Top Comics to Buy for November 13, 2019: Far Sector, Usagi Yojimbo, X-Men, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — The holiday is really setting in now, which means our committee (of one) is extra grateful for weeks like this in which there are less notable books...but the books we are getting through the direct market are largely stellar. This is a week in which a few key things dawned on me. I mean, I’m always talking about how good comics are right now, but maybe that’s always a little bit true when you’re reading a lot and keeping really engaged with the medium (the same can be said of movies, TV, music, etc.).

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Comic of the Week: Green Lantern - Blackstars #1 is not to be missed for readers of The Green Lantern

By d. emerson eddy — The Green Lantern from Grant Morrison, Liam Sharp, Steve Oliff, and Tom Orzechowski was one of the best series over the past year. The first season was not so much a wild reimagining of the property as a collation of numerous ideas in new and entertaining ways, building an overarching tale of Controller Mu's manipulation of events to lead to Hal Jordan choosing an inevitability. That choice led to this new series, with reality rewritten and the universe remade by Mu's will in Green Lantern: Blackstars #1.

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Best Comics of October 2019: These Savage Shores, Doom Patrol, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — While the debut issues in October probably got more attention, there were also some significant conclusions last month, too. First of hall the Jonathan Hickman-mastermined House of X / Powers of X combo finished its drastic and visionary reinvention of the X-Men line of comics (you know, the one basically everyone is talking about), which paved the way for all those Dawn of X reviews.

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Best New #1 Comics October 2019: Superman Smashes the Klan, Mutant Pirates, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — So, I broke the usual rules for this column this month. I actually went with six titles in our top 5 Best New #1 Comics section rather than five. But hey, it’s my website, I don’t have a profit motive with it (and as such am not beholden to anyone anywhere at all, which is a rare thing in 2019 life), and I can do what I like. 

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REVIEW: Going to the Chapel #3 is madcap, unpredictable, and very funny

By Zack Quaintance — There’s a reason that famous comedian/actor Patton Oswalt keeps Tweeting about Going to the Chapel. As I’ve written in past reviews, this is a well-done book that delves fearlessly into the absurd, exploring madcap relationship drama and doling out one-liners left and right. It’s also very very funny through out. And so it makes sense that Oswalt (who knows from funny) would be as into the book as I am. 

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REVIEW: New Mutants #1 is a space romp brimming with cosmic adventure and one-liners

By Zack Quaintance — In some ways, New Mutants #1 might be the most surprising debut issue within the Dawn of X, which is the six-comic line-wide X-Men relaunch that’s now one book away from complete. Sure, some of the other comics have bigger plot twists (see X-Force) or wilder concepts (see Excalibur), but New Mutants is a rarer thing — it’s a comic that’s being co-written by Jonathan Hickman, that deals more in individual moments than it does high-concept sci-fi ideas.

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REVIEW: Wasted Space #11 is the funniest issue of an already-hilarious series

By Zack Quaintance — Maybe this compromises me as a reviewer of the arts, but I just love Wasted Space so much. I think I can say that, given this is the 11th issue of a longer story, which means we’re talking not just about this chapter but all that has come before as well. Anyway, as I’ve written in the past, Wasted Space is one of the best series in comics because of its tone. It’s established itself as a story with a great deal of range. It can have its characters lay down long monologues about philosophy, politics, and the nature of societal structures...right before segueing into a hilarious multi-panel joke about blue penises. It’s just an incredibly versatile space opera, built with much fun and excitement by writer Michael Moreci, artist Hayden Sherman, and the rest of the Wasted Space team.

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REVIEW: X-Force #1 is the dark heart of the Dawn of X

By Zack Quaintance — I knew when they got Benjamin Percy to write X-Force that this comic would be the dark heart of the new X-Books. Now that X-Force #1 has arrived, I’ve seen just how dark things in this series are about to get. See, Percy’s time in comics is maybe not an accurate reflection of his writerly interest, with the bulk of his work in the medium coming on the DC title, Green Arrow.

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REVIEW: Coffin Bound #4 is a visually-poetic abstraction of a finale

By Zack Quaintance — Since reading the first issue of Coffin Bound over the summer, one of the scenes in the book has really lingered in my mind. It depicts what is, essentially, a literal strip club, in which a dancer removes clothes...and then begins to remove skin. Eventually, the dancer in the scene is stripped down to the insides, raising a powerful visual metaphor about the nature of objectification.

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REVIEW: Heist or How to Steal a Planet #1 is an ambitious, high-wire act of a debut

By Zack Quaintance — As a reader — of novels, short stories, comics, anything — I apparently do not have an over-saturation point for well-told stories about the dangers of corporate greed. There is certainly no shortage of these stories in comics, be they near-future dystopian extensions of things we see in the real world every day, or giant science fiction projects that take familiar themes and extrapolate them deep into realms of fantasy. Heist or How to Steal a Planet #1 definitely falls into the latter category. 

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REVIEW: No One Left to Fight #5, ‘bigger and bombastic-ier’

By Jarred A. Luján —  No One Left to Fight #5 is out THIS WEEK! For those of you who have been following this book and were hoping for a big, bombastic ending to a comic that has had some of the biggest, bombastic issues year round, I have news! It is bigger and bombastic-ier­ than I imagined. I don’t think I’m allowed to curse in these (Ed. note: he is), so suffice to say: Holy cow. What an insane issue.

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Top Comics to Buy for November 6, 2019: Wasted Space, Die, Everything, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — This is the most packed week I’ve seen all year, at least as far as my own tastes in creator-owned comics are concerned. Each week, we pick a top 5 list of new comics coming on Wednesday to spotlight. This week’s list of Top Comics to Buy for November 6, 2019 could have easily gone to 6, or 7, or maybe even 10. There were, quite simply, too many great books.

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Comic of the Week: Basketful of Heads #1 is a great start for Hill House Comics

By d. emerson eddy — Basketful of Heads #1 is the launch book for DC's new horror imprint within Black Label comics. Dubbed Hill House Comics, this new line of horror stories is curated by Eisner & Stoker-award winning writer and co-creator of Locke & Key, Joe Hill.

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Drawn From Perspective: Thumbs #5 is a sneaky Dark Knight Returns successor

By J. Paul Schiek — I’ll always have a special place in my heart for the sort of classic-but-wholly-unintelligible books, like Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight Returns. Apart from the appealing premise of an aged and tired Bruce Wayne returning from retirement, the book is probably better known for its (at the time, at least, if not now) envelope-pushing visuals. Bearing that in mind, I had had an itch in the back of my head each and every time I picked up an issue of the Sean Lewis-penned Thumbs, with art by the incomparable Hayden Sherman. Or, indeed, when I picked up a previously read issue for a second glance or full immersion. While comprised of its own characters and settings, and festooned with its own directions and ideas, Thumbs, to eschew any undue comparisons, is not the logical successor to DKR…it is actually a usurper that steals its throne entirely.

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Thirsty Thursdays October 2019: Mutants-only FOREVER

By Allison Senecal — Happy Halloween, you all, and welcome back to Thirsty Thursdays, which I think it’s safe to say is among the top monthly looks at thirsty comic book art anywhere on the Internet. Now, you may be wondering…is this column still mutants-only? YES (mostly). But now it’s also a sex and resurrection cult.

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REVIEW: The Plot #2 is more of the same high-quality storytelling from the debut

By Zack Quaintance — If you haven’t read my review of The Plot #1, allow me for a moment to summarize in brief: I thought it was one of the best creator-owned debut issues of the year (in a top-tier that now also includes Undiscovered Country). Basically, that first dropped readers into a full-formed world, which is impressive enough but the creator-owned ecosystem of late has gotten really good at that. What set The Plot #1 aside, was that it also seamlessly doled out the necessary bits of a complex family backstory/dynamic while establishing itself as a character-driven drama about two young, orphaned siblings.

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REVIEW: Wolvenheart #1, a polished adventure comic that sends monster hunters travelling through time

By Zack Quaintance — Wolvenheart #1 is a slick-looking comic that operates with the exact right amount of absurdity appropriate for a story about a time-travelling werewolf hunter. It’s an entertaining read, one that bounces through the ideas it needs to establish in order to pull off its world-building, doing so relatively efficiently. It’s also one of those comics that finds new narrative ground by combining past ideas, a bit like fusion cuisine at a restaurant or a mix by a DJ that specializes in mash-ups.

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REVIEW: SFXS #2 is a refreshing type of creator-owned comic

By Nick Couture — Hot off a stellar #1 issue, the creative team of the new Image comic, SFSX (Safe Sex) continues to gel on all levels. That team, by the way, is Tina Horn, Michael Dowling, Chris O’Halloran, Steve Wands, Tula Lotay, and Lauren Mccubbin. The story here is about Avory, a former artist and sex worker, wrestling with the sudden detainment of her partner George by the evil anti-sex totalitarian government, and it intensifies in the second issue as she approaches former friends and colleagues to ask for help. Safe Sex is dystopian. It’s grim, but it’s so lovingly crafted you feel like you’re in safe hands.

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REVIEW: Excalibur #1 is very much its own thing, for better or worse

By Zack Quaintance — This week’s Excalibur #1 brings us right to the edge of the halfway point of Dawn of X, which is the new wave of six X-Men titles springing out of the recently-concluded House of X / Powers of X reconceptualization of Marvel’s X-Men franchise. Next week, a double-punch of New Mutants and X-Force will hurdle us over that halfway point, but for now, here we are. So, about this comic...Excalibur #1 is the first title of the new X-Men era that I, quite frankly, don’t really know what to make of.

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Comic of the Week: Dracula - Son of the Dragon blends fact and fiction in intriguing ways

By d. emerson eddy — October is generally a good month for ghosts and ghoulies, things that go bump in the night, and horror stories and this year does not disappoint. Just in time for Halloween, Mark Sable and Salgood Sam's crowd-funded graphic novel mixing history and horror as a Comixology Original in Dracula: Son of the Dragon.

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