What comics are those you anxiously await each month? I mean the ones you're just sitting on the edge of your seat waiting for them to arrive each month.
Mine are:
Immortal Iron Fist - Especially the Matt Fraction/Ed Brubaker/David Aja period, but Duane Swierczynski and Travel Foreman are good too. The only thing I don't like in the current run is the billionaire guilt trip that Danny's going through. I think he could put his money to better use by helping people than giving it all away. I'm glad they're putting Danny & Luke Cage back together as a team. To me they're the Spenser & Hawk of comic books. But sorta in reverse. (One continuity question I have is how did he get his company back? I thought Namor had bought it as part of his Oracle, Inc.)
Umbrella Academy - See my write up from earlier this week. It's the Royal Tenenbaums, Amazing Screw-On Head, and Grant Morrison's Doom Patrol rolled up into one and is drawn by Gabrial Ba, one of the best artists currently in the business.
Hellboy & BPRD - Mike Mignola, Guy Davis, Duncan Fegredo, John Arcudi, and more. Guy Davis is another of the best talents out there right now. Duncan's art is amazing. I had my doubts about him on Hellboy, but he's awesome. The only thing I miss are the old style Hellboy stories. To me Mignola used to do like Grant Morrison and throw everything out there and see what worked and build on that. Now he is too busy cleaning up the mess he made earlier on and not just having fun throwing things out there that Hellboy is a Brand.
Criminal - Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips on a crime book that rivals some of the best crime movies ever made. Nuff Said!
Ex Machina - Tony Harris and Brian Vaughn have created a very interesting world of politics and super-heroics in one. Not a combination I would normally think of, but they've made it one of the best comics series around. Plus Mitchell Hundred has one of the few super powers I think I'd actually like, but they even show the reasons why I might not like it as much as I think I would.
Planetary - It's probably the longest running 27 issue series of all time. Warren Ellis and John Cassaday have created a commentary on pulp fiction of the 20th century from comics to pulp magazines to movies. I don't think I will live that long, but I could entertain another 12 issues. Hopefully we'll see the 27th issue (the final issue) early 2009. John Cassaday is about half way through issue 27 according to Warren Ellis' e-mail list, Bad Signal. Issue 27 is supposed to be the epilogue. There are few comics I'd like to see as a movie or really good TV series, but Planetary is at the top of the list. I'd probably whine a lot if they screwed it up. Have you seen the Global Frequency pilot they made? Sweet!
Lone Ranger - Sweet! And the John Cassaday covers are just the gravy on the cake...you know what I mean. It's one of those rare comics than my father-in-law and I agree on. He likes it for the nostalgic reasons. I like it because, in my opinion, they've successfully updated a classic and made it believable/likable for a modern aesthetic and haven't lost the integrity of the source material.
Astonishing X-Men - Warren Ellis has taken this title to new heights. I know it's only two issues in. I generally don't enjoy Warren's Marvel work as much as his Wildstorm work and a lot of his other work is pretty hit or miss with me. I actually amazes me what of his stuff I like (Scars anyone?). He's made the X-Men interesting again. For me Joss Whedon and Grant Morrison were trying to tell new stories while also telling stories that were at least partially tributes to prior X-Men stories. Warren Ellis, on the other hand, has taken them and made them work again on their own in new stories.
Trades I anxiously await when they come out:
Y the Last Man - To me, this series was much easier to read in trade form. As soon as I'd get one, I'd speed read it cover to cover. Then I'd read it again at normal speed to see what I missed. The whole idea of being the "Last Man on Earth" if he was a total geek. It's also interesting to see a theoretical world completely run and populated by women.
100 Bullets - I discovered that I liked this series way late in the game. I picked up the first 10 trades in two weeks two at a time. As soon as I'd pick up the second one to read each time, I'd be exciting I would have to jump onto Amazon.com and order the next two. Just like a junkie looking for his next fix. Now that I'm having to wait on its normal publishing schedule I have to reread all of the trades at least every six weeks. Eduardo Risso and Brian Azzarello doing another great crime book that is also one of the great conspiracy theory books of all time.
Queen & Country - The best darned spy story ever (In my opinion). Queen & Country is Greg Rucka's love letter to the UK TV Show the Sandbaggers from the 70s and is another series I discovered late. I wasn't a huge Greg Rucka fan until I discovered Queen & Country. Actually I discovered the first novel first, then 50 pages into the first novel, I set it aside and ordered all of the available trades at the time and read them cover-to-cover twice. Then I finished the novel and bought the next one when it came out. It's funny though, I don't really know what order to put the novels and the last trade on my shelf. The last TPB, Red Panda, and the last novel overlap. I even bought all three seasons of the Sandbaggers DVDs for $50 each and watched them twice. I wish they had made more. He's supposed to do another novel next year to fill the gap and then pick up act two the following year. The existing issues are being republished in novel sized omnibus style editions called Definitive Editions. If you like Q & C, you should also read the two Whiteout trades (soon to be a major motion picture starring Kate Beckinsale). Tara Chace, star of Q & C, also has a guest appearance (almost a cameo) in Whiteout.
Daredevil - Ed Brubaker on a crime book, Nuff Said! It's probably the most I've enjoyed Daredevil in a long time. There was no one better to follow up Bendis on DD.
Captain America - OK, I'm one of those who doesn't like that Bucky is alive still, but he did make it believable (in a Marvel Universe sort of way). I also am still trusting Ed Brubaker to not screw it up. Meanwhile he's telling interesting stories in the Marvel Universe in a book whose title character is dead.
Usagi Yojimbo - Stan Sakai's story that originally started out as a tribute to Miyomoto Musashi. It's an epic tale of a ronin living during the Edo period in Japan. Very cool! He's the quintessential good guy. Think David Carradine in Kung Fu, Zatoichi, most Kurosawa films, and/or Lone Wolf and Cub.
4 comments:
Updated to add a couple that I accidentally deleted during the original post.
Okay - so my question is simple. I have never read a Hellboy story, and yet, I am curious about which one to start with. I loved the movie - but which book will grab me?
Also - I'm waiting on that Captain America too. Not a big Cap fan, but if the story is good, I have no trouble in picking up any hero series.
Oh, oh. Another question:
Since I am ordering online (per your suggestion), what are the top 10 graphic novels that I should definitely have in my collection? (Removing the typical "Watchmen" or "Dark Knight"....etc?)
Hmmmm?
First off, I recommend supporting your local comic shop before resorting to online or mail ordering. You can use both, but you gotta take care of your LCS if you have one and they're not jerks.
As for Hellboy, look watch for a future piece on that very topic.
Captain America is definitely worth reading, but to me, like many Brubaker books, it's easier to read in trade, preferably two or more at a time. His arcs tend to run more like twelve issues or more.
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