COMIC OF THE WEEK: Dying is Easy #1 delivers dark humor and a seedy set-up for mystery

By d. emerson eddy — When I was in university, I tried my hand at a bit of stand-up. During high school, I was part of the improv troupe and had written what was kind of a comedic play, inspired by both George Carlin and Spalding Gray to try working out a few things through comedic monologues. I wasn't very good. I had a habit of leaning towards dark humor, but it was the sort of thing that people didn't want to hear from some twenty-year-old university kid. Not enough life experience to be credible, with subject material that was too dark. Even if they were real life experiences. I learned early on that there was a fine line between looking at horrible events through the mirror of comedy and just being depressing or crass. And dying at the mic was easy.

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Top Comics to Buy for December 11, 2019: Superman, New Mutants, Undiscovered Country, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — This doesn’t have much to do with our Top Comics to Buy for December 11, 2019, but it’s my site and I don’t have a profit motivation (even a little bit whatsoever) to feel beholden to, so I’m going to lead with it anyway — you all, I organized a bunch of the big stack of comics I have laying around my office this weekend, and it feels incredible. I’ve moved across the country twice now, and as such I’m seriously re-thinking my approach to physically collecting comic books.

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COMIC OF THE WEEK: Dead Eyes #3 is a book about crime that also has a big heart

By d. emerson eddy — In 2018, Image Comics had launched a new crime thriller about a thief who just up and disappeared one day, after supposedly making a big score. That book was called Dead Rabbit, and it was unfortunately cancelled due to problems with the trademark. Thankfully, it was tweaked and renamed, and for the past few months we've seen it returned as Dead Eyes. The first two issues are already on the stands, reprinting a slightly modified version of the first two installments of the first book. Here in Dead Eyes #3 is where the brand new material hits and, man, it was worth the wait.

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Top Comics to Buy for December 4, 2019: Deathstroke #50, Everything #4, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — I am always caught by surprise by holidays, which consistently leaving me feeling more worn out than they do rejuvenated for reasons I struggle to understand. Anyway, point is I’m here, a little worse for the Thanksgiving ware. I am, however, totally ready to let you know about the books that our committee (of one) has selected as the Top Comics to Buy for December 4, 2019.

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Comic of the Week: The Plot #3, more excellent family drama in a top-tier horror story

By d. emerson eddy — Vault is one of the most consistent publishers in comics today. For the past few years they have been publishing some of the most unique and innovative stories, all of which feel like something wholly new. They've fostered a creative vision for their publishing platform that seems to allow their creators to take ideas that might appear old and subsequently transform them into something new, or just outright create things that we've never really seen before. From Heathen to These Savage Shores, Relics of Youth to Vagrant Queen, Friendo to Wasted Space, these books run the gamut of genres as their creators consistently manage to elevate the medium. Now they're doing it again as The Plot thickens.

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Top Comics to Buy for November 27, 2019: Batman Creature of the Night, Ascender, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — Sorry for the delay this week, but it’s actually kind of fitting because our comic of the week is Batman Creature of the Night #4. So, why does that make it kind of fitting? Well, because two years have elapsed between the release of Batman Creature of the Night #1 and this week’s finale.

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Comic of the Week: The Question - The Deaths of Vic Sage #1

By d. emerson eddy — Hrrm. Influence, homage, legacy, lineage, and parody in comics can be quite an interesting thing. When you've got long-running recurring serial characters, it's inevitable that there will be cycles and returns as creators who were once fans of original stories and characters borrow from them in their own stories. We see it time and again, and we see it here in The Question: The Deaths of Vic Sage #1, from Jeff Lemire, Denys Cowan, Bill Sienkiewicz, Chris Sotomayor, and Willie Schubert, in a very unique way. The Question started out as a Randian exploration from Steve Ditko.

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The Saga Re-Read: Saga #53, where it all starts to go even worse

By Zack Quaintance — Re-reading Saga has been a dual exercise in clarity and familiar feelings. The clarity comes with the reminders of what has happened in this story and why, both of which are liable to get lost when you read a comic monthly. The familiar feelings are a bigger surprise, in that I find myself being moved by this story in almost the exact same ways I was the first time through.

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REVIEW: Ice Cream Man #16, this series somehow continues to get better

By Zack Quaintance — Look, I know I’ve heaped just a ton of praise on Ice Cream Man in the past two years or so that the book has been coming out. As such, I know some of you may be tired of hearing it or are simply tuning me out. Still. If just one new reader comes to this book because of something I write about it, I think continuing to praise this comic is worthwhile. It’s just that good, and, somehow, it also continues to get better.

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REVIEW: Rai #1 evokes the peak Valiant Universe of a few years back

By Zack Quaintance — Plain and simple, Rai #1 reminds me of a better time for Valiant. It reminds me of the 4001 AD event of a few years back, which came before the leadership change that resulted in the ouster of long-time Valiant creative leader Dinesh Shamdasani, which is a personnel change that in my opinion the publisher has never quite recovered from. But I digress. For the unfamiliar, 4001 AD ran during the summer of 2016, and it told the story of future Earth in which the mostly-privileged lived in the island nation of Japan, which is ruled by a benevolent AI called Father. 

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REVIEW: Olympia #1 is a stunning debut comic for readers who love comics

By Zack Quaintance — Olympia #1 is a comic for people who loves comics, who love the medium, love the history, and love the grandeur of the characters, concepts, and ideas it has kept alive for so many years. The first of five, this introductory chapter follows a protagonist named Elon, who is a latchkey kid that finds company and escape in comics. His adventure starts when, to borrow a turn of phrase from the preview text, “his favorite superhero, Olympian, comes crashing off the page and into reality.”

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REVIEW: Heart Attack #1, a powerful debut that announces the arrival of a major new series

By Zack Quaintance — Phew, Heart Attack #1 was so good. So good, in fact, that I’m struggling a bit as to where to start heaping praise upon this book. I’ll start with where I was at with it before I read the comic. I knew this one was a must-read the moment I read that Eric Zawadzki was the artist. 

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Top Comics to Buy for November 20, 2019: Ice Cream Man #16, Money Shot #2, and more!

By Zack Quaintance — The great new #1 issues just keep coming this month, and — here’s my favorite part — the vast majority of creator-owned. During the first two Wednesdays alone, we got excellent new books such as Undiscovered Country #1, Black Stars Above #1, Family Tree #1, Folklords #1, and Heist or How to Steal a Planet #1. That is..a lot of excellent and original new books. 

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Comic of the Week: Dollhouse Family #1 keeps the Hill House momentum going

By d. emerson eddy — The Joe Hill curated line of Hill House Comics had an auspicious debut with Basketful of Heads #1 and that high continues with the first issue of The Dollhouse Family. This series reunites long-time collaborators MR Carey and Peter Gross, responsible for such luminary work on Lucifer, The Unwritten, and The Highest House, alongside Vince Locke, Cris Peter, and Todd Klein for a story that mixes family drama with childhood fantasies and an ancient something that fell to Earth.

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The Saga Re-Read: Saga #52 is ominous as all get out

By Zack Quaintance — So, it’s been a while since the last installment of the Saga Re-Read, which we posted way back on Sept. 20...like six weeks ago! To be totally honest, I thought we’d have an announcement of a return date by now, especially with writer Brian K. Vaughan appearing at New York Comic Con. Part of me thought his presence at the show was all about announcing a Saga return.

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Drawn From Perspective: Wolverton: Thief of Impossible Objects #1 & #2

By. J. Paul Schiek — I’ll go out on a limb and say it’s a fairly rare thing for me to look at an idea or intellectual property and grow legitimately jealous that I wasn’t the one to think of it. Okay, well, it probably happens more often than I’m letting on, but in the case of Wolverton: Thief Of Impossible Objects, it’s been a hard one to let go, let alone forget. I mean, look at it for Pete’s sakes?! It’s a comic book about a jewel thief who is six parts Westley from Princess Bride, and four parts literally every David Niven role ever. He’s extraordinary, he’s a gentleman, and he takes his leagues the same way the San Diego Padres take their chances of ever winning a World Series (20,000 under). 

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REVIEW: Black Stars Above #1, Canadian cosmic horror has never looked so good

By Nick Couture — Black Stars Above #1 sees writer Lonnie Nadler striking out on his own after frequent collaborations with Zac Thompson. Nadler — who is joined here by a team of Jenna Cha, Brad Simpson, and Hassan Ostmane-Elhaou — has created something that feels wholly “Nadler.” It’s a small personal story with striking art. Canadian cosmic horror has never looked so good.

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REVIEW: Fallen Angels #1 is the first misfire from the new Dawn of X

By Zack Quaintance — No. Oh no. No no no no no no no. Noooooooooo...is what I was thinking while reading Fallen Angels #1, the sixth and final title in this Dawn of X relaunch wave for the X-Men franchise. Admittedly, I’m being harsh here, but Fallen Angels suffers from proximity to five other excellent new X-Men comics, and the comparison exacerbates this comic’s flaws.

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REVIEW: Family Tree #1 speaks to many of Jeff Lemire’s long-time storytelling interests

By Zack Quaintance — Family Tree is the best type of genre-bending comic, in that it doesn’t feel like it’s setting out to be a genre-bending comic. And look, I know that sounds goofy, but I really couldn’t get to a better way of phrasing it. This is a comic that has family drama, body horror, and a foreshadowed apocalypse. There’s a lot going on within the 20-some pages of this debut issue, and yet it doesn’t feel at all like the creators felt obligated to include any of the places this story goes for marketability or shock value or standing out, or whatever other reason contrived narrative bits find end up in comics.

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REVIEW: Folklords #1 is a polished and fresh take on the fantasy genre

By Zack Quaintance — We try to review most notable new #1 comics, with a heavy heavy emphasis on creator-owned books. As such, this year it has felt like every other week, I’m sitting down at my computer and typing, OMG this is crazy but we have yet another stellar first issue for a truly scary new horror book! Wow wow wow...what are the odds! I’m hyperbolizing a bit, but it really has been a strong year for horror comics. Off the top of my head, I’m in love various degrees of love with The Plot, Resonant, Cult Classic: Creature Feature, Pandemic, Basketful of Heads, The Mall, Bad Reception, Something is Killing the Children, You Are Obsolete, Gideon Falls, Ice Cream Man and the list goes on.

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