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Showing posts with label BOOM Comics. Show all posts

CAPSULE COMMENTS: For comics on-sale Jan. 14, 2015




It was a decent week for me at Zimmie's Comics in Lewiston, Maine. Eight new comics appeared in my folder, plus one re-order. Here are a few quick thoughts on each book, along with the requisite letter grade.


ALL-NEW CAPTAIN AMERICA #3
Marvel Comics, $3.99
[MILDLY RECOMMENDED)

The main thrust of this issue is that it rectoned out of continuity the "Snap" Wilson retcon. So, the Falcon, or Captain American as we now know him, was never a drug-pushing pimp, and the original continuity, which we were once led to believe was a lie, is once again how things were. I suppose that's necessary, even if the Snap Wilson thing has been ignored for long enough that I think most fanboys had forgotten it. After all, even in this age, we need our Cap to be a heroic persona, not a reformed one. Still, this issue represents a lot of what's wrong with comics these days. What we have here is not so much a story, as a story that explains a past story (and one almost 40 years old, at that!). Spending absurd amounts of time obsessing over backstory is one reason I can't even look at Hawkman today, because I know what I'm going to get is new details explaining exactly which version of the character I'm reading about, rather than a new adventure of that character. Similarly, what should have been the main trust of this book — Cap's forced suicide to save his family amid Hydra's plot to sterilize everyone in the world not a member of its evil organization — is relegated to the back of the book. I'm hopeful that, now that we've established Sam Wilson was a hero from Day 1 (did anybody really doubt it), we can get back to the much more interesting adventure at hand. But, for my money, this issue really stalled things out. 

I'll also say I was confused over the WWII battle scenes during the first half of the book. I thought at first, based on the text, that Cap had traveled into the past. Then I realized it was all an illusion projected by Sin (who could've looked more like a chick, frankly), but was distracted from the story wondering how she was doing it. By the time we finally got back to reality, I was fairly well exasperated and ready to move on to something else in my buy-pile.  
(Read Time: 11:25, plus 0:45 for recap page) 
GRADE: C+ 



ASTRO CITY #19
DC Comics (Vertigo imprint), $3.99
[RECOMMENDED]

Astro City is one of my favorite books, probably because it is the most "old school," in terms of storytelling, of everything on the stands today. Here we get, even amidst a continued story, a full plot with plenty of characterization. We also get lots of little bits, such as Crackajack's true origin, that let the reader fill in the details, helping to expend the universe at hand. I'll only say that while this tale was a wistful riposte on the topic of aging (done better than about a million JSA stories) it was a little too much tell, and not enough show. Quarrel narrated her history throughout and, more than once, I found myself thinking, "Who are you talking to, exactly?" So, in that sense, this story may have been a little too old school. Still, I'll remember it long after I've forgotten much of what else was in thy buy-pile this week. That may be because artist Brent Anderson (while I'd still like to give him an inker) gives us a layout that moves the story along and is not so decompressed that it takes 12 panels to show Quarrel leaping off a building and smacking snot out of some evil-doer. 
(Read Time: 17:00, plus 3:50 for lettercol and promo pages) 
GRADE: A-



BATGIRL #38
DC Comics, $2.99
[HIGHLY RECOMMENDED]

I am really, really grooving on the "new" Batgirl. What we get here is fairly standard, thematically. Babs has to come to grips with whether she's a hero, or a vigilante menace. Clearly, she thinks the former while her new police officer boyfriend thinks the former. But the way the story is told feels fresh and modern, using social media as a form of peer pressure in a way the now-canceled ABC-TV show Selfie (starring Karen Gillan, who should totes play Batgirl in the movie version of this book) only hoped it could do. And, while we're talking tv-shows, the dating scenes, mixed with a generous dose of internal conflict, are reminiscent of the best episodes of Sex and the City. Honestly, BATGIRL is the book to show your female friends who wonder why you still read comic books at your age. Best of all, while Babs Tarr's artwork is clear and compelling, the panel breakdowns of writer Cameron Stewart rely on a traditional panel grid. That makes the book much easier for a comics neophyte to read than the helter-skelter, all-over-the-page designs many artists churn out in emulation of Neal Adams, who may have done more than anyone else in history to drive casual readers away from comics. Luckily, BATGIRL is written and drawn in such a way that it is not the exclusive playground of aging fanboys. Anyone can get into this book, and should. 
(Read Time: 15:15, plus 2:55 for promo pages) 
GRADE: A



DAREDEVIL #12
Marvel Comics, $3.99
[MILDLY RECOMMENDED]

I'm torn on this book. On the one hand, I love what writer Mark Waid and artist Chris Samnee have done with ol' hornhead. And the move out to San Fran has breathed new life into the character. But much of this issue felt like it was recapping previous chapters in this story. I'm torn over that because I generally feel modern comics don't offer enough in the way of recap, such that a casual fan can't just pick up any random issue — say because they're inspired by a fantastic cover, such as this one — and feel like they know what's going on. Once upon a time, it was accepted that any comic could be someone's first, and a well-written series didn't need so-called "jumping-on points." That said, I spent most of this issue feeling like I was being told things about Stunt-Master, and the plot-to-date, that I already knew. I mean, why go over that all again at all when you have a recap page, for gosh's sake? 

But maybe I was just annoyed at having my suspension of disbelief broken so thoroughly by this issue's main action scene. I can accept that Daredevil, though blind, can drive a vehicle at breakneck speeds. I can even accept, just because it's such a cool visual, that he'd choose to drive a convertible Dodge Charger while standing in the driver's seat, using his billy club(s) to operate the steering wheel, shifter, clutch, and pedals. What I cannot accept is that he could follow a motorcycle across a bridge jammed with traffic, or that by merely yanking on his club, he could get the Charger to go up on two wheels. Also, how he jams his billy club into the "spokes" of a speeding motorcycle tire without breaking both his arms is beyond me. 
(Read Time: 8:00, plus 0:45 for recap page) 
GRADE: B-



JUPITER'S LEGACY #5
Image Comics (Millarworld imprint), $4.99
[STRONGLY RECOMMENDED]

This issue was, quite frankly, super-cool. I'm not sure it was worth the interminable year-long wait between issues, nor do I think it was worth $5, but it was pretty neat nonetheless. The good news is that the story was handled well enough that I did not have to reference previous issues to understand what was happening, despite the long lag since the last outing. Fans of DC Comics' Legion of Super-Heroes, like me, will, of course, blanch at the villain using the name of The Molecule Master, but he was kind of awesome, with his evil mustache and the way he flushed the heroes out of hiding. What's most interesting about this book is that while we hear a lot of proselytizing on what it means to be a super-hero, we see characters doing some very un-heroic things. Sure, she's just defending her family, but Chloe clearly uses deadly force. And, I have to say, the image of Hutch using a train to plow down a column of government agents is one that will stay with me for a while. It will be interesting (say, in another year, when the next issue comes out) to see whether Chloe and Hutch end up paying for the death and destruction they've caused (as Jim Shooter might have demanded, a la Phoenix) or if, in the manner of the grim 'n' gritty '90s, this is all just par for the course and perfectly acceptable super-hero stuff. 
(Read Time: 11:45, plus 2:45 for promo pages)
GRADE: A



JUSTICE LEAGUE UNITED #8
DC Comics, $3.99
[NOT RECOMMENDED IN ANY TIMELINE]

This, friends was a terrible comic book. Terrible. Terrible. Terrible. If you happen to have read online interviews with writer Jeff Lemire, you might have seen him say it was not his intention to provide a Legion that fit any one continuity, but to present a sort of all-star cast. Well, that's all fine and good, but there needs to be some in-story explanation of that when you've got Legionnaires from different reboots appearing together in a line-up that could never have possibly happened. The shame is that, given a time-manipulating villain, the appearance of characters from at least three distinct versions of the Legion could have been easily explained in one throw-away line in one random panel. "Hey, Brainy, there are people wearing Legion flight rings I don't recognize!" "Yes, Infinitus' presence is pulling disparate timelines into one!" "Cool! Let's fight!!"

But, we don't get that, leaving us to wonder how and why we have Magno (depowered last we knew), Kinetix (terrorformeed last we saw), and Monstress (dead), fighting alongside the classic Legion team that, with Phantom Girl present and both Sun Boy and Star Boy not dead, seems to ignore completely the most recent New52 stories. Moreover, while the retroboot Legion that's appeared since Geoff John's rehabilitation of the team has implied the "five-year gap" stories of Tom and Mary Bierbaum never happened, we have characters from that era, in the form of Computo and Dragonmage, which implies they did. 

What we have here, then, is sort of the opposite spin on my concern with ALL-NEW CAPTAIN AMERICAN #3, above. In that issue, I fretted that too much attention was paid to a 40-year-old story most people have since ignored. Here, there doesn't appear to be any concern for continuity at all. And while I could readily accept tossing out continuity for the sake of telling a great tale, there are enough flat-out errors in this book that it's hard to accept anything was done on purpose. It all feels less ignoring-of-continutity than plain old ignorance. I mean, we have characters appearing in the roll call who are nowhere to be seen in the story, and vica versa; we have characters who showed up last issue who are gone in this outing, we have misnamed characters ("Colossal Lad?"), and, while we don't have the same character showing up twice in the same group shot wearing different costumes, as we did in Issue #7, we do get one character who was never a member (Radion), appearing alongside the team as though he were. Worse, not even the internal continuity is consistent. As the Legion prepares to go back in time, Dream Girl says Shadow Lass is on medical stasis on Mars, then, four pages later, she pops out of the time vortex fighting alongside the team. It all feels like there's either a giant disconnect between the writer and artist, or an editor at the helm who is completely clueless, and probably both.

And, just as this issue is the flipside of my critique of ALL-NEW CAPTAIN AMERICA, it also swings the pendulum on what I said about DAREDEVIL #12. While I thought Mark Waid over-explained his plot this far in that book, here Lemire makes zero effort to bring his readers up to speed. You'd think that, with the Legion relegating the JLU to cameo status in their own book, by the time a few JLU members do show up, Lemire might have dropped some minor recap. But no, he plunges straight ahead with the plot, such as it is. And here it is: Last issue, the JLU was trying to prevent Ultra from entering a time vortex. This issue, he enters it. That's about it. Ultimately, not much going on. Literally, it took you longer to read this review than it would have taken to read the issue in question. And, at $4, that's the worst travesty of all. Besides having no plot to speak of, and errors galore, this comic is simply a piss-poor entertainment value. 
(Read Time: 5:15, plus 2:55 for promo pages). 
GRADE: F



S.H.E.I.L.D. #2
Marvel Comics, $3.99
[TEPIDLY RECOMMENDED]

Well, this issue was cute enough. Or at least it would be, as an 8-page back-up story. I have to say, Mark Waid has really been letting me down on this title, enough so that this is probably my last issue. The storytelling in this issue, as in the last, is so decompressed that there's really no plot to speak of. The tale reads less like a story than a vignette. I mean, S.H.I.E.L.D. tracking a surplus weapons ring to Ms Marvel's school is a nice hook, even if I could have used a little more of an explanation on how the kids came to be part of the black market in villain equipment trade in the first place, but then the kids are caught and that's that. The scene of students puking up poison pizza dough is a hoot, but I'm unclear on what connection it had to anything. Who sent it? Were the dough creatures supposed to steal the weapons back from the kids? All we know is that Ms Marvel impressed Coulson by catching the creatures. 

Additionally, while I totally dig the new Ms Marvel, and Waid nails her character pretty well, Humbert Ramos' art is so stylized that it's sort of unclear, until she specifically says she's doing so, when she's using her powers. But then, I've always found Ramos' art hard to follow, even if it is fun to look at. I also wouldn't recognize the characters he draws as the actors from the tv show, without being told. Under a different artists I think this story could have been better, which isn't meant to be an insult to Ramos. His considerable talents are just mismatched to this title, I think. 
(Read Time: 11:10, plus 0:20 for intro page). 
GRADE: B



STAR WARS #1
Marvel Comics, $4.99
[RECOMMENDED, IF YOU CAN GET THE RIGHT COVER]

The best thing I can say about this issue is that John Cassaday nails, and I mean absolutely nails, the actor likenesses. The plot is a little thin — the rebels arrive on an Empire planet intent on blowing it up, and then Vadar shows up — but Jason Aaron's script is meaty enough to make up for that. We get some fun one-liners and all of the characters sound true to themselves. However, not being an active purveyor of Star Wars material outside of the films, I am a bit confused as to the placement of this story. It certainly seems to pick up soon after the original Star Wars movie (which I still refuse to call, STAR WARS IV: A NEW HOPE). Why this should be, I don't know. I would have thought that with Marvel and Lucasfilm now both owned by Disney, this new series would serve to fill in the gap between STAR WARS: RETRUN OF THE JEDI and the upcoming sequel, STAR WARS: THE FORCE AWAKENS. Why we're covering ground I'm sure other Star Wars comics have covered before, and which I'm certain must contradict Marvel's original Star Wars series, is beyond me. 

Still, my only real problem with this book is that it's simply not worth $5. The first four pages are completely wasted imitating the film openings, while the final 10 are worldless previews of pages from the upcoming Darth Vader and Princess Leia series. Both look nice, but the art makes it appear the storytelling in them will be decompressed enough that they, too, will be poor values. In the end, this issue is cool enough as a Star Wars event, but I foresee me dropping the title from my pull list once the first story arc is complete, if not before. As far as collectibility goes, this issue reportedly shipped one million copies, so all of the value (if you're into that kind of thing) will depend on which cover you managed to get. I got the standard cover, which means, less-than-cover-price forever. 
(Read Time: 11:05, including preview pages) 
GRADE A- 



ABIGAIL AND THE SNOWMAN #1 (of 4)
BOOM! Studios (Kaboom! imprint), $3.99
Originally released Dec. 31, 2014.
[BARELY RECOMMENDED]

Occasionally, I like to spice my usual super-hero diet with something from some other genre. For years, the standard go-to in that regard were the Disney comics published by Gladstone, and then Gemstone. So, I've a bit of a soft-spot for the kind of "kiddy comics" I would have skoffed at as a kid. I was many years an adult before I purchased my first Archie comic, and Harvey was long out of business before I began gobbling up their output. You may then understand my mindset when I saw the preview art for this issue and thought, oh, yeah, sure, I'll try that. Well, it was okay, just not okay enough for me to bother with subsequent issues. That's mainly because of the $4 price point. Just not enough here for that outlay. Sue me, but 50¢ per minute of read time is just too rich for my blood!  

The story tries hard, and hits all the standard plot points one would expect if this was a Disney movie. Trouble is, it spends so much time establishing Abigail's loneliness and eccentricity that I was kind of bored with her by the time the snowman showed up. It might have been better to have started with the snowman and then establish Abigail's character through her efforts to keep him hidden. After all, how much fun would THE IRON GIANT have been if said giant had not shown up at all until the third act? I also found the art to be a little stiff, and suspect it was rendered on a computer. The "Zookeepers" strip on the back cover was actually nicer looking, with better line weight and spotting of blacks. For what it's worth, my local comics shop did not get the copy I ordered (I was the only customer to ask for it, apparently) when it first came out. The shop owner had to place a re-order, which I just got this week.  
(Read Time: 8:05) 
GRADE: C 



That's it for this week, except to note a few stats on the nine comics I brought home:

TOTAL RETAIL COST: $36.91
MY COST (retail - 20% LCS discount + 5.5% ME sales tax): $31.14

COVER PRICE
High: $4.99 (Jupiter's Legacy #5, Star Wars #1)
Average: $4.10
Median: $3.99
Low: $2.99 (Batgirl #38)

PRODUCT PAGE COUNT
High: 48 (Star Wars #1)
Average: 32
Median: 32 
Low: 28 (Abigail #1, All-New Cap #3, Daredevil #12, SHIELD #2)

STORY PAGE COUNT
High: 34 (Star Wars #1)
Average: 23.5
Median: 22
Low: 20 (All-New Cap #3, Batgirl #38, Daredevil #12)

STORY VALUE (price/story page count)
Best: 14.68¢/pg (Star Wars #1)
Average: 17.63¢/pg
Median: 18.13¢/pg
Worst: 19.95¢/pg (All New Cap #3, Daredevil #12)

STORY READ TIME
High: 17:00 (Astro City #19)
Average: 11:10
Median: 10:55
Low: 5:15 (JLU #8)

ENTERTAINMENT VALUE (price/story read time)
Best: 19.83¢/pg (Batgirl #38)
Average: 42.18¢/pg
Median: 42.47¢/pg
Worst: 76.0¢/pg (JLU #8)

PRODUCT READ TIME (inc. letter cols, promo/preview pages, etc.)
High: 20:50 (Astro City #19)
Average: 12:35
Median: 11:30
Low: 8:08 (Abigail #1)

TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT VALUE (price/total read time)
Best: 16.61¢/pg (Batgirl #38)
Average: 36.38¢/pg
Median: 34.70¢/pg
Worst: 49.38¢/pg (Abigail #1)

PANEL AVERAGE (panels/story pages)
High: 7.15/pg (Batgirl #38)
Average: 4.74/pg
Median: 4.58/pg
Low: 2.23/pg (JLU #8)

WORD AVERAGE (words/story pages)
High: 
Average:
Median:
Low:

ADVERTISING PERCENTAGE (total pgs inc. covers/(ad pgs - house ad pgs))
High: 25% (Batgirl #38, JLU #8)
Average: 12.61%
Median: 9.38%
Low: 0% (Jupiter's Legacy #5)



{[['']]}

THE PULL LIST: For September 2014



Oh, good Lord, what a disaster of an order this is going to be. 

You see, there's a notice in Diamond Distribution's Previews catalog that says the Future's End editions of regular titles from DC Comics were advance solicited in May. Yeah, I knew that, but the notice goes on to say that retailers had to order those books by May 29 and that any orders placed after that date "cannot be guaranteed." 

I get that DC is trying to avoid the cluster caused by last year's crop of 3-D covers (which were pretty cool, if not necessarily worth the extra dollar), but I did not think to place my order for September books back in May, assuming at the time that they would be solicited again in this month's catalog. Well, no dice. In fact, the books are not listed at all. So, what's a poor fanboy to do? Well, I scrounged up the solicitations online, but have decided to largely skip the books, since I am not buying the Future's End weekly series anyway. Instead, this month will be largely dedicated to experimenting with books from other companies that I have never been able to fit into my budget. How that will that affect my pull list next month, and in months to come, remains to be seen.



DC COMICS
Astro City #15, $3.99
Bodies #3, $3.99
Booster Gold: Future's End #1, $3.99
Justice League: Future's End #1, $3.99
Justice League United: Future's End #1, $3.99
Multiversity: The Society of Super-Heroes... #1, $4.99
Scooby-Doo Team-Up #6, $2.99

Notes: I drop all of my regular titles, keeping only Justice League for the event month, and that only because Wildfire is on the cover. I also add Justice League United, even though I've recently dropped the regular title, because of the Dawnstar appearance. Even when pushing back against event month foolishness, I love me some Legion! I also decide to try the Booster Gold one-shot, since time travel is his milieu, and rumors are this issue will lead into a new regular series, which I'd likely buy anyway. I was going to try the Earth-2 special, on the assumption that it will feature story beats likely to play out in the upcoming weekly series that has been rumored to be in the works. However, I have no clue who the listed writer might be and the solicitation is all about Mr. Terrific while the cover features Lois Tornado. So, I back off, fearing a FUBAR of other-wordly proportions. 

I also add in the Scooby-Doo book, which I buy when the budget allows, depending on who the gang teams up with. This Super Friends cross-over is getting tantalizingly close to the team-up I REALLY want to see: Wendy, Marvin and Wonder Dog! 

Still, I'm pre-ordering just seven DC titles this month, down from 13 last month and the fewest DC Comics I will have purchased in any one month in more than 40 years of collecting.



MARVEL COMICS
Amazing Spider-Man #1.5, $3.99
Amazing Spider-Man #5, $3.99
Daredevil #8, $3.99
Fantastic Four #10, $3.99
Fantastic Four Annual #1, $4.99
Ms Marvel #8, $2.99
Rocket Racoon #3, $3.99
Savage Hulk #4, $3.99
Silver Surfer #7, $3.99
Thor: God of Thunder #25, $4.99

Notes: Unfortunately, Marvel does not benefit from my own personal DC Implosion, as my net number of titles from them drops from 12 to 10. Despite having room in my monthly budget due to the DC cuts and the end of Original Sin, I just can't seem to find any Marvel's I'm interested in, other than the ones I'm already buying. The company's solicitation magazine is such a jumbled fudge factory of X-Men and Avengers that it makes me nauseous just to look at it. It's a shame, too. Marvel really should have seen what was coming from DC and counter-programmed a ton on first-issue launches this month to lure dissatisfied fans from the Distinguished Competition. I suppose that's maybe what The Death of Wolverine is supposed to be, but I'm so super-saturated on Wolverine I have a hard time caring. Plus, I don't for a second think Marvel is going to let Logan stay dead for long. For that reason, the solicitation really just reads like I'm being sold a bill of goods. Pass. 

That said, I do stick with Fantastic Four, which I had been thinking of dropping, and even add in the annual, against my better judgement. I have to admit, I'm really only sticking with the book because I expect to see it canceled soon (if rumors of the fight over movie rights pan out) and I kinda want to see how it all plays out. I almost re-add All-New Invaders, which I recently dropped, because the last issue I pre-ordered was pretty decent. However, I decide to leave the title on month-to-month status, reviewing each issue on the stands before purchase rather than committing to it in advance.  

Oh, and I drop All-New X-Men. I don't hate Miles Morales. I just don't really know him, having never read the Ultimate book beyond the first few issues. However, his appearance signals that All-New is venturing further and further away from what I bought into the title for, which was the adventures of the original X-Men. I wasn't wild about X-23 joining, and I'm less enamored of non-mutant ( I assume) Miles on the roster. His membership feels like a stunt just to cross-promote his new book. Also, this title has always had kind of a plodding plot and I buy it mostly for Stuart Immonen's art, and since he's not on this issue . . . 



IMAGE COMICS
Black Science #9, $3.50
Copperhead #1, $3.50
Fade Out #2, $3.50
Jupiter's Legacy #5, $4.99
Manifest Destinty #9, $2.99
Stray Bullets: Killers #7, $3.50

Notes: I add Copperhead even though there are some layout problems with the sample pages as previewed in Previews. But the art is otherwise generally okay, and since before Firefly I was a sucker for sci-fi cowboys. Of the other #1s, and Image lately has had 4-5 every month, Roche Limit looks to be a paean to "rich people suck," Larfleeze Hates Astronauts looks too weird and The Further Adventures of Tabitha Stevens just does't seem to be something that's aimed at me. 

I considered adding books that have been praised online by fans which I missed out on, such as Chew, Saga, and The Manhattan Project, as well as the various Mark Miller titles, but decide each is too deep into serialized stories for me to ever catch up. 

Of my other regular Image buys, there appears to be no Real Heroes this month. I'm still waiting to get a copy of #3 as all issues sent to my local shop arrived damaged. Meanwhile, I'm overjoyed to see a new issue of Jupiter's Legacy solicited, although I don't expect to see it actually released until sometime next March.



DARK HORSE COMICS
One for $1: Ghost #1. $1
The Goon: Occasion for Revenge #3, $3.50
Groo vs. Conan #3, $3.50
Prometheus: Fire and Stone #1, $3.50

Notes: Not a ton that appeals to me among the Dark Horse solicits, I'm afraid. However, the preview of Prometheus looks interesting, so I bite. I missed the movie, so I'll have to seek that out before this issue arrives. I figured, what the heck, at $1 I'll give Ghost a try. I assume that like previous titles in the One for $1 line, this will reprint the debut issue of Ghost's current regular series, now up to #8, but the solicit makes it seems as if this will be original material. We'll see. I considered re-adding Captain Midnight, which I recently cut, but decide to keep it on month-to-month status off the stands, if my shop has any copies left over when I get there. They only order a couple of issues beyond pre-orders, and I think I was the only customer who had it on a pull list.



DYNAMITE
Flash Gordon #5, $3.99
Flash Gordon Annual 2014, $7.99

Note: As much as I love, Love LOVE, Dynamite's Flash Gordon series, $7.99 for a 48-page comic is a really, Really, REALLY bad deal. If I was not so enamored of the regular title, and if this was any other month, I would not even consider giving this the green light. Here's a suggestion guys, try selling some advertising.

I had ordered Bob's Burger's last month, but that was mostly on a lark and I don't expect much from the book, so I don't bother to pre-order #2. If the debut issue is great, I may re-add the title and/or pick up later issues off the stands.



ARCHIE
Sabrina #1, $3.99
Afterlife with Archie #7, $3.99

Note: You'll notice that all of Archie's regular 32-page books, even the ones aimed at kids, go up to $3.99 this month. Had Afterlife with Archie launched at that price point, I would not have taken a chance on it. And it's only because it's so good that I continue with it at this price. Sabrina gets on the pull list solely on the strength of Afterlife, and because of this month's DC purge. 



BONGO
SpongeBob Comics #36, $2.99

Note: A couple of week's ago was a short one for me. Not many items off my pull list shipped that week and a few I was supposed to get were either shorted by Diamond or arrived damaged. So, with money in my pocket I had planned to spend anyway, I searched the stands for an impulse buy, eventually settling on a SpongeBob comic (#33) released the previous week. Jerry Ordway on a SpongeBob story?! SO much fun. So, I decided to pre-order the last chapter of Ordway's five-part tale. Now I just need to find #32, and make sure I don't miss #34-35!




BOOM!
George Perez' Sirens #1, $3.99

Note: It's George Perez. 'Nuff said.





Extended errata: I really wanted to order something from IDW, but just could not find anything that pushed my buttons. Sadly, most of the company's licensed titles are of properties that reached their peak popularity when I was either an adult, or into my later teens, so there's little of the nostalgia factor to lure me in. So, here's a hint IDW, go out and work a deal with Sid and Marty Krofft. Imagine Electra-Woman and Dynagirl by Kevin Maguire, Land of the Lost by Frank Cho, H.R. Pufntuf by Scottie Young, The Bugaloos by Mike Allred, or Sigmund and the Sea Monsters by Eric Powell. YES! YES!, YES! YES! and YES!

On another note, I only WISH I could afford some IDW offerings, such as Superman: The Golden Age Sundays, Will Eisner's The Sprit Artist Edition, and Puck: What Fools These Mortals Be.

Out of the rest of what's in this month's Previews, DC continues to make missteps, IMHO, with its Earth One line. The Teen Titans all grew up together in Oregon now?! I get that it's hard to reboot a team all at once that originally formed over a period of time, and it's especially hard to re-imagine the Titans sans Robin, who doesn't exist yet on this particular Elseworld, I believe. But really, this solicitation reads more like, Just Imagine Stan Lee Creating the Teen Titans. I like Jeff Lemire, and I adore the Dodson's, but this one's not for me.

Of the independent publishers, some things that caught my attention, but just missed making the cut for my $100 monthly budget — I actually went a little over, at $103.40, post discount, which will come to $110.51 with Maine state sales tax — include the following:
  • Number One #1, $3.99, from Aazurn Publising
  • Kevin Keller #15, $3.99, from Archie (just for the awesome Days of Future Past cover)
  • The Simpsons' Treehouse of Horror #20, $4.99, from Bongo
  • Wild's End #1, $3.99, from BOOM
  • Doctor Who: The Tenth Doctor #6, $3.99 from Titan (Weeping Angels!)
  • Doctor Who: The Twelfth Doctor #1, $3.99, also from Titan
  • The Death-Defying Doctor Mirage #1, $4.99, from Valiant. 
I should also mention that I took a hard look at former Valiant/Acclaim properties published by the new Valiant, as well as the one's owned by Dell (Dreamworks now?) published by Dynamite. But while some look interesting, I just couldn't find the dollars to work them into my pre-order. The same goes for Dark Horse's "final" Elfquest title, although that one catches my eye based on the original WaRP issues from years and years ago and is only hobbled by subsequent Elfquest books put out over the past couple of decades.


I'll also mention that two of Robert Kirkman's books were on the first draft of this month's order, but (common refrain) had to be cut to make budget. I almost ordered my first issue of The Walking Dead ever, having been all but ignorant of the comic until the TV show. Issue #131 promises that, "A journey begins," and that seemed a good jumping-on point. I also was going to go ahead and add Outcast, which I had previously passed on, simply because of recent sales reports -- I can't resist lemminging in with the crowd, I guess. Probably just as well that I did not order it, however. My local shop got shorted on #1, so who knows when or if I'll ever see that. The same thing happened with Manifest Destiny #1, which I did pre-order. By the time Diamond got around to fulfilling the order from my shop the series was on #6 and what I got of #1 was a fourth print! 

Finally, let me mention that I thought about filling in the jettisoned DC titles with a graphic novel, before ultimately deciding to stick with "floppies." Among the books I considered were:
  • The Rise of Aurora West, $9.99, from First Second Books
  • The Wrenchies, $19.99, also from First Second
  • Shoplifter, $19.95, from Pantheon
  • Sugar Skull, $23, from Pantheon
  • The Chimera Birgade, $9.99, from Titan
  • The New York Four, $19.99, from Dark Horse


Okay, that's it for Septemeber comics. Now to await what wonders will come our way in October!






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