Monday, November 4, 2024

Heat Seeker: A Gun Honey Series Graphic Novel Preview

 


I reviewed the first issue of this series. It was my introduction to the Gun Honey franchise and the Hard Case Crime stories. It's a lot of fun, with tons of energy, so check it out!

Warning: Heat Seeker is hot stuff, and for Mature readers only!

Here's all the info from Titan Comics:


HEAT SEEKER: A GUN HONEY SERIES

Writer: Charles Ardai

Illustrator: Ace Continuado

Publisher: Hard Case Crime (Titan Comics imprint)

SC, 112 pages, FC, $17.99

ISBN: 9781787740914

On sale February 27, 2024

 

Fans of crime noir and pulp fiction will love the sensational spin-off of the acclaimed Gun Honey comics featuring a brand new fiery heroine, Dahlia Racers.

 

This graphic novel is written by award-winning co-founder of Hard Case Crime Charles Ardai teaming with brand new series artist Ace Continuado.

 

Award-winning writer and co-founder of Hard Case Crime Charles Ardai returns to the Gun Honey universe in this action-packed spin-off featuring the sultry and explosive artwork of Ace Continuado!

 

Dahlia Racers is a fiery redhead who, when someone’s gunning for you, will take the heat on herself – for a price. As a master of disguise and deception, she uses every trick to dupe those who want you captured or dead. But will a new job taking Gun Honey Joanna Tan’s place in the crosshairs turn out to be too hot to handle?

 

Marked for death by a U.S. intelligence agency, Gun Honey Joanna Tan turns to Dahlia Racers to help her pull a vanishing act. But the killer hot on her trail, beautiful sociopath Sarah Claride, will leave bodies strewn from New York to Las Vegas to Tijuana, Mexico, if it means cornering Dahlia — and breaking her…

 

If you’re a fan of classic pulp fiction and crime noir, and love a strong sexy heroine with flaming red hair, this is the book for you!

 

Now, let's take a look inside:

 


 



 


 

Heat Seeker: A Gun Honey Series is on sale now at bookstores, comic shops and digital. Order now from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million and Forbidden Planet for UK. 

 

With the sequel series Heat Seeker: Combustion hitting comic shops next Wednesday, November 13, 2024, there's never been a better time to check out this fun series! Thanks to Titan Comics for sharing this preview with us!

 


 

 

 

For more on Heat Seeker: Combustion, check out my preview at The Dragon's Cache.

 

Discover the incredible options for the pioneering Heat Seeker Combustion #1 Cover J of Heat Seeker: Combusion.

The Sacred Damned #1 Review


 


Writer: Sabir Pirzada

Artist: Michael Walsh

Colorist: Toni Marie Giffin & Michael Walsh

Letterer & Designer: Becca Carey

Cover Artists: Michael Walsh & Tula Lotay

Editors: Will Dennis & Pornsak Pichetshote

Publisher: Image Comics

Price: $3.99

Release Date: October 23, 2024

 

Kyle is a college football star. He excels in his classes, and his girlfriend adores him. Then Allison hears Kyle speaking a foreign language while he sleeps. Another evening, Kyle’s roommate awakens him in the kitchen. How did Kyle become fluent in Arabic? And why is he devouring an entire cake in his sleep? Let’s slip on our sacred amulets, leap into The Sacred Damned #1, and find out!

 

Story

NFL scouts approach Kyle. His professors brag about him. But as he garners good grades and touchdowns, Kyle seeks medical help. Why can't the doctors prevent him from sleepwalking and dumpster diving for table scraps? Kyle’s horror grows when he awakens in the woods over a fresh kill. Then, he does something that will haunt him forever.

 

When Western medicine has no answers, a college professor introduces Kyle to Dr Inayah Jibril. Based on her knowledge of customs and the supernatural, Inayah believes a djinn inhabits Kyle.

As the Ethnography and Occult professor grabs the spotlight in The Sacred Damned #1, Kyle hopes she can rescue him. But is Inayah a hero, a villain, or (to coin a phrase) a bit of both? Inayah did her homework on Kyle and learned secrets few others know. She claims her interest in djinn is academic. Yet Inayah's childhood diary tells a different story.

 

While Inayah proves the central Human character in The Sacred Damned #1, the djinns also emerge as sympathetic figures. They predated Humans. Yet most Humans who believe in them shun them. Western civilization has banished ancient spirits to the realms of folklore. So, the djinns subsist like illegal aliens or Native American tribes not granted a reservation. Humans live far shorter lives than their predecessors. Yet the ever-growing human population has caused rising global temperatures, the extinction of plant and animal species, and the gradual eradication of the djinns’ forest homes.

 

Humans have ruined the djinn’s lives. So, a djinn ruined Kyle’s life. Yet the djinns have also ruined Inayah’s. She fought back by learning how to defeat them while the djinns plotted to overthrow Humanity. No one wins in Sabir Pirzada’s story. Unless, that is, you define winners as those who live to fight another day.

 


 

 

Art

While Allison's smile glows, Kyle looks haunted. An exploding football and a photo of burned hands on a phone precede Kyle's descent into gluttony. Five panels stretching horizontally across the page evoke Richard Bachman's (or, if you prefer, Stephen King's) novel Thinner in reverse. Another lineup of three panels shows sympathetic leaders seated beside an American flag. Dr Inayah Jibril wears a black shirt, army surplus pants, and black lace-up boots. The only person who smiles in the second half of The Sacred Damned #1 is someone Inayah loves.

 

Red and blue haunt an evening that should have brought joy. Reds, blues, greens, and yellows dominate Toni Marie Giffin & Michael Walsh’s art. The djinn’s presence often bleaches colors from Kyle's surroundings. An orange and yellow fire rages between Kyle and Inayah as blues, greens, and purples illuminate the heavily inked forest.

 

Giant colored letters haunt dark panels, while black uppercase letters embolden for intonation in white dialogue balloons. After black letters in yellow narrative boxes chart Kyle's downward spiral, a child's large handwritten pink letters link Inayah and Kyle’s childhoods. As wobbly white letters in black boxes convey the djinns’ complaints in The Sacred Damned #1, Becca Carey’s sound effects heighten a brutal clash between the factions competing for control of the planet Earth. Thanks to Image Comics for providing a copy for review.

 

Final Thoughts

When Humans stop believing in the supernatural, they stoke the flames of their desires regardless of how it burns the planet. With the usurpers despoiling their home, the supernatural refugees initiate guerrilla warfare in The Sacred Damned #1. Humanity's best hope for survival might be a woman who admires the “evil” spirits.

 

Rating 9.4/10

 

To preview interior art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

Creepshow Vol 3 #2 Review

 


Writers: Eugenio Mira & John Ridley

Artists: Jorge Fornés & Stefano Raffaele

Colorists: Jordie Bellaire & Romulo Fajardo Jr

Letterer: Pat Brosseau

Cover Artists: Martín Morazzo & Chris O’Halloran; Jorge Fornés; Steve Beach

Editor: Ben Abernathy

Designer: Jillian Crab

Production: Richard Mercado

Masters Of Horror: Greg Nicotero & Brian Witten

Additional Creep Art: Michael Broom

Publisher: Image Comics

Price: $3.99

Release Date: October 23, 2024

 

Duty and responsibility come with maturity. The world threatens to press us into a mold as we age. But what if we didn't have to grow up? What if we could stay footloose and fancy-free forever? Let's shut out the world, leap into Creepshow Vol 3 #2, and see what happens!

 

Story: The Last Sleepover!

In Eugenio Mira's story, Hudson visits his friends Timmy and Emma for a Halloween sleepover. Hudson digs into the pizza as they watch scary movies. Finally, Kenny and Darla arrive. Unlike Hudson, their friends arrive without a parent, and their manner is reserved. Hudson and Emma taunted Timmy about his feelings for Darla. But when Timmy senses danger, he realizes he can't trust his close friend.

 

This first story in Creepshow Vol 3 #2 contrasts Hudson’s indifference to others with Timmy’s sense of belonging. Hudson fixates on his interests, while Timmy puts family first. “Kenny” and “Darla” have charted a future that combines friendship and freedom from responsibility. While Eugenio Mira’s story begins with Hudson, Timmy emerges as the central figure in The Last Sleepover! Timmy is too young to be forced to decide his future. Yet, as Hudson says, this “shit is about to get real.”

 

Art: The Last Sleepover!

Hudson and his mother cross the street amid driving rain. Dressed in his mummy costume, he never looks at his mother. When Timmy, Emma, and their mother greet their guests, the mothers look at each other, and Emma faces Hudson. Timmy gazes through his Jason Voorhees mask at his mom. The friends sprawl around pizza boxes and watch the Black & White Console TV. When Hudson ribs Timmy about his interest in Darla, Emma rises and leans against her friend. The doorbell prompts Timmy to barrel between them. But when he and his mother open the front door, Jorge Fornés tilts the scene 45 degrees, and Timmy and his mom become silhouettes facing two costumed children.

 

Jordie Bellaire adorns pages in light shades of gray, yellow, orange, red, and green. The beige borders and black or colored dots suggest faded newsprint. While Timmy’s red coverall links him with his mother and sister, the bloodstains adorning his limbs and torso suggest a thematic link with someone else.

 

Story: Trigger Warning

Tre reports frightening incidents online and revels in the popularity of his posts. This angers Marcus, who accuses Tre of publishing false news and trading in human misery. When Danielle suggests Marcus needs a little perspective, he slams her for following her muse. Marcus believes the truth is more important than fiction and goads Tre into spending the night in an abandoned apartment complex. Tre accepts Marcus' challenge. But events unfold differently than Marcus expects.

 

In this second entry in Creepshow Vol 3 #2, each protagonist is the hero of their own story. Tre entertains people who want something to talk about. Marcus' single-minded adherence to provable facts makes him indifferent to the Human need for entertainment. In his determination to be correct, Marcus hurts his friends and misses that Tre has named his site Urban Legends. Danielle keeps an open mind about her friends’ differing outlooks as she pursues a literary career. Although she writes fiction, Danielle proves the most capable of the three. So when opportunity beckons in John Ridley’s story, Danielle can capitalize on the mysterious events at The Kingswood Projects.

 

Art: Trigger Warning

Tre stands before an old building on his phone in Trigger Warning before Stefano Raffaele shows him with his friends. Marcus watches as Tre revels in his likes and reposts. Danielle sits on the couch in the modern apartment, her pen poised over the notebook in her lap. The next day, Marcus, Danielle, and a police detective surround Tre's backpack on the rough, littered floor. While they talk, uniformed officers survey the weathered and crumbling plaster walls.

 

Romulo Fajardo Jr lavishes a loaded palette on Stefano Raffaele’s lifelike art in Creepshow Vol 3 #2. A gray droplight conjures a yellow cone before the couch when the sky turns gray-blue outside the modern apartment. The overhead lighting casts shadows on Marcus and Danielle while heightening their skin tones. Danielle ventures to the old apartments and sits before a pink window. The formerly green and yellow walls are now teal and gray, while the scarlet letters and handprints seem brighter. Danielle writes in her notebook while a silhouette of legs and feet treads a green and black hall. Soon, orange and red will blossom.

 

Lettering & Additional Creep Art

Pat Brosseau lavishes black, uppercase words in white dialogue balloons and white letters in black ones. Sound effects herald a doorbell, squeaky hinges, and the thumps and thuds that will open new chapters of Timmy and Danielle’s lives.

 

Michael Broom introduces Timmy’s story in Creepshow Vol 3 #2 by showing the Creep hover over Timmy and Emma’s house on a dark and stormy night and evoking the Green Goblin at the end. After bookending Jorge Fornés and Jordie Bellaire’s classic comic art, Michael Broom shows the Creep channeling Tre's showmanship. Broom takes inspiration from Stefano Raffaele’s lifelike art and Romulo Fajardo Jr’s vibrant colors to lend the Creep a three-dimensional appearance as he breaks the fourth wall in a crowded coffee shop. Thanks to Image Comics and Skybound for providing a copy for review.

 

Final Thoughts

Two people’s greed forces an innocent boy to decide his fate, while a desire to entertain leads to a desperate struggle for survival in Creepshow Vol 3 #2.

 

Rating 9.7/10

 

For more cover art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Spider-Boy #12 Review


 


Writers: Dan Slott

Artists: Paco Medina

Colorist: Erick Arciniega

Letterer: Joe Caramagna

Cover Artists: Paco Medina & Rachelle Rosenberg; Elizabeth Torque; Mark Bagley & GURU-eFX, Michael Cho; Edwin Galmon & Jesus Aburtov; Federico Vicentini & Edgar Delgado

Designer: Adam Del Re

Editors: MR Daniel, Kaeden McGahey, Kaitlyn Lindtvedt, Ellie Pyle, Nick Lowe & CB Cebulski

Publisher: Marvel

Price: $4.99

Release Date: October 23, 2024

 

Spider-Man surrendered his memories of a non-Spider-Man life with Uncle Ben to restore Bailey Briggs to the Web of Life and Destiny. Now everyone remembers Spider-Boy, including his mother, Tabitha Briggs. After Bailey saves a school bus full of children, his mom allows the 10-year-old to continue his costumed career. But what happens when villains remember their grudges against Bailey? Let's don our suits made from unstable molecules, thwip into Spider-Boy #12, and find out!

 

Story

When Tabitha takes her son and Christina Xu to a street fair, she discovers that the organizers want to celebrate her son's contributions to society. Like Spider-Man, Tabitha tried to discourage her child from crime-fighting. But she realizes this is Bailey's passion, and Tabitha loves him enough to give up her day with him so Bailey can entertain the crowd as Spider-Boy. If only she loved Boy-Spider, Eli (or Hellifino), and the rest of her adoptive Humanimal friends at Stillwell Farms as much!

 


 

 

Sadly for Bailey and his fans, Daredevil interrupts the Spider-Boy Day festivities. Daredevil abducts Bailey to shield him from Bullseye and his apprentice lurking on a rooftop. Then he whisks Spider-Boy off to find the boy's secret stash and reclaim an artifact Bailey never should have won. Despite Daredevil and Spider-Boy’s expertise in fighting and evading villains, they can’t shake Bullseye and his apprentice. Bullseye wants the artifact that Spider-Boy took from him. Although Bailey doesn't remember her, Bullseye's apprentice is obsessed with him in Spider-Boy #12.

 

Everyone met Spider-Boy for the first time until Spider-Man's sacrifice restored Bailey to the Web of Life and Destiny. Dan Slott's story flips the script by introducing Bailey to someone new. Or at least Bailey thinks she is someone new. But then, our outlooks are defined by our memories. Tabitha knew Bailey and Boy-Spider shared the same Human DNA but preferred to mother Boy-Spider because she couldn't remember Bailey. As for Bullseye’s apprentice, all of Bailey's good works can't erase something he said or did that hurt Spider-Girl. 

 


 

 

Art

The cat recently freed from Tabitha’s DNA walks beside her, Bailey, and Christina in Spider-Boy #12. It glances at a dog that pulls on its leash and barks. Tabitha, Bailey, and Christina’s jaws drop, and their eyes widen when they see people clustered beneath Spider-Boy balloons and a banner. Tabitha touches his head before letting Bailey go. As they watch him leave, Christina hugs Tabitha's waist like Boy-Spider once clung to her. Paco Medina portrays differing reactions to Spider-Boy with Bailey’s new friends at school. Larissa wears a Spider-Boy pin in her hair and lets the ice cream fall out of its cone before handing Bailey a photo and interlocking her fingers. Marco’s smile is more reserved. After finishing his ice cream, Marco slips his hands into his pockets.

 

Bullseye’s apprentice poses like a dancer before throwing her shuriken. Erick Arciniega covers her in red, suggesting a link with Daredevil and Spider-Boy. The association grows more apparent as Bailey remembers training with Daredevil in Fogwell’s Gym. 

 


 

 

Yellows and browns surround the red-clad sparring partners in Spider-Boy #12. Then colors invade the sepia backgrounds as Daredevil and Bullseye face off in a room that evokes Tony Stark’s courtship with Emma Frost. As Bailey watches in shadow, his ten eyes and sharp teeth glow, reminding us of Marco’s unease with New York’s newly remembered hero.

 

Joe Caramagna thwips uppercase lettering into white and colored dialogue balloons. Words shrink for distant or lowered voices, embolden for intonation, and swell for volume. Giant, colored dialogue conveys Larissa's delight and Spider-Boy's surprise. Sound effects help us hear Bailey mess up his autograph and Spider-Girl unleash her unique webs as Bullseye pauses to play cards. Thanks to Marvel Comics for providing a copy for review.

 


 

 

Final Thoughts

Like Spider-Man, Daredevil knows that enabling a child to fight crime comes with a cost. Daredevil pays that price with stoic resolve, hoping to protect Bailey from the consequences of an impulsive attack. But with Bullseye and a new spider-villain hungering for a powerful artifact Bailey once stole, The Man Without Fear discovers that Spider-Boy isn’t a responsibility he can shrug off in Spider-Boy #12.

 

Rating 9.6/10

 

To preview interior art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.

 

 

Friday, November 1, 2024

Jimi Hendrix Purple Haze Preview

 

 

This came out back in August, and I intended to review it. But I was on travel at the time, and with the demands of the weekly review schedule, I wasn't able to cover it. I've read the first half and enjoyed it very much. If you're a science fiction fan and a believer in the transcending power of music, this book is for you! Hopefully I can cover this original graphic novel in the future. It's very cool!

 

Here's all the info from Titan Comics:

 

 

JIMI HENDRIX: PURPLE HAZE

Writers: Mellow Brown and BenHa Meen

Illustrator: Tom Mandrake

Publisher: Titan Comics

HC, 128 pages, FC, $29.99

ISBN: 9781787731899

On sale August 27, 2024

 

This is a pure rock and roll space opera featuring the legendary Jimi Hendrix as you’ve never seen him before.

 

Fully sanctioned by Experience Hendrix L.L.C.; Authentic Hendrix, LLC - this is the first ever full-length graphic novel inspired by the music of the legendary Jimi Hendrix – arguably the world’s greatest guitarist.

 

This 21st Century psychedelic rock ‘n’ roll odyssey sees Jimi Hendrix embark on a quest to the very centre of the universe in search of a magical talisman powerful enough to unlock the incredible latent power of his music so that he can share it with a universe starved of the rock ‘n’ roll by a tyrannical intergalactic force hellbent on silencing all music from the universe and enslaving all life.

 

Jimi Hendrix: Purple Haze is on sale August 27, 2024 at bookstores, comic shops and digital. 

 

Now, let's take a look inside: 






 



 

As you can see, this is a beautiful book.

 

Here is the front and back cover together:




 

Order now from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books A Million and Forbidden Planet for UK. 

 

 

Also available, Jimi Hendrix: Purple Haze DM Edition featuring cover art by Tom Mandrake, available from comic shops and Forbidden Planet for UK. 

 

That's all for now. Thanks for reading, and thanks to Titan Comics for sharing this preview with us!

 


 


Chasm: Curse Of Kaine #3 Review


 


Writer: Steve Foxe

Artist: Andrea Broccardo

Colorist: Brian Reber

Letterer: Joe Caramagna

Cover Artists: Mark Bagley & Dean White; Alessandro Cappuccio & Rachelle Rosenberg

Designer: Carlos Lao

Editors: Kaeden McGahey, Kaitlyn Lindtvedt, Nick Lowe & CB Cebulski

Recap Art: Mark Bagley

Publisher: Marvel Comics

Price: $3.99

Release Date: October 30, 2024

 

Kaine heard his clone-brother was walking a darker path. Perhaps he is the Scarlet Spider now, and Ben is Chasm. Still, Kaine wants to help imbue Ben’s life with more meaning than robbing rich kids and frightening the criminally insane. Then Kaine learns Ben is making monsters out of dead people. Worse, his brother isn’t making quips or puns as he emulates Victor Frankenstein. What would Gene Wilder think? More to the point: can Kaine free Ben from Druig's influence and arrest his downward spiral into villainy? Let’s refill our psychoactive goo guns, leap into Chasm: Curse Of Kaine #3, and find out!

 

Story

After Druig halts Janine's psychic ramble through Ben's mind, Mole Man's Moloids carry the unconscious lovers away. Janine awakens in the sewers, and Druig doesn't want to relinquish another prize. So the Eternal sends Ben to reclaim another plaything, but Janine evades his grasp with a ghost mask. When Kaine finds her, Janine assumes the Scarlet Spider is involved with whoever was messing with Ben's mind. Then Ben finds them and launches another psychoactive goofest.

 

Chasm: Curse Of Kaine #3 ponders who is best qualified to help Ben. Both the Goblin Queen and the Queen Goblin promised to ease his troubled mind. Janine can offer Ben nothing more than diversions from his angst. Ben's actions have isolated him from many of the superhero community who could help him. Could a conventional therapist without the words Goblin or Queen in their name help Ben? Or should Chasm be imprisoned in the cell next to Doppelganger?

 

While Kaine ponders if his connection to Ben can help his brother, the Mole Man is grabbing his opportunity to become more than an Eternal's footstool. As Druig plays games with Ben's mind, he inspires Mole Man to rise above his subterranean existence and overthrow the world above. Druig enjoys watching people like the Mole Man pursue their pathetic schemes as much as Rocket Raccoon enjoys seeing Taserface depose Yondu and declare he will help the Ravagers rise again to glory. But in Steve Foxe's story, all these diversions leave Druig as unfulfilled as a life of crime with Janine would leave Ben. Like frightening Doppelganger with a werewolf mask, all this activity is just meaningless fun and doesn't address the fact that Druig has all the time in the world and nothing to fill it with.

 


 

 

Art

As Chasm pursues Hallows' Eve through the sewers, her eyes glow yellow, and Ben's eyes burn white. Hallows' Eve slips on a mask and fades away like Miles Morales. Then she phases through brickwork like Kitty Pryde. As Ben rips off his mask, tears stream down his face, and the building blocks of reality swirl around Druig’s glowing red eyes. Then Druig descends a revolving staircase and walks through an array of spider people like a Psi Corps officer walking through Commander Jeffrey Sinclair's mind. While Taskmaster projects imagery to make Deadpool smile in Deadpool #4, Druig does so to make Ben more miserable in Chasm: Curse Of Kaine #3.

 

Brian Reber lavishes a loaded palette on Andrea Broccardo’s art, coloring sewer scenes in green, purple, and blue. Red dominates Druig’s mental landscape. Yet he wears green, like the Mole Man and the Vermin he views as beneath him. Janine’s red hair and Kane’s red suit link those most concerned with Ben’s mental health, while red drops falling from Kaine’s right arm reveal the lengths he will endure to be his brother’s keeper.

 

Joe Caramagna thwips black uppercase lettering into white dialogue balloons in Chasm: Curse Of Kaine #3. Words grow bold for emphasis, swell or change color for volume, and rarely shrink. The font emulates hand printing, and the balloons get cloudy when Janine decides to change tactics. Colorful and transparent sound effects help us hear Chasm attack, the brothers deploy their webs, and a monstrous attack on the surface world. Thanks to Marvel for providing a copy for review.

 

Final Thoughts

As Kaine attempts to help his brother, Druig empowers people to pursue their greatest desires. Despite his claims about others, the Eternal reveals that he is the pathetic one in Chasm: Curse Of Kaine #3. Not only because Druig lacks fulfillment but also because he attacks people with lesser power instead of pursuing his grievances with his fellow Eternals.

 

Rating 9.6/10

 

To preview interior art see my review at Comic Book Dispatch.