Comic Picks by the Glick

Manga and Comic Reviews

The Names

I was hoping that this Peter Milligan-written miniseries about sex, the world of high finance, revenge, and an esoteric sci-fi concept would be one of the projects from the notoriously hit-or-miss writer that actually hit.  Instead, “The Names” turned out to be one of his less interesting failures.  The story kicks off when Kevin Walker, […]

Hawkeye vol. 4: Rio Bravo

After much waiting, the Matt Fraction/David Aja run of “Hawkeye” is finally over and collected.  I can say that it’s been fun.  Not really “BEST COMIC EVAR IN RECENT MARVEL HISTORY!!1!” but definitely one of Fraction’s better efforts at the company and a fantastic showcase for the skills of Aja.  That said, the most surprising […]

Fairest vol. 5: The Clamour for Glamour

The main series may be over, but here’s one more volume of this (decidedly uneven) spinoff series for the road!  Longtime “Fables” artist Mark Buckingham writes the six-issue title story as he picks up on a stray plot thread. Back during his campaign for mayor of Fabletown, Prince Charming promised glamours for all of the […]

Conan vol. 17: Shadows Over Kush

Fred Van Lente makes his debut as the new writer for this series and almost immediately has Conan getting into trouble in the land of Kush.  The barbarian, still feeling the loss of his love Belit, gets drunk enough to have his gear stolen by a fence and then thrown into a junk pile teeming […]

Gantz vol. 36

It’s the penultimate volume of this series, and mangaka Hiroya Oku decides to oblige the readers who have been following it for so long with some answers.  To his credit, they’re actually fairly interesting ones that explain some of the nonsense that has come before and play against your expectations.  Vol. 37 starts off on […]

Chew vol. 10: Blood Puddin’

As the first epilogue to this volume makes abundantly clear, this is Tony Chu’s FINAL showdown with The Collector.  Easily identifiable as the series’ “big bad” from his first appearance way back in vol. 2, this vampiric cibopath is responsible for the single most shocking act in this series — the death of Tony’s sister […]

Black Science vol. 3: Vanishing Pattern

I think I’m about done with Rick Remender. His tendency for grinding down characters was what got me to stop reading “Fear Agent” a few years back, and it’s become more prevalent in his recent work from Marvel.  Granted, the writer has written some great stories for that company, and the first volume of this […]