Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Babs: The Black Road South #4 Review

 


Babs: The Black Road South #4 Review

Writer: Garth Ennis

Artist: Jacen Burrows

Colorist: Andy Troy

Logo, Production & Letterer: Rob Steen

Cover Artists: Jacen Burrows & Andy Troy; Erica Henderson

Editor: Tom Peyer

Publisher: Ahoy Comics

Price: $4.99

Release Date: June 17, 2026

 

After defeating childhood bully Yorikk the Ginger, Babs took on more soldiers, a green cyclops, and a panda with a unicorn horn. Then, after booking a night in the Tyrannical Suite, Babs and Izzy wowed the crowd in Pale Elric’s with their rendition of “Like The Sonj.” Unfortunately, before returning to their hotel, they stopped by the Invest-A-Quest booth and invested their winnings in an expedition into the Shadowlands of Mordynn.

 

After misfortune struck the fellowship, Babs and Izzy huddled in a tent, while the knight Colin Culpepper paid obeisance to his fallen idol. When a pack of Snowpeckers attacked, Babs suborned Colin’s ultimate image of womanhood as a snowboard. As they sped away on the frozen body of Lilith Lazuli on the dark and snowy night, the trio toppled off a cliff. Can Babs’ talking sword advise them on how to survive the fall? And why is Babs having a Bad Hair Year? Let’s leap into Babs: The Black Road South #4 and see!

 

Story

Clinging to the muscular, bikini-clad corpse, Babs, Izzy, and Colin scream epithets to their plight as they plummet into a chasm. But when they splash into an underground sea, the trio must make their way to shore before their musclebound ride vehicle thaws. The journey grows more unsettling as the magic that cursed the land revives Lilith. Her tough-girl consciousness may have died. Still, her motor skills respond to verbal commands.

 

As Izzy traveled in the fellowship, she had wondered why Babs dreaded returning to Mordynn. The landscape didn't gel with Mordynn’s reputation as a hellscape filled with monsters. When they reach the coast of this underground world, Izzy discovers the corrupted, primordial land lurking beneath the vibrant surface. After the first Snowpecker attack that destroyed their company, she realizes the second cannot have been a coincidence. So, amid the dangers of this bleak underground world, Izzy decides it is time for her friend to explain why she was so reluctant to return to Mordynn in Babs: The Black Road South #4.

 

In Grant Morrison's story, Izzy and Colin learn more about the history of this dark land. They confront more of its cursed inhabitants. And as the ladies shrug off the dishonorable act that quenched the fire of Colin’s magic sword, they confront the person responsible for the two Snowpecker attacks that reduced their well-supplied company to a trio and a bikini-clad zombie in Babs: The Black Road South #4.

 

 

Art

As they fall into the chasm, the snow-covered opening, replete with stalactites and stalagmites, resembles a toothy maw. When they emerge from a cave tunnel, they descend one of many waterfalls. After splashing into Mordynn’s inner sea, the trio perch atop Lilith’s still body. Ahead, a stand of trees, barren of foliage or branches, evokes the trials of another Hobbit-filled fellowship. A downshot reveals the spark of life that awakens a remnant of Lilith’s consciousness. An upshot reveals Babs and Izzy’s horror, as the earnest knight peers down between them.

 

While they battled the Snowpeckers, the yellow-and-orange that crept into the snowy sky evoked the warmth of the campfire they had left behind. When Babs, Izzy, and Colin descend into the chasm, the memory of the fiery sky and the blue waterfall contrast with the gray sea and land the adventurers encounter in Babs: The Black Road South #4. 

 

Andy Troy paints the sky in similarly fiery tones in Babs' memories, as she travels alongside a Hobbit, and flies on a dragon past volcanoes spewing lava. Even Lilith's blue hair is less vibrant in this bleak land. Yet as Jacen Burrows showcases Lilith’s subdued nature, the barbarian queen retains a vestige of what made Colin admire her. And when day gives way to night, the vivid colors of the triune fellowship return beneath a crimson sky.

 

Like the land they travel through, black uppercase letters fill white dialogue balloons. The letters grow bold for intonation, swell for raised voices, and shrink for distance. Amid a glimpse of the past or Babs’ imagination, Rob Steen’s sound effects demonstrate the depths of Mordynn’s evil.

 

Bonus Features:

Angelique Fawns illustrates a young woman’s struggle to find love and better her life in Elena and the Belligerent Zeno Beets. Rob Steens’ accompanying illustration demonstrates the dangers of tinkering with nature. As Joe Orsak pays homage to an iconic cover from comics history, Kek-W champions a forsaken era of comics in Potato-Chip Rick Mansplains the Pewter Age of Comics. An editorial page hailing the merits of 19th-century poetry accompanies the prose stories. Thanks to Ahoy Comics and Superfan Promotions for providing a review copy.

 

Final Thoughts

Some things may be easy to explain, such as Babs’ hairstyle. Others are harder to ignore, like how she knocked a Hobbit into a lake of fire. But what becomes clear as she returns to Mordynn is that Babs bears some of the responsibility for the shadow that lingers over the blighted land in Babs: The Black Road South #4.

 

Rating 9.8/10

 

To look inside see my preview of Babs: The Black Road South #4.

 

For what happened last time, see my review of Babs: The Black Road South #3.

For what happened when Babs went There, And yes, Back Again, see my preview of Babs: The Black Road South #2

For how this series started, see my review of Babs: The Black Road South #1

 


No comments:

Post a Comment