Comic Picks by the Glick

Manga and Comic Reviews

Green Lantern Corps (vol. 1): To Be a Lantern

With Hal Jordan’s “rebirth” as Green Lantern in the DC Universe being the commercial success that it was, a spinoff title to capitalize on that success was inevitable.  Fortunately the concept of an interstellar police force is big enough to handle two titles with different approaches.  Where “Green Lantern” is “The Hal Jordan Show,” “Green […]

Echo vol. 1

Best known for his long-running “Strangers in Paradise” series, writer/artist Terry Moore made a name for himself with that series in the 90’s with his skills at creating richly detailed characters and relationships.  He also had the artistic talent to vividly convey these things on the page as well.  As character-driven as that series was, […]

Scalped vol. 7: Rez Blues

While “Scalped” has certainly been one of the grimmer series to come down the Vertigo pipeline, it has yet to reach the point where the darkness overwhelms the story or the characters.  That’s because at the end of vol. 4, it reached the point where I figured series protagonist Dash Bad Horse had hit rock […]

Grimjack: The Manx Cat

It’s the stuff dreams are made of.  Almost literally in the case of the title object here.  This latest installment in the adventures of John Gaunt, a.k.a. GrimJack, has him tracking down a rare statue with mysterious powers.  The problem for him is that not only does its current owner have it under lock and […]

Seven Billion Needles vol. 3

It’s a testament to skill and focus of mangaka Nobuaki Tadano that the intimacy of this series isn’t lost when things start happening on a much larger scale than we’ve seen before.  With the entities Maelstrom and Horizon now both residing in Hikaru’s body, you’d expect a volume full of “Odd Couple” shenanigans.  Wouldn’t you?  […]

Astonishing X-Men vol. 6: Exogenetic

I thought that the first volume of writer Warren Ellis’ “Astonishing X-Men” was an interesting failure.  It had a lot of good ideas, coupled with the man’s talent for razor-sharp dialogue, but it also managed the dubious trick of feeling both too slow and not long enough to allow its story to really work.  As […]