Category: Graphic Novels

Black City

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While reading Black City - almost voraciously enough to warrant watching over a webcam – I couldn’t shake from my mind a set of twinned Tom Waits songs: We’re All Mad Here and Everything You Can Think of is True. I was initially slow to the realization that, despite major musical differences, they are in fact the same song; the same sets of creepy,carnivorous and carnivalesque stories and images, just seen from two different sides of the mirror. Like those songs Black City is a book both familiar and strangely new; the same but so, so different. The most evident example of this has to be that it’s published by Gestalt, Australia’s self-proclaimed ‘premier graphic novel publishing house’ – a title to which I can only attest – but it’s a prose piece; as in without pictures, as in only words.

It’s made instantly apparent by all of those words that the book’s author, Christian Read, brings with him a radical new voice; his writing brisk and irreverent but ironclad in its intelligence and poetry. With those words, and in that voice he tells a horror story that is more often than not hilarious. It’s a tale that has been told many, many times before – tropic in its topics and more than half homage – but because of the temperament which which he tells it the resulting read is like nothing else you’ve experienced. Around that story the words build a world, one in which every kind of magic ever seen in a story exists, but its wielded in ways we havn’t seen before: the supernatural stuff seeping into street violence, through the arts ( literary, visual and … culinary) and even effecting economics. Black City then is both a book and a place wherein everything you can think of us true; even, fittingly, that mythological creature known as Tom Waits.

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Strange Attractors

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Strange Attractors is, like Primer, the sort of story that stresses the science section in its genre classification of Science-Fiction: mashing and merging as it does concepts like chaos theory, The Butterfly Effect and fractal mapping into a plot that never once resembles a text-book, despite its deeply educational exposition. The book takes its title from a mathematics term whose definition is near meaningless to me, with my mere High School education in the field (An Attractor is a set towards which a variable, moving according to the dictates of a dynamic system, evolves over time and earns the ‘Strange’ suffix for featuring a non-integer dimension or chaotic dynamics…yeah) and based on the occurrence of those words – which I understand solo, just not in syntax – within it I daresay that its plot was derived from the very same.

So I shouldn’t have got it, the book should not have spoken to me since the science was so over my head; yet it did, deeply so, and the reason for that is instantly obvious once you open the lushly contoured cover – Archaia once again doing an amazing job of producing their books – and actually begin to read. Charles Soule, in his introduction, doesn’t once mention science – specifically or even vaguely- instead he spends those several hundred words wistfully explaining what it is about New York that made him want to write Strange Attractors. His speech suggesting that it was the city, and not those heady concepts, that came first, the city that stands at the core of the book and even though I am an Australian this was a concept that I could not only understand but connect with.

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Dream Merchant #1

As a writer Nathan Edmondson is known to me, and surely many others in comic circles, for crafting intensely real action stories: the consistent traits displayed in each are his eye for blunt truths, his ear for technical terminology and a mind manipulable towards intense research. His is not then a name that I could cohesively connect to a book about dreams and magical Dream Merchants. Those prior series he scripted – Dancer and Jake Ellis, for examples – had sci-fi twists to their stories, yes, but these were there to garnish hard-boiled military stories that would have worked more than well enough without them. This dish though is one built on a base of [insert preference of metaphorical seasoning here, lets say parsley] and made palatable by thin shavings of the bloody protein we had been served in the past; it’s not then as far a leap of faith as one might think, the elements of a classic Edmondson tale are still here, the ratio’s have just been twisted in a tantalizing attempt to keep things fresh.

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Chin Music #1

I don’t like to write a review that merely disses the material it was made in response to, for a number of reasons: firstly doing so would imply that I didn’t enjoy the piece, which is never preferable; secondly I only tend to buy and consume things that I feel pretty confident that I will enjoy, so finding something entirely absent of enjoyment would be off task but thirdly it just seems like a sort of sucky thing to do, especially when so much effort has surely gone into the making of it. I’m not here to harm, I’m not out for blood but I do expect the best from things. Chin Music, however, presents an opportunity beyond the  usual pedantic pessimism of a negative review and so although the book did nothing for me I will say a few words about why; if only to lend some credence through comparison to the rave reviews that usually get put up.

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Red Handed: The Fine Art of Strange Crimes

Unless I really disliked something I normally tend to bury the negative points of my response deep in the review, to give the art and the artist a better chance of still winning people over but with this book, the latest from Mind MGMT auteur Matt Kindt, I have to begin with my one big criticism: the man is a genius. Worse still he writes here seemingly unedited – First Second Publishing perhaps even smarter for allowing him to do so – so that sections of his mind are smeared on each page I turn to exactly as he must have envisioned them originally, in their full genius. This is a criticism because I, alas, am not so gifted, I am not as smart a man as Matt and so much of his work in Red Handed must gone above my mere mortal’s mind.

The book is definitely a mental challenge, it’s arguably the most complicated work yet from comic’s most complicated artist, and although I probably only just passed its tests – earning a B-minus, maybe – what I caught of it then, of that cross-section that I could grasp was,well… genius both in its education and in its entertainment. It is a great, engrossing and greatly effecting read; the sort you can’t put down once you’ve started reading, nor when you’ve finished, nor can you get it out of your mind even after the second swing through the twisted world of Red Wheel Barrow, through the unadulterated mind of a master at play.

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Ten Grand #1

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The title of this book, the debut series from Image imprint Joe’s Comics, comes form the amount that its protagonist, the aptly titled Joe Fitzgerald, charges for his services as a paranormal private investigator. He doesn’t do it for the money though, his real reasons for working established later, the charge is simply to “weed out the kooks, the clowns, the whackos, the feebs, the creeps [and] the game-players”; strangely then that is exactly who Ten Grand seems to focus on.

When we hear tales told of the divine war, of heaven, of hell and the rapture the characters within them are usually high and distinguished, the Dramatis personæ. Here though the characters are conflicted, the settings seedy and behavior by both sides far too human: here Angels inhabit the bodies of strippers – that popular pseudonyms brought ingloriously to life – while demon’s possess PC’s not protected by walls of divine fire. Its an iteration of a comforting story told using the things we’d all rather not see.

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The Movement #1

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Billed as the first blow in a one-two punch of bracingly contemporary comics, DC taking a fittingly partisan tact to the current political landscape, The Movement is meant to represent the revolutionary side of the current social slate. It does this by amalgamating a number of real life traditions like the Tea Party, the Occupy Movement and the digital guerrillas Anonymous, then straining them through a more traditional superhero team narrative. Going in this was all I knew to expect and I’m very glad of that because there is something troubling about the experience of reading this book semi-blind that made it much more effective than it may have been had I known more.

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Adventures of Superman – Violent Minds

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Now, I’m no Lex Luthor but I do have a bit of a beef with Superman. I’ve simply never been a fan and so his status and the love of those who are has always baffled me somewhat. I am however a fan of DC’s Digital First lines and the creative team that they chose for the first comic in this one – lead by Jeff Parker and Chris Samnee – so I thought that, given the year, I should give the old Kryptonian a chance to win me over and win is exactly what Superman always does.

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Hawkeye #9

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The premise behind this series has been the fact that Hawkeye is, at his core, a regular guy and so the book itself has been very loose and low-key in its approach to the Avenger. Issue nine suggests a sort of shift in this approach however, marrying the inventive stylistic structure and smart comedic tone of the series thus far with a stronger, more serialised narrative that even starts to get a little dark and sinister. The story of this issue is an entirely supplementary one, it is a sort of sequel to the last issue which got inside the head of Cherry ( or Darlene Penelope Wright if you want to be really long winded about it) and also a sort of prelude to the stories that are soon to come. It does this by stepping back and showing us the effect that events in the series’ sort of arc have had on the supporting characters in Clint’s life; namely the women that love him with both their hearts and on occasion bodies.

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Saga #12

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I’ve been wondering lately whether or not I was doing the right thing by buying Saga month in, month out; wondering whether I should maybe stop buying the single issues of this sensational comic. I was torn, then lo and behold the world delivered unto me a message, a sign, first by having the series left out of my LCS’s delivery then through Apple controversially refusing the comic the right to be hosted digitally through Comixology ( which I use as a back up in all such cases) because it features, somewhere in a background, the sight of sex, gay sex (007?). It seemed that the world wanted me to stop reading Saga but as I’m stubborn these twists actually only made me more keen to pick up the issue, balancing things out. The real decision on the series future then was going to be made based on this issue and how it managed to close out the comics second arc before the multiple month break.

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