Posts Tagged “Jeff Smith”

A collection of brief comic book reviews for your pleasure or ire

0John Seven29th Dec 2009Comics, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Amulet 2: The Stonekeeper’s Curse - Kazu Kibuishi (Scholastic)
Creator Kibuishi certainly borrows from modern archetypes — Star Wars and Lord of the Rings in particular, as well as the films of Miyazake — but he is not content to let his own creations wallow in a bath of influences. Instead, his ballpeenhammerscience fiction/fantasy epic for young readers leaps off the pages thanks to the natural quality of his storytelling — and having the story center around a cool girl character like Emily certainly helps. Kibuishi has so far skipped the lame supernatural fetishism and overwrought romance that taints too many young adult efforts, preferring story, character, and imagination in an exciting dance.

Ball Peen Hammer - Adam Rapp and George O’Connor (First Second Books)
Ball Peen Hammer moves from the dark allure of post-apocalyptic science fiction into an unrelentingly grim realm populated by unexpectedly noble characters — all rendered with an animated beauty by O’Connor’s hand. The stereotypes are turned inside out, victims of their own personal failures, as humans face a monumental and deadly challenge — and at the center is the sad and too easy decision to exploit children and in the process not only kill hope but create heaps that stand as sad reminders of moral failure. As depressing as it sounds, that’s what makes it worth recommending.

Batman/Doc Savage Special (DC)
Brian Azzarello pens an alluring vignette like something out of the ’70s Brave and the Bold, with strong stylized artwork by Phil Noto. He captures Batman in his younger days and dealing with the authority figures of the time — hence pulp fiction legend Doc Savage slumming in Gotham City as a diversion. In all truth, nothing much happens here — the adventure is basically dropped by the heroes — but this story mostly serves as a prelude for the upcoming First Wave comic, which will feature great DC Implosion characters from Justice Inc. and Rima the Jungle Girl, among others. The tone here is just right — serious but not overwrought, dark but not posturing — and it bodes well for the upcoming series.

Best American Comics 2009 (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)
Charles Burns sets the tone for this year’s edition with a compelling essay that recounts his artistic and professional development as a journey through comic book collecting, where each tangent is a revelatory moment in his embrace of groundbreaking creativity. That he’s mirrored this volume’s selections in the same way is no accident. Easily one of the best in recent years, among the highlights are: Dan Zettwoch’s fictional history of a Church cartoonist’s newsletter; Peter Bagge’s comical slice of pre-Revolutionary America, and Dan Clowes’ attack on film critics and movie fetishists.

Breathers 0-4 (Just Mad Books)
If you want to read the best science fiction comic around, don’t look in any of the obvious places — Breathers is a self-published work by Wisconsin resident Justin Madson that concerns a gritty world of tomorrow that isn’t so far breathersremoved from today. In Madson’s scenario, the air we breathe has been infected with a virus for the last 40 years and people use stylish respiratory masks called “breathers” to stay alive. Madson weaves the tales of several people together in a series of shorter entries that create a wider tapestry of this future. Some are concerned with their own problems wrought from the situation, while others grapple with larger one — is the virus even real? Check it out at Madson’s website.

Cancer Vixen - Marisa Acocella Marchetto (Pantheon)
Suffering through breast cancer will get my sympathy — and my appreciation for bravery and chutzpah in the face of it — but it does not automatically mean I will think the graphic memoir of your experience is readable. In full disclosure, I couldn’t actually finish this book, so grating is the voice and narrative, and so amateurish and plain awful is the artwork. I read several reviews to make sure I wasn’t missing something, with the full intent of going back and reading the rest, but everything I encountered only cemented my reaction to this book. In contrast to what a good memoir should be, the narrative is manipulative rather than honest. Marchetto takes great pains to control our impression of her by compiling pages and pages of how successful and admired she is before we even get to the cancer. I understand that she does not want her readers to define her as the woman with cancer and have that image be our lasting impression, but then why bother to write a cancer memoir? The reader should be given a chance to discover her best qualities as she fights cancer, not have them dished out in an attempt to circumvent any impression we might have of her as a non-fabulous person with cancer. I bailed out at the diagnosis after having been pummeled by almost a hundred pages of constant bragging Also, I’m really tired of artists who who look as if they are relearning their entire craft starting with kindergarten level work when they go digital — it made an irritating story unbearable. This is a low point to the usually high standard of Pantheon’s output.

Ganges #3 (Fantagraphics)
Kevin Huizenga’s Every Man Glen Ganges faces a sleepless night and what unfolds is a mix of incoherent night rambling and time-passing mishap. Huizenga delivers a quiet tour de force that shows confident cartooning that thrills through its ease and craftsmanship, rather than stylizing the hell out of anything. His Ganges stories function as the American equivalent to Michel Rabagliati’s Paul stories, documenting a normal life with a sharp eye and a penchant for gentle revelation.

The Good Neighbors 2 - Holly Black and Ted Naifeh (Scholastic)
Spiderwyck co-creator Black continues her coming-of-age fairy-style saga as our heroine Rue starts to find her otherworldly family is beginning to take a toll on her friends, the resident Scooby Doo gang, and also that her mother isn’t as helpful as she’d hoped. Black’s first foray into the graphic novel format makes what is the now standard supernatural YA adventure more kinetic than most. and yet toned down in the histrionics and dramatics departments in such a way that grown-ups will have fun with it as well as teens. I confess that I’ll be glad when the supernatural wave in teen fiction dies down and a more open field of subject matter exists again — and also the standard plot of a kid hits a certain age and discovers he/she is secretly a wizard/vampire/fairy/spy/whatever becomes less overused — but Good Neighbors is at least agreeable in its use of these newly-minted chestnuts.

Insomnia Café - M.K. Perker (Dark Horse)
It isn’t a perfect work, but Turkish artist M.K. Perker’s stylized surrealist suspense tale — his American writing debut — insomniacafehas a lot to recommend it. Kolinsky is an expert on rare books whose shady past sends him on a downward plunge in the world, sleepless and at a job he hates. When he becomes involved with a coffee shop girl, he gets the opportunity to hide from his problems even as they snowball without his attendance. All is not as it necessarily seems, though, and Perker investigates the manifestations of that very concept from the eccentric to the unhinged. Perker is definitely one to watch.

Little Mouse Gets Ready - Jeff Smith (Toon Books)
If you’ve never considered that a children’s book about a mouse getting dressed would charm you into giddy happiness, you might want to pick this up. Combining the sweetness of old style Golden Books with a modern twist of a punchline, Smith has crafted a fun and funny little sequential picture book here — and Toon Books never disappoints, anyhow.

Skin Deep - Charles Burns (Fantagraphics)
Charles Burns offers a glimpse of what might happen if EC Comics existed today with three tales of intrigue and absurdity in this softcover reissue from the 2001 series collecting his early work. A master of the unearthly atmosphere — David Lynch has nothing on him — Burns unleashes tales of a man transplanted with a dog’s heart, a failing marriage with an alarming secret, and, best of all, an evangelist’s son’s encounter with God and his path to millions because of it. At once cautionary, creepy and curious, Burns is consistently one of comics’ deepest thinkers.

3story3 Story - Matt Kindt (Dark Horse)
In this somber and beautifully realized tale, Matt Kindt recounts the life of a real giant as seen through the eyes of the three women most important to him — his mother, his wife and his daughter. It’s Citizen Kane meets Gulliver’s Travels. As with Super Spy, Kindt’s styles are multiple and thoroughly accomplished, as is the depth of the biography that measures the perception of a man by the opposite sex. It is an area of mystery where expectations can outgrow and overtake the self that lurks within. In this book, Kindt comes up with a protagonist who is truly as big as the author’s ideas.

Trotsky: A Graphic Biography - Rick Geary (Hill and Wang)
Geary, one of the best practitioners of the non-fiction comics form,  tackles the life of Communist thinker and leader by examining his ideas at a time when such radical naivete seemed like just the answer to oppression. Though it’s hard to say that Trotsky comes off as likable, Gear isn’t afraid to present the harsher side of the man in a fight for his own principles and some level of government fairness towards ordinary human beings, even when it involves executions of peasants who refused to fight in the revolution. A person like Trotsky is unlikely to exist again — we’re less tolerant of intellectuals and anyone with foibles — but Geary does a fantastic job at bringing the era to life.

Wasteland Vol 5 - Antony Johnson, Carla Speed McNeil, Joe Infurnari, Chuck BB, and Christopher Mitten (Oni Press)
The originally invigorating Wasteland series suffers another sidetracking setback — Vol. 4 with its foray into nomadic dog tribes was irritating enough. In that, the main characters and their stories were largely relegated to minor purposes, leaving them tied up for the duration of the story. In this volume, four flashback stories are presented, filling in details of the post apocalyptic word and leading up to the stories in the first volume. The problem is that no matter how well done these stories are — and they are extremely well realized, particularly with Mitten’s stunning color work on the final story — they are mostly superfluous. A nice time passer but I hope Johnson will get back to what made this series truly interesting. To that end, I highly recommend the first 3 volumes of the series if you haven’t read them already.

wetmoonv5Wet Moon Vol. 5 by Ross Campbell (Oni Press)
Campbell’s ongoing series of graphic novels follows a loose group of industrial-goth art school students in a mysterious Southern swamp town. Based on his own experiences at the Savannah College of Art and Design, Campbell weaves a network of gossip, doubt, and confessions that creates a mystique of experience in those transition years between high school and adulthood. Campbell shows an uncanny respect and sympathy for every character who enters the story, which keeps it down to earth even as the strange feeling in the air begins to wrap mystery around the story in ways you can’t quite put your finger on, even as it careens into an wholly unexpected event.

Year of Loving Dangerously - Ted Rall (NBM)
Unapologetically frank memoir of the year Rall spent as — there is no delicate way to put this — a gigolo who traded his favors for a roof over his head and a bed. Not just one — multiple places of action and rest were his in 1980s New York City, and this maze of mattresses serves as a stellar travelogue to life at that place and time. If Rall comes off as a bit of a rogue, he’s a least one with an interesting tale to tell — a series of misfortunes that saw him kicked out of college and on the streets during one of the scariest times in NYC history to be a homeless person.

Review: Bone - Rose by Jeff Smith and Charles Vess

0John Seven5th Sep 2009Comics, , ,

The acclaimed YA graphic novel series returns with this one-volume prequel that ups the girl power by revisiting a character in the series during a pivotal moment in her youth.

Two princesses, Rose and Briar, are undergoing intensive training to determine which one will eventually ascend to the throne. That honor revolves around the ability of each to hone her “dreaming eye” and become knowledgeable in the lore that will allow them to access the larger universe. When they are both taken for a final test at the Old Man’s Cave, dreams mix with the waking life to create a situation that will decide the crown in ways that Rose never expected.

No prior knowledge of the Bone series is required to enjoy this — in fact, it might be recommended. A lot of this is back story that has been covered in Smith’s epic, here fleshed out and with fewer surprises if you have experience with the books. As a standalone work, “Rose” succeeds marvelously. Smith and Vess have crafted a rich saga apart from the main story that utilizes all the trappings of the fantasy genre while mixing them up into something a little different than most. Even dragons seem fresh in the context that Smith provides.

Best of all is the character of Rose — plucky, brave and sincere, she’s the best girl hero I’ve encountered in books since Lyra in Phillip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy. A fully-rounded character, Rose draws you into the story and provides you with the  same surprises that any real person would. Meanwhile, Vess’ visual portrayal of her is animated and engaging — she leaps from the pages with energy and emotion. Far from following any sort of archetypal checklist, Rose is scrappy and unpredictable, with tough decisions to make in her adventure. For story and character to come together so gracefully is a big achievement for Smith and Vess — I’m sure there are more stories to be told about Rose and I’m positive there are girls out there who would be thrilled to read them.

Review: Shazam - The Greatest Stories Ever Told

0John Seven23rd May 2008Book Articles, Comics, , , ,

Of all the superheroes in the tapestry of costumed wonders, it’s Captain Marvel who has gotten the raw deal. In his original incarnation in the ’40s and ’50s, he was a character of silly and delightful whimsy, but he has always been harder for the modern writer to peg. The usual plan is to aim it towards kids, but that often becomes a labor in simplifying the presentation rather than crafting a superhero tale on par with some of comparable recent literature for kids.

At some point, though, creator Jeff Smith was brought in and his “Shazam: The Monster Society of Evil” proved to be a hoot — Captain Marvel done right and done modern.

As a way of traversing the other interpretations of the character, DC has released “Shazam: The World’s Greatest Stories,” which gives several examples through the decades that show that Captain Marvel and the rest of the cast are often delightful enough to shine through in any era.

There are several fun stories from more recent times — “With One Magic Word” offers a good natured team-up with Superman and the comical “Out of the Dark Cloud” takes details of Captain Marvel’s magical transformation from Billy Batson to the World’s Mightiest Mortal and extends them to wacky extremes. There is also a bizarre — and I mean that in the best possible way — tale involving “Captain Thunder,” a kind of alternate Captain Marvel who has gone bad and is causing some problems for Superman.

But the real treasures of the book are the six stories from the character’s original era that really capture his essence. The origin story is often reprinted, but little seen tales such as Joe Simon and Jack Kirby’s untitled tale a visit to a planet inhabited by domineering dragon men from “Captain Marvel Adventures #1″ are a whole lot of fun.

In great bit of absurdity, the Marvel Family helps build a modern city in the Amazon for a society of talking apes, but discovers that the apes aren’t all that they seem and their naive trust of the simian society turns to a race to save the world, with the craziest way to save the day you can imagine.

Most impressive of all is “Captain Marvel Battles the World,” a charming and sly fable that has the World’s Mightiest Mortal evading the ire of the earth itself. The earth is sick of humans digging into it and despite the moon’s attempts to talk it out doing anything, the earth retaliates with a series of natural disasters that Captain Marvel must present. The surreal tale comes to a conclusion when even the earth learns a valuable lesson about appreciating a resident superhero.

This is highly recommended for kids, but grown-ups with a good sense of delight and an affection for whimsy will eat these marvelous tales up.

Review: Shazam: The Monster Society of Evil by Jeff Smith

0John Seven6th Dec 2007Book Articles, Comics, , , ,

It’s a simple fact that the way most people encounter superheroes in any prolonged way is through television shows and movies. The public is familiar with the drawn image of any given superhero, but less so with the actual stories in which they appear. There are probably many reasons for this, but I would suggest that there is one simple one that supersedes all others — the stories aren’t self-contained. Even in collections of comic book stories, it’s like joining a story mid-stream — if you don’t need to know actual plot points, history is still often a demand made of the reader — and for many people, it’s a lot easier just to settle into a good movie about the same.

Perhaps it would be easier if comic book superheroes functioned like Sherlock Holmes, where endless tales are told as collection of self-contained islands of fiction — you just have to know who Holmes and Watson are to enjoy them, but not their entire biography.

In the new book “Shazam: The Monster Society of Evil,” ac-claimed comic book creator Jeff Smith (his “Bone” books transcended genre borders and audiences, and claimed some attention outside of the comic book world) gives Captain Marvel the much-needed treatment by rebooting, reimagining and revisiting the hero all at the same time. It’s a self-contained adventure with a kid-friendly charm mixed with an adult wit.

Captain Marvel started out in the 1940s as what can only really be described as a superhero fantasy — it didn’t take place in the same sort of “real world” as Superman or Batman, and it was peppered with magic and whimsy that was more reminiscent of “The Wizard of Oz” than anything else — talking tigers, evil worms, wise and kindly ancient sorcerers. As the era passed and Captain Marvel became the property of DC Comics, it seemed obvious that many of the creators given a chance to work on the character didn’t quite know what to do with it. They were often torn between trying to maintain the innocent charm in a world where it no longer seemed natural or working to update the story into a grittier market in which the characters barely resembled their original selves.

Smith’s story is a reworking of a ’40s comic book serial that has Captain Marvel battling against the mysterious Mr. Mind, but the twists and turns he takes, mixed with the genial feeling the book conveys, is not trapped by the confines of the original, but walks alongside it, arm in arm, in a different era.

Smith manages miraculously to update the story of orphan Billy Batson and his transformation into the World’s Mightiest Mortal into the modern world with hints of the darkness that exists, while still making the innocence of the characters and situation seem natural. In Smith’s version, Batson is a sweet but crafty street scalawag and Captain Marvel is an amiable and kind galoot always u to save the world. Marvel’s talking tiger friend Tawky Tawny is reintroduced as a shape-shifting wandering spirit who affects the tiger form, while his greatest foe, the evil scientist Dr. Sivana, is now the United States attorney general, a Dick Cheney-like scientific criminal attempting to use Billy and the Captain for his own reward.

In the best twist of all, Billy and the Captain’s younger sister, Mary — that is Mary Marvel — is an abundantly energetic little kid (as opposed to her 40s incarnation as a young teen girl of appropriate manners). Mary sparks even more energy in the story — she’s a fireball of childhood that is to be reckoned with and a wonderful addition to the cast.

Given the prominence of TV shows like “Justice League Unlimited” and imprints like Johnny DC’s kid line, it seems that child-friendly superheroes are being allowed to prosper after two decades promoting the darker and more brooding interpretations. Smith’s “Shazam” goes to the top of the list of the possibilities of genre — not every superhero comic book has the potential to be like this, certainly, but one hopes that others will take it as an example of what can be done and rise to the occasion— and that Smith will return to do more stories, whether of Captain Marvel or some other super friend.