Comic Picks by the Glick

Manga and Comic Reviews

Glory vol. 1: The Once and Future Destroyer

This also hails from the same Extreme relaunch that gave us “Prophet” but it’s not in the same class.  Briefly:  as Supreme was Rob Liefeld’s Superman analogue who later gave Alan Moore the license to tell the kinds of stories he wanted to but couldn’t with DC’s icon, Glory is his take on Wonder Woman.  […]

Ultimate Comics Thor

Much like “Ultimate Comics Hawkeye” I suspect that this mini-series owes its existence to a desire to get as much product featuring the title character out into the marketplace in time to tie in to his movie.  While this is also written by Jonathan Hickman, it’s not part of a larger storyline and does a […]

The Manhattan Projects vol. 1: Science. Bad.

I wasn’t planning on turning this into “Jonathan Hickman Week” around here, but that’s how things wound up being shipped to me.  While I have one more Ultimate title of his to talk about tomorrow, and even taking into account how much I enjoyed “Ultimate Comics Ultimates,” this is the one you should shell out […]

Ultimate Comics Hawkeye

I don’t think the market was exactly clamoring for a mini-series featuring Ultimate Hawkeye.  Were I a betting man, I’d say that the whole reason we got this when we did is because Marvel wanted some Hawkeye product in the bookstores in time for the arrival of “The Avengers” movie.  Even though it comes to […]

Barbara

BEHOLD THE POWER OF KICKSTARTER! Digital Manga is the first major manga publisher to utilize the crowdfunding site to bring more manga stateside.  Specifically, they’re using it to not only bring their previous Osamu Tezuka work “Swallowing the Earth” back into print, but to bring us more of the mangaka’s immense body of work.  “Barbara” […]

Swamp Thing vol. 1: Raise Them Bones

(Or, “Raise ‘Dem Bones” if you’re going by the title of the opening issue.) Alan Moore’s run on “Swamp Thing” is rightly regarded as a watershed moment in comics.  Not only did it pioneer the idea of the “retcon” or the “Everything you know is wrong!” school of thinking and do it well, but it […]

Demon Knights vol. 1: Seven Against the Dark

This is Paul Cornell’s other contribution to the New 52 after the “finally got its act together at the end, but since he’s not writing it anymore why bother” Wildstorm import “Stormwatch.”  It’s also a much better fit for his style, allowing for plenty of humor that tweaks the conventions of the genre (not quite […]