Shook! A Black Horror Anthology ★★
This was a real mixed bag for me. Some stories had solid art, some I couldn't even tell what was happening or didn't assist with telling the story through sequential art. There are some authors I enjoy in this like Rodney Barnes and David F. Walker. It's a real shame that this didn't work more.
Star Wars: Darth Vader - Black, White & Red ★★★
Nothing special short stories about Darth Vader. I don't think this format works very well for Marvel. Only one story, the one by Marc Bernardin took advantage of the limited color palette. Of course they were also only one of two stories that actually used a color artist and it showed. Every other story just looked like uncolored art that didn't use any shading or techniques a book intended to be black and white would use to give the art more nuance.
Monstress, Vol. 1: Awakening ★★★★★
A breathtaking new series. Marjorie Liu and Sana Takeda are firing on all cylinders with this series. Takeda has taken the best of Eastern and Western comics and created an original world with a somewhat steampunk look mixed with the lands of fairy. An uneasy truce exists between humans and Archons (basically fairies). Humans have discovered an Archon's essence can be distilled down to give humans magic. Those on both sides are hunting for a teenage girl trying to control the elder god hidden inside her.
Monstress, Vol. 2: The Blood ★★★★★
The closest thing I've read to a true illustrated fantasy novel. The art and story combine with Manga and Lovecraftian influences for a unique experience. I'm not sure how a book can look both ethereally beautiful and gut-wrenchingly bloody and awful at the same time. Reading this often feels like the first time I read Sandman back in the day, like we're in on something uniquely special that no one else has discovered yet. BTW, I love Kippa. At first, she comes across as this stupid little girl and then says something insightful or profound out of the blue. Everyone seems extremely annoyed by her, but then finds themselves looking after her.
Monstress, Vol. 3: Haven ★★★★★
I will say that this reads much better in big chunks. Reading this straight through has made things clearer. There's a ton going on with a lot of characters weaving in and out. In this volume. Maika Halfwolf heads to a new city that was able to sit out the previous war due to a magical dome over the city. That dome though is on the fritz now with factions approaching. Queue up Maika and the old one inside her Zinn to get it back up and running again. Takeda's art is just as lush and gorgeous as the previous volumes.
Monstress, Vol. 4: The Chosen ★★★★★
Maika meets her father who she immediately doesn't trust. We get a lot of backstory into what's been going on as everyone prepares for war. I love that Kippa gets a chance to shine too. She's my favorite character in this harsh, violent world. Takeda's art is just perfect. Such a terrific blending of East and West.
Monstress, Vol. 5: Warchild ★★★★★
The war between humans and the arcanics begins with the humans invading the city of Ravenna. Maika helps out in a hopeless cause to defend the city. The story continues to be dense and fantastic. The art is amaze balls.
Monstress, Vol. 6: The Vow ★★★★★
A few volumes in, I feel like we're finally getting some shape as to what is going on here. Although there are still a ton of factions here and some of them flit back and forth frequently. Starts off a bit slower with some smaller stories while there's a lull in the war in Ravenna. Then things heat up again towards the end with more revelations.


Most definitely. Well deserved.

Chas said: "A few volumes in, I feel like we're finally getting some shape as to what is going on here."
He said that on volume 6! I didn't have the patience to make it that far.
(I dislike "Game of Thrones" and "Dune" for exactly the same reason. But they were big hits. So I understand that not everyone has the same problem as me.)

Memetic
Eve Ewing’s Ironheart vol 2
Girl Juice
Floppies mostly felt like transitional phases in stories, but an intriguing twist in Batman: Dark Age, and I feel like Creature from the Black Lagoon Lives is heading in an interesting direction

Space Ghost #2
Get Fury #2
Scarlett #1
Birds of Prey #10
X-Men #35/700
The Ultimates #1
Crocodile Black #1 <--- New Boom comic from Phillip Kennedy Johnson
This week's episode of the IRCB Podcast is "Party-Boy Wayne (ft. Bijhan Agha)." Mike and Kara are joined by Bijhan Agha to talk comics and Bijhan's latest Kickstarter for Kobra Olympus #2!
Here's what folks read on this week's episode:
- Mike: Batman Universe 1
- Kara: Black Widow, Vol. 1: The Ties That Bind
- Bijhan: The Brave and the Bold (1955-1983) #28
Check out the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts to hear our thoughts on what we read! Or listen now at https://ircbpodcast.simplecast.com/ep...
Check out Bijhan's Kickstarter at https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/...
or follow Bijhan at http://www.Patreon.com/JamsheedStudios
Here's what folks read on this week's episode:
- Mike: Batman Universe 1
- Kara: Black Widow, Vol. 1: The Ties That Bind
- Bijhan: The Brave and the Bold (1955-1983) #28
Check out the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts to hear our thoughts on what we read! Or listen now at https://ircbpodcast.simplecast.com/ep...
Check out Bijhan's Kickstarter at https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/...
or follow Bijhan at http://www.Patreon.com/JamsheedStudios

Star Wars: Darth Vader - Black, White & Red ★★★
Nothing special short stories about Darth Vader. I did really like the oversized art this was printed on. It was more the size of art boards the pages are originally drawn on or those old treasury size comics from the 70s. I'd probably say differently though if I had to store this on a shelf instead of getting it from the library.
The Last Fall ★★★
This was actually pretty good. The story is about a sergeant who has lost it all during a religious war between 2 planets.
The Explorers (Snowpiercer, #2-3) ★
Apparently there's an unknown second train travelling the Earth. It's called Icebreaker but a better name would have been Cashgrab.
Kolchak The Night Stalker: Monsters Among Us ★★★
Two stories of Kolchak the Night Stalker. One of them by the former writer of Amazing Spider-Man. The first one is about zombies in a small town. The second is about a monster running around in Oregon.
Rogue & Gambit: Power Play ★★
A kind of crummy and by the numbers miniseries where Gambit and Rogue don't trust one another yet again. The whole thing is just to set up Manifold for the Fall of X even though he's hardly in it.
Afterlife with Archie, Vol. 1: Escape from Riverdale ★★★★★
The Archie comic that started a whole new genre at Archie comics. We wound up with just about every horror variant of Archie possible after the success of Afterlife with Archie and it's well warranted. This is great. We start off with a little variation of Pet Cemetery. Turns out Hot Dog started the whole outbreak. I'd forgotten how much more adult this was than the regular title. These kids are off having sex, brutally putting the undead out of their (or maybe our) misery. It's all just terrifically gruesome stuff.
Afterlife with Archie, Vol. 2: Betty R.I.P. ★★★★
The coolest bits about this volume are actually the first and last issues where we step away from the Riverdale folks who are travelling the countryside like The Walking Dead. Instead we get some C'Thullu stuff with Sabrina and a different monster type story with Josie and the Pussycats. I'd love to see how these ultimately came together. Unfortunately, the Riverdale and Sabrina TV shows got in the way and this eventually petered out. Maybe one day Aguirre-Sacasa will pick this back up now that his TV shows ended.
DEN Volume 1: Neverwhere ★★★
Back in the 70's, Corben hooked up with Heavy Metal to publish Den in its magazine. This person gets a brand new, ripped but naked body after going through a portal to this fantasy realm. Kind of just ignore the plot and the fact that no one wears clothes for some reason, men and women just letting everything float in the breeze. Corben's visuals are terrific. All of the art has been retouched and the terrible lettering completely replaced.
Star Trek: Celebrations ★★★
This was alright. I didn't think most of the art captured the likenesses of the actors very well so I had a difficult time telling wh0 was supposed to be from the shows other than Seven of Nine and Sulu. I did really like that the stories weren't about being gay or being in a relationship. They were just about living their lives as everyone else does and they just happen to be LGBTQIA.
Betsy Braddock: Captain Britain ★★
Just terrible. A miniseries should be able to stand on its own. This instead requires you know 30 years of Marvel UK history to know what's happening. I know most of it and this book is still just a mess.
Shades of Magic Vol. 1: The Steel Prince ★★★
An OK prequel story about the King from the books when he was just a prince gathering experience. His father sends him away to a lawless port city.
Fall of the House of X/Rise of the Powers of X ★★
What a clusterfuck. My first thought was "Would this have been any better had Hickman stuck with this or did he jump ship because he saw the nonsense writing on the wall?" Everything about it is a mess. A lot of the story occurs in ancillary miniseries. If it's a crossover, why didn't you number all the issues Marvel? Even the artwork isn't very good. They go to great lengths to try and hide the lack of backgrounds with special effects from the production team.
X-Men #35/700 ★★★★
A much better send off of the Krakoan age than the actual culmination of Fall of X. That was a shitshow and this was actually pretty good. It also made way more sense. It's mainly one big story about the mutants who disappeared when Krakoa left for 15 years while only a short time had passed in the main universe.
Agent of W.O.R.L.D.E. ★★★
It's about an agent for some weird spy organization like Agents of SHADE. He has a secret family that know one knows about and will be killed if he's found out. The issues are more one off. It doesn't tell a complete story or anything but I wanted to read it now that Deniz Camp is writing The Ultimates over at Marvel.
X-23: Deadly Regenesis ★★★
These flashback Marvel stories don't interest me a whole lot but I'm a completionist so there you go. It's set in the Utopian era of X-Men. Laura has just left X-Force (one of the best iterations of that team IMO.) She heads to Minnesota and of course Kimora goes after her.
Bite-Sized Tales Of Terror #1 ★★★
A 50 page one shot with three shorter horror stories. The first two were pretty good. The third one not so much.
Deadpool, Vol. 1 ★★★
Even though this is stated as being part of the Krakoan age of X-Men, Deadpool gets kicked off Krakoa in New Mutants #30 and never looks back. He gets invited to join a group of assassins and has to kill Dr. Octopus within 24 hours to join. Meanwhile a crazy woman has put a Carnage symbiote inside of him.
Deadpool, Vol. 2 ★★★★
Deadpool's in love with a psycho and has a new symbiote dog in tow. Time to be attacked repeatedly by an assassin's guild.
Wasted Space: The Cosmic Collection ★★★
This started off pretty bad. The story was confusing and the art was terrible. But it does get better. The story straightens itself out. Sherman's art gets better over the course of these 25 issues.
Usagi Yojimbo, Vol. 26: Traitors of the Earth ★★★
I couldn't get into this volume as much as I have with other Usagi stories. I know there's been magic in the series before but the use here was too over the top for me and took away some of the realism. It's still solid, just not one of my favorites. Once people start floating over rivers that's too much for me when the story is typically pretty well grounded.
New Mutants: Lethal Legion ★
This was a chore just to get through. Anders wrote the last 3 issues of the last New Mutants series and it's pretty clear this was meant to be the next arc. It's so boring. It's about a dumb ass Count Nefaria trying to put a new Lethal Legion together for no real purpose other than to give this a title.
Magneto: Magneto Was Right ★★★
Another one of those flashback series from Marvel and again, one where nothing new is gained. Magneto is now running the school with the New Mutants in tow. DeMatteis tries to retcon his past behavior to declare he was purposely playing a character with the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants in order to make the X-Men look better and that is just so much nonsense.
Brother Nash ★★★★
I like the idea of this Ancient travelling the highways in a semi helping people. I love all the Native American lore in here and just the general strangeness of this story.
Bacchus, Vol. 1: Immortality Isn't Forever ★★★★
Bacchus has been around for 4,000 years, drinking wine and telling stories. Most of the other gods are gone but someone from Greek mythology occasionally shows up and causes problems.
Bacchus, Vol. 2: The Gods of Business ★★★★★
I love the mix of Greek mythology and gangsters. Bacchus is barely even in this volume and it doesn't even matter. Joe Theseus and the Eyeball Kid versus the Telchines is where it's at.
Bacchus, Vol. 3: Doing the Islands With Bacchus ★★★★
Bacchus takes center stage again in this volume. Most of the stories consist of Bacchus drinking with his buddies while telling stories from Greek mythology with his twist on them or the histories of wine or the like. Hermes also makes his first appearance in the story. This is also when I started buying the book in single issues when I could find it at my LCS. Good stuff.
Bacchus, Vol. 4: The Eyeball Kid: One Man Show ★★★
Those one man monologues from the Eyeball Kid are tough to sit through. It's much more interesting whenever the story focuses on the Telchines. So Telchines, good. Eyeball Kid, bad. Even though they are all bad.

Far Sector ★★★★★
This is a prime example of when Science Fiction is at it's best. By setting this story in a completely new setting, we explore some of humanity's greatest flaws, both explicitly through flashbacks to early 21st century history and quotes from great civil rights leaders, but even implicitly through the emotional prejudice Jo faces. This is also easily the best Green Lantern story I've read as it doesn't require a deep understanding of all the implications of their history, but also avoids the simple solutions that so easily bleed into GL stories.
Spawn, Compendium 1 ★★★★
It's been a while since I last read Spawn, so there's a nostalgia in going through this again. The artwork is good, and great after Greg Capullo joins. The early Image comics politics lead to events taking place in other Image series or standalone mini-series, some easier to find than others. The story is enough to keep the pages turning, though it's a touch predictable.
Batman: Tales of the Demon ★★★★
I often don't enjoy the various metal age comics as I find them immature; often a limited palette, narration explaining everything, big plot holes, and dues ex machina on every page. While these tales have some of those hallmarks, the story does shine through and Ra's makes for a compelling intellectual foe, and ally, for Batman. Ra's has the ability to manipulate Batman with Batman's own moral compass, and it's through this that we see the wisdom of Ra's. The 70s do shine through as Batman doesn't dwell long and monologues his way to the natural solution, save the innocent and let Ra's escape once more.
Kingdom Come ★★★★★
The artwork is nothing short of gorgeous. I enjoyed thumbing through the pages many times before actually reading it, and when I did finally read it I was rewarded with an incredible story that really tied everything together. The concept of metahumans running amok bringing about the apocalypse works really well and it's interesting to see how the old, weary, heroes have their morals tested. Spectre as a prophet guiding a genuine minister was fascinating putting a new spin on Spectre. That the minister is based on the author's own father was a touching and respectful tribute. I enjoyed all the older heroes, but Batman really stood out. That he, the non-meta, has remained and has continued with his inventions helping his failing body is a welcome change from the more traditional Miller take of embitterment.
Batman: Gotham After Midnight ★★★
A good detective story only let down by it's seemingly rushed conclusion in it's wordy last issue. Clearly setting itself up for a sequel that has never come, you're left with an unsatisfactory conclusion which seems out of character for Batman.
Green Lantern: Sector 2814, Vol. 2 ★★
The earlier issues were interesting as Hal adjusted to his ringless life and John found his feet. The final issues involving Star Sapphire were a mess. A long and repetitive monologue about being and forgetting, only to be and forget again, and just as it starts to make sense, roll the last issue seemingly missing a whole pile of plot. At least Guy woke up.
Suicide Squad, Volume 1: Trial By Fire ★★★★
Leaving aside the presence of Reagan and Gorbachev, you could well believe these stories are happening in today's political world. I particularly enjoyed the 3-parter where they are sent to liberate a political prisoner, only to find she doesn't want liberating. Apart from Deadshot, these characters are relatively unknown to me, but unlike some of the bigger crossovers, I enjoyed them.

Star Trek: Celebrations ★★★
This was alright. I didn't think most of the art captured the likenesses of the actors very well so I had a difficult time telling wh0 was supposed to be from the shows other than Seven of Nine and Sulu. I did really like that the stories weren't about being gay or being in a relationship. They were just about living their lives as everyone else does and they just happen to be LGBTQIA."
I only recently learned of DC's Pride collections, which I intend to read as it's Pride month, but I had missed Star Trek! I've been picking up the Eaglemoss collection off eBay and have been planning to jump into the new runs, but this will make a good start. I'm also glad to hear that it's a fact of their character, like having feet, rather than it's their character.

Yeah, DC does a Pride one-shot every June. So does Marvel for that matter. The story quality varies a lot as they typically get one bigger name writer or artist (I think Grant Morrison did a story in last year's.) and then it quickly turns into try out stories for writers and artists with a few LBGTQIA creators thrown in.
The Marvel one this year was about Mystique and Destiny renewing their vows. The best part of it was the interview Chris Claremont did where he talked about putting them in a relationship back in the early 80s where he had to be really subtle. Like there's an issue where Destiny walks into the kitchen in Mystique's apartment one morning and it's clear she spent the night but nothing is said.

That sounds really interesting, and makes you wonder how many other instances these relationships were hidden in plain sight.
PSA: Humble Bundle have nearly the entire volume 1 of the IDW Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles as a Kobo bundle. The deal ends in a couple of days and is a steal.

They also have one going for Dynamite for their 20th anniversary. It's 20,000 pages for $20. It's got stuff from Gail Simone, Garth Ennis, Al Ewing, Grant Morrison, Andy Diggle, Christopher Priest, Rick Remender, Duane Sweirzyncki, Keiron Guillen and Kevin Smith. I've read a lot of it and I'm tempted to get it just so I can have digital copies of all of it for $20. This one ends in 23 hours.
https://www.humblebundle.com/books/dy...
The one Mike mentioned ends in 2 days.
https://www.humblebundle.com/books/te...
Also ending in two days is all of BPRD. For $30 it includes the Hellboy bundle they did last year too which even includes some of the novels. Or just get the BPRD stuff for $18.
https://www.humblebundle.com/books/mi...
There's also a Kodansha manga bundle for $30. Most of this isn't my thing but to each their own.
https://www.humblebundle.com/books/sp...
I have a ton of Humble Bundles from over the years. The nice thing is that the files are always accessible so you don't need terrabytes of local storage to store them all. You can just download what you want to read and then delete it afterwards. Plus, it's a terrific way to check out comics you've never read before. With $20 for $1.500+ worth of comics you can't really go wrong. Even if you only like one or two things you've got your money's worth. If it's something I'm at all interested in, I'll go ahead and get it and then read it during lulls. Plus, part of the money goes to charity and you get to choose how much that is via a slider bar.

Avengers #15
Geiger #3
GODS #8
Incredible Hulk #13
Outsiders #8
Transformers #9
Ultimate X-Men #4
Thundercats #5
Blood Hunt: Red Band #3
Deadpool / Wolverine: WWIII #2
Crocodile Black #2

In TV comics, in Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures, In one episode Gandy Goose and Sourpuss are shown as showering together. Scandalous!


Yeah, I read about that in Outrageous: A History of Showbiz and the Culture Wars. I was a bit surprised, because I didn't remember that. Guess I was a bit too young to know what was going on. I did like the show and was sad that it was cancelled. Even today, I have a Mighty Mouse wallet.

The Writer #1 <-- Josh Gad wrote a comic and the main character looks just like him. Plus Ariel Olivetti drew it. Needed to check this out.
Ultimate Spider-Man #6
Titans #12
Nightwing #115
Invincible Iron Man #19
Immortal Thor #12
House of Slaughter #24
Doctor Strange #16
Captain America #10
Batman / Superman: World's Finest #28
Destro #1
Faith Returns #2

Godzilla: 70th Anniversary ★★★★
A better than normal anniversary celebration of Godzilla. Most of the stories are told from the viewpoint of humans as they struggle to survive while Godzilla fights various monsters.
Magic, Volume One ★★★★
Some of this was intriguing, some of it confusing. Mackay could have done a better job of introducing this world. I mean it's based on a card game, you can't expect everyone to know the worldbuilding and history aspects of the game. The sign of a good comic based on an existing property means I don't have to have read anything else to enjoy this and this doesn't do the best job of that. I did enjoy Ig Guara's art quite a bit. I did enjoy this more the second go around.
Magic, Volume Two ★★★★
Three planewalkers who run their guilds in Ravinca have banded together to uncover a conspiracy, one that threatens all dimensions. It all comes to a head in this second half of the story.
Mycroft Holmes and the Apocalypse Handbook ★★★
Turns out the all-time leading scorer in NBA history (well, 2nd most now to Lebron.) is also a writer. This was fun. It's about Sherlock Holmes's older and maybe smarter brother. He's even more insufferable than his brother. He's a real prick for most of this but gets away with it by being right.
Afterlife with Archie, Vol. 2: Betty R.I.P. ★★★★
The coolest bits about this volume are actually the first and last issues where we step away from the Riverdale folks who are travelling the countryside like The Walking Dead. Instead we get some C'Thullu stuff with Sabrina and a different monster type story with Josie and the Pussycats. I'd love to see how these ultimately came together. Unfortunately, the Riverdale and Sabrina TV shows got in the way and this eventually petered out.
Bacchus, Vol. 5: Earth, Water, Air, and Fire ★★★★
Another very good story. Bacchus, Joe Theseus and the Eyeball Kid cross paths for the first time.
Seoul Before Sunrise ★★
A pointless story about a girl who feels abandoned by her friend after they go to different colleges in Korea. This girl starts working at a convenience store overnights as a way to put herself through school. She meets this older woman who talks her into repeatedly sneaking away from the store when she should be working. There's never really any chemistry between them and the girl is twice her age but she randomly realizes she's a lesbian and declares her love for her friend which of course goes poorly.
Ancient Dreams ★
Everything about this is a complete mess. There are passages of text that go on for multiple pages. The story is indecipherable. Something about a woman with a twin who is tied to someone from the Iliad and the Greek gods. Clearly Roth doesn't understand that comics are a visual medium. This is a novel with illustrations around the prose (and terrible prose at that). It was like they took Roth's novel, translated it to Japanese in Google Translate and then back to English. It makes absolutely no sense. It does have some pretty pictures though.
JP Roth's Theory Of Magic ★
Oof, this was horrible. This had to be written as prose first and then adapted into a comic. There are so many text boxes peppered over each page. And good luck trying to determine the reading order. They just seem randomly plopped on the page. There's also a ton of text pages that are written in cursive on top of art. They were almost impossible to read.
Huda F Cares? ★★
This looked pretty interesting. A comic about a girl growing up in a Muslim family. I used to live near Dearborn, MI and there is a large Muslim community there. It's about Huda and her sisters going to Disney World. For a book that's supposed to be funny though, this just wasn't really. The art is REALLY poor too. Huda looks like a slug with magic hands floating in the air.
Kindred: A Graphic Novel Adaptation ★★★★
This is an extremely tough read. It's about a black woman who keeps time travelling from 1976 (when Octavia Butler's book was written) back to the South about 50 years before the Civil War. Even though she's educated (more educated than the owners of the plantation even) the only thing that matters is the color of her skin. She's able to gain some special privileges after saving the owner's son, Rufus, becoming his tutor. Things are further complicated when on one of these journeys back to the past, her white husband is dragged back with her. There is no white washing here. Black people are treated awfully, whipped and sold at their master's whims.
G.O.D.S. ★★★★
This was cool. I've heard it billed as Marvel's Sandman but I don't think that's true. It's clearly setup for something much larger, probably some big event in the future. If I had to compare it to something, I think it might be a toned down Planetary. It's got that same operating behind the scenes vibe.
Rabid World ★★★★
A solid end of the world comic when a rabies virus breaks out that turns people into rage zombies similar to 28 Days Later. The story focuses on a doctor trying to find a cure and four regular people trying to survive on a boat.
Acursian ★★
I was curious about this. A comic written by John Barrowman, Jack Harkness from Doctor Who. Unfortunately I couldn't tell what was happening half the time. It has to do with Celtic mythology and a curse upon the male lineage of this family.
FIREBRAND: THE INITIATION OF NATALI PRESANO ★★
This just isn't very good. It's about a girl who has magic. She goes to live with her mom's side of the family to learn how to control it. She returns to Seattle as an adult to fight magical enemies. She isn't allowed to kill even though the bad guys are draining the life force of people left and right, leaving stacks of bodies everywhere. The story is really confusing and often contradicts itself.
Sirens of the City ★★★★★
This was just terrific. It's set in the 80s counter culture scene in New York. A teenage girl gets kicked out of her house when her foster parents learn she's pregnant and she heads to NYC. There she meets some other people and learns there's more to her than one first thought (see the title). It gives off Lost Boys vibes on the East Coast. My only complaint is that it should have been many more volumes.
Yasmeen ★★★★★
This was very good and also harrowing. It's about a teenager who was separated from her family when ISIS took over Mosul, Iraq. The rest of her family made it to the U.S. while she was forced to become some older man's wife that she didn't even know. She's made it to her family at the beginning of the story and we flashback to her time in captivity as the story moves along. It's really horrible but never graphic. She doesn't let it break her though and we see how she and her family adopt to life in a small town in Iowa.
I Am Legend ★★★★
A great adaptation of the book. Niles mainly just cuts Matheson's prose into panels and lets Brown do the work telling the story visually. This is very text heavy as book adaptations tend to be. In fact each page typically has one or two panels that are completely text. The story is great. It's about the last human on Earth. Vampires have taken over the world and for some reason, Robert Neville is the only one left unaffected.
Usagi Yojimbo Saga Volume 7 ★★★★
Another fantastic massive tome of Usagi Yojimbo. One of the things I like is that these stories can pretty much be read in a vacuum. Even though this contains volumes 26-28 of the series, you can start here without missing a beat. The nature of the story is that the main character is a ronin roaming from town to town helping people. There are recurring characters but not a whole lot of mythology that you have to remember unlike most other comics.
If You'll Have Me ★★★
An overly cute light romance between two women in their first year of college. One has never dated before and doesn't pick up on social queues at all. The other has a reputation for one night stands. I found this overly long at 300 pages, considering it doesn't have anything deep to say.
Kolchak The Night Stalker Volume 1 ★★
I do like that this volume is new stories instead of adaptations of TV episodes. Still, these original stories from the show that inspired the X-Files doesn't feel very inspired itself.
Bloodline: Daughter of Blade ★★
This was better than I expected. I rolled my eyes when I saw it on the shelf at my comic book store. Blade's daughter gets his powers when she's in high school and also finds out Blade is her dad. Lore does a great job with the dialogue. The story though kept feeling like there were pages missing though. Both in the action sequences and with missing scenes. I half expected a few panels to say "Scene Missing" throughout this.
Darboe's art is pretty good. However, I can't stand the lack of backgrounds. Swirling colors and speed lines can't replace a lack of details. This is one area where I can't stand manga's influence on Western art.

Grendel: Devil by the Deed, Master's Edition ★★★★★
This new version of Devil by the Deed is terrific. The original appeared as backups in Mage and totaled only about 40 pages. Wagner has completely redone this with new artwork (It’s around 120 pages now). It maintains the feel of the original. It’s still illustrated prose. It’s supposed to be a biography of Grendel written by his ward’s daughter years later. The artwork is just gorgeous and Matt’s son Brennan does a bang up job coloring this solely in black, white and red.
Shades of Magic Vol. 2: Night of Knives ★★★
Better than volume 1. They are cool prequel stories but could have been better with an expansion from 4 to 6 issues.
Japan's Longest Day: A Graphic Novel About the End of WWII: Intrigue, Treason and Emperor Hirohito's Fateful Decision to Surrender ★★
This is an interesting story. It's about the last few days before the end of World War II in Japan and the attempted coup by hardliners who wanted every man, woman and child in Japan to fight to the death. My problem is that it's hard to follow. The art is good. But there's a gazillion different people in it, most of which look very similar so it's difficult to keep track of who is who. There's also some translation issues that made it more difficult to follow.
The Art (and Many Other Mistakes) of Eric Powell ★★★★★
Not a comic but a look at the creator of The Goon's artwork. This was great. Lots of original art and sketches. Powell's trademark humor written by a fake author who thinks Powell is an overrated hack who failed his way into an art career. I love the oversized nature. The book is about the size of an old school record and really showcases Powell's art.
Billy the Kid's Old Timey Oddities ★★★★
Billy the Kid hooks up with a carnival sideshow to go treasure hunting. Hotz fills this book full of strange looking mutants. The art is really good. It's one of the rare times where Powell doesn't draw his own comic but it works here.
Illuminations: Stories ★★★
Alan Moore of Watchmen and Swamp Thing fame has written his first collection of short stories. Short stories is a misnomer in at least one of the stories though as there is an entire 240 page novel sandwiched in the middle of this. Moore's prose in the past has typically bored me. It got to the point where I started skipping the stories in the back of League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and Providence because they were starting to make me hate the comics.
These nine stories were fine. What We Can Know About Thunderman is Moore's crack at the comic book industry. All of the names have been changed and there's no linear story. It's more just snippets of time at fake DC over the last 60 years. Others liked this much more than I did. I may have just reached the end of my Alan Moore phase after 40 years. Who knows.
Crisis on Infinite Earths: Paragons Rising The Deluxe Edition ★★★
This was fine. It adds a little bit to the Crisis event in the Arrowverse from the CW. It was cool that Guggenheim got Marv Wolfman to come help him write it. Guggenheim does talk about how there's some minor continuity errors in it. They had to write all of the episodes and this comic at the same time so some things may be slightly out of sequence with the shows.
Superman, Vol. 2: The Chained ★★★★
More of Luthor's secrets come to light, leaving Superman to clean up the messes. It's solid stuff. I do like that Williamson is leaning into some longtime continuity from 20 years or so ago. This leads directly into House of Brainiac too and now I'm interested, especially since the ramifications of that are used in DC's summer event, Absolute Power.
Fantastic Four, Vol. 2: Four Stories About Hope ★★★
4 fine stories. That's about all you can say about this. It's fine. Nothing special. Just fine.
Did You Hear What Eddie Gein Done? ★★★★
The true story of one of America's first mass murderers. Schechter is a true crime writer and I got the impression that this is an adaptation of one of his books by Eric Powell. The book goes through Gein's entire life and you can easily see how he was an inspiration for Psycho with his verbally abusive relationship with his mother. Later on, when the book gets extremely graphic after he is caught you'll see how he also influenced The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Silence of the Lambs as well.

https://www.humblebundle.com/books/te...


DC Pride 2021 ★★★
A collection of short stories involving LGBTQ characters. Most of the stories were OK but too short to really go anywhere. The standout story is the opening Batwoman story. I liked that it was her story, how she didn't feel she fit in growing up, especially the confusion and disconnect as hetero normative relationships begin to be discussed amongst peers. I can well imagine that it's a story many can identify with.
DC Pride: The New Generation ★★★★
Like its predecessor, this is largely a collection of short stories involving DC's LGBTQ characters. Some are more enjoyable than others, some are simply too short, but all make you smile. Two exceptions to this are Kevin Conroy's journey to becoming the voice of Batman, and Tim Drake's coming out story. Conroy's story is evocative and is prefaced with a trigger warning. It's remarkable how he found Batman amongst the duality of his own life, and a shame he had to endure what he did simply for who he is. Drake's story is simpler in comparison. There does seem to be a bit of avoiding stating the obvious, but it was good to see him talk to/come out to each "family" member, and to have positive reactions.
DC Pride: Better Together (DC Cultural Anthologies ★★
As with the first two, this is a collection of short stories involving DC's various LGBTQIA+ characters. Or rather, that's what it should've been, but instead they're story fragments that led into other books. Unlike the prior volumes, there isn't a key story to make the shorter fragments worth while. Quite disappointing compared to the previous volumes. The redeeming feature was the stories about friendships with the late Rachel Pollack. The militant right would have you believe transgenderism is a recent phenomena, but here's a trans woman from the 70's who made a huge impact on comics and created some of the earliest queer characters.
Star Trek: Celebrations ★★★★
Four short stories centring on LGBTQIA+ characters largely produced by LGBTQIA+ authors and artists. That they are members of the community is merely an accident of the story rather than its essence. The Discovery story was a bit dull, but the other three were more fun. The Lower Decks story is easily the best, and it also shows Trek at its best. No one asked for it to be a date, but there's no issue that it becomes such and that they happen to both be women. That is the utopian thinking that makes Star Trek so great.
Love Is Love: A Comic Book Anthology to Benefit the Survivors of the Orlando Pulse Shooting ★★★★★
The event that necessitated this collection looms large in the stories and is a harsh reminder of how much hate there still is in the world. The stories are moving, and remarkably so given that they all have either one or two pages in which to deliver. Compared to other collections I have read, these writers and artists have said so much more with much less.




The World of Nebulon Preview <-- Kickstarter from one of the guys working at my LCS.
Spectacular Spider-Men #4
Blood Hunt #4
Ultimate Black Panther #5
Absolute Power: Ground Zero #1
Feral #4
Red Coat #3
Rook Exodus #3
Something Is Killing the Children #38
Void Rivals #10
Gatchaman #1

X-Men God Loves. humans Kill
Gail Simone Complete Red Sonja Omnibus
Shazam Origins (for the IRCB Cape movie/comic)
Helen of Wyndhorn #3
This week's episode of the IRCB Podcast is "Person-Soup." Danny, Brian, and Nick talk comics, Shogun, One Piece TCG, and keep the show alive while Mike is out.
Here's what folks read on this week's episode:
- Danny: Uncle Scrooge And The Infinity Dime (2024) #1
- Brian: Dawnrunner #1
- Nick: イサック 1
Check out the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts to hear our thoughts on what we read! Or listen now at https://ircbpodcast.simplecast.com/ep...
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Mike and I have both been traveling so neither of us have posted here in the last few weeks. I added quite a bit to my to-read list based on everyone's posts here! I haven't read much recently but I plan to dig into some of the outstanding books on the reading challenge this week.
Here's what folks read on this week's episode:
- Danny: Uncle Scrooge And The Infinity Dime (2024) #1
- Brian: Dawnrunner #1
- Nick: イサック 1
Check out the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts to hear our thoughts on what we read! Or listen now at https://ircbpodcast.simplecast.com/ep...
---
Mike and I have both been traveling so neither of us have posted here in the last few weeks. I added quite a bit to my to-read list based on everyone's posts here! I haven't read much recently but I plan to dig into some of the outstanding books on the reading challenge this week.

Great site, thanks for the heads up. Unfortunately the postage to the UK eats up all the discount and make it slightly more expensive than brand new on Amazon. They are a few at lower prices on eBay, but I already bought Batman and Robin Omnibus, Batgirl Returns Omnibus and Batgirl of Burnside Omnibus this week!!
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Books mentioned in this topic
Batman & Robin By Tomasi and Gleason Omnibus (2023 Edition) (other topics)Batgirl of Burnside Omnibus (other topics)
Batgirl Returns Omnibus (other topics)
Dawnrunner #1 (other topics)
Uncle Scrooge And The Infinity Dime (2024) #1 (other topics)
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Tell us all about what you're reading in the thread below!
As always, if you'd like to check out what the IRCB crew is reading, take a peek at the Top of My Pile posts over on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ircbpodcast