Dear Neil Gaiman, Dave McKean and Todd Klein,

January 10, 2010

Black Orchid – Neil Gaiman, art by Dave McKean, lettering by Todd Klein – 144 pages

“After being viciously murdered, Susan is reborn fully grown as the Black Orchid, a hybrid of plant and human, in order to avenge her own death. Now as this demigoddess attempts to reconcile her human memories and botanical origins, she must also untangle the webs of deception and secrets that led to her murder. Beginning in the cold streets of a heartless metropolis and ending in the lavish heartland of the thriving Amazon, this book takes the reader through a journey of secrets, suffering, and self-rediscovery.”  –from DCComics.com/Vertigo

I picked up a Black Orchid comic quite some time ago because I love female crimefighters, and I find orchids to be both visually pleasing and symbolically appealing, so the combination seemed like the kind of thing I’d enjoy.  When I discovered the Gaiman/McKean version of Black Orchid, I knew I’d hit paydirt.

Mr. Gaiman, anybody who reads this blog knows I’m a huge fan, but for some reason I’ve never gotten around to reading Sandman–so my experience of your writing in comics is limited to graphic novels or guest writing of single arcs in continuous series.  I’ve liked all the graphia of yours that I’ve read, though, and this trade is no exception.  Somehow you managed to write something that captures and keeps my attention, but is so dreamlike that I’ve forgotten what it was about almost as soon as I’ve finished reading it–I’m just left with this really pleasant sense that some kind of fascinating journey has occurred, and I got to go along for the ride.  Maybe that doesn’t sound like a compliment, but it’s meant as one.

Part of the dreaminess, though, is the incredible art.  Mr. McKean, I love your work no matter what style you’re using, but this gritty-yet-ethereal sort of photorealism works so well with the strange story, and you do such a lovely job making the orchids seem so alien without being frightening.  The juxtaposition of color palettes, of gray city and red violence versus the orchids and verdant jungles and things…well, it was fantastic.

Also, I don’t know if the excellent placement and coloration of the text boxes and speech bubbles were part of the art or went with the lettering work, but either way, it was brilliant.  Mr. Klein, never let it be said that I don’t appreciate excellent lettering–you make the whole thing readable, and yet it never looked out of place with the art style.  Awesome.

Four enthusiastic stars for Black Orchid!

Love,

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Wanna check out this title for yourself?  Try the Indie Bound or ABC bookstore finders!


Dear Joss Whedon, John Cassaday…

April 3, 2009

…Laura Martin and Chris Eliopoulos,

Astonishing X-Men:  DangerousAstonishing X-Men:  GiftedThere are less of you to write to than I usually end up listing in a comic tpb review, so way to go with the condensing of the work.  ;)   Like any good Joss fangirl, I finally got around to reading Astonishing X-Men:  Gifted and Astonishing X-Men:  Dangerous, the first two collections of the Astonishing run.  Joss, the things I love about your writing are all over these two books–perhaps best summed up in the moment where Colossus fights for three panels musing on freedom, Shadowcat fights for five panels musing on destiny and love, and Wolverine fights silently for three panels before thinking “I really like beer.”  The serious and the hilarious are always side-by-side with you, and it makes the X-men wonderfully human.  There’s a lot going on, plot-wise, but the great thing about what you’ve done here is that they’re all accessible–if you’ve seen the movies, or read a few X-men issues before, it’s surprisingly easy to get the hang of what’s going on.

These trades have great art, too; Mr. Cassaday, I’m particularly fond of your Beast.  I love his furry face, and the way his eyes go from crazy animal to calculating scientist from one panel to the next.  I’m also quite enamored of the Danger-Room-come-to-life robot woman, and her astonishing eyelashes.  The colors are great, the action is great, even the lettering is great!  I can’t wait to read the next volume.  Five X’s…I mean…stars!

Love,

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Wanna check out this title for yourself?  Try the Indie Bound or ABC bookstore finders!


Dear Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa…

March 26, 2009

…Darick Robertson, Wayne Faucher, Jimmy Palmiotti, Rodney Ramos, Scott Koblish, Matt Milla, Cory Petit, Rus Wooton and Greg Land,

Nightcrawler:  The Winding WayNightcrawler:  The Devil InsideWhew, that was quite a list–as it always is when I’m reviewing awesome trade paperbacks, and I’ve got a two-for-one deal here.  Nightcrawler:  The Devil Inside and its sequel Nightcrawler: The Winding Way collect an AWESOME series of issues.  Mr. Aguirre-Sacasa, I’ve loved your writing since I read The Mystery Plays and Say You Love Satan while doing research for my Masters project (comics and theater–it was cool).  You’ve always got this great mix of religious symbolism and demons and angels and stuff going on–which, of course, is ideal for a Nightcrawler book.  And the art…wow.  Kurt Wagner is the hottest blue fuzzy mutant out there, and you all capture him wonderfully.  Especially when he’s coming out of the shower.  Five stars for these two trades, hooray for the dogmatic side of X-Men.

Love,

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Wanna check out this title for yourself?  Try the Indie Bound or ABC bookstore finders!


Dear Gail Simone…

June 23, 2008

The Battle Within…Joe Bennett, Ed Benes, Tom Derenick, Joe Prado, Eddy Barrows, Jack Jaoson, Ed Benes, Bob Petrecca, Robin Riggs, Jared Fletcher, Phil Balsman and Hi-Fi Design,

It takes so many folks to make a comic, and far be it from me to leave out any step of the process.  Hence all the names on this particular letter.  Now, on to the meat of things–Birds of Prey:  The Battle Within I’m slowly catching up on the trades of Birds of Prey, featuring one of the hottest heroines ever, Black Canary. Fishnets, anyone? Anyway, superhero comics don’t get better than this–kickass women in tight costumes, an appearance by Black Canary’s mom (the original BC), flashbacks of Batgirl in her hot-redhead-librarian prime, martial arts duels on a beach in Singapore and the seedy docks of Gotham, crazy villainesses, multiple appearances of the famed Canary Cry, and BABS MOVED HER TOES. Gotta go get the next one right away!  It takes a village to raise a comic trade paperback, and I owe you folks for this five-star read.

PS – Almost forgot what was possibly the best part. Black Canary SCOLDED BATMAN. She’s got some rocks.

Love,

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Wanna check out this title for yourself?  Try the Indie Bound or ABC bookstore finders!


Dear Michael Dooney,

June 10, 2008

ChallengesHow do I express the joy that reading Challenges gives me?  I’m sure I did a botch-up job of it when I met you at NYCC last spring, and you signed my copy in such an excellent and personalized way, with the little drawing and all.  Anyway, I’ve had this little book in my collection probably since the year it was published (I was nine), and it’s held steady in my personal top five graphic novels, let alone top Ninja Turtles comics.  I re-read it again, clearly, and it was just as good as all the other times. The art is dynamic and interesting, the stories are funny and clever, and the design of the book is just lovely.  I especially love the story where you think it’s all about how Leo is the consummate warrior, when actually he just finished signing Raph up for the Barry Manilow fan club.  Priceless.  You rock, Michael Dooney!  Also, the lettering (by Mary Kelleher) is really fantastic. Lettering is so often overlooked–but I’m impressed by how wonderfully it’s done in this book.  Five stars, cowabunga.

Love,

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Wanna check out this title for yourself?  Try the Indie Bound or ABC bookstore finders!


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