Comic Picks by the Glick

Manga and Comic Reviews

The Walking Dead vol. 28: A Certain Doom

Even if the previous volume was called “The Whisperer War” it was basically the first half of a two-volume story.  Where that volume focused on the actual threat presented by the Whisperers themselves, this one addresses the “Zombie A-Bomb” they left behind.  Oh, and the impending threat of whatever the Saviors have planned for Alexandrea. […]

Hadrian’s Wall

Simon Moore spends his days as a detective in the Seattle of 2085 dwelling on the failure of his marriage and taking pills to combat the pain of getting shot four times by his ex-wife’s new husband.  So when an old friend tells Simon that said husband, Edward, is now dead and that his company […]

Extremity vol. 1: Artist

This was a series that grabbed my attention because of its cover for the first issue (which was a full wraparound that I only saw the right half of on solicitation).  It was indicative of violence and loss against the backdrop of an unfamiliar world and I wanted to know more about it.  Creator Daniel […]

Stop the Presses: Bendis Now Exclusive to DC!

Talk about things that I never expected to see happen anytime soon.  After well over a decade of working exclusively at Marvel, Brian Michael Bendis has signed an exclusive deal to write comics for DC.  This is shocking not just because of how long the writer has spent working for Marvel but because whenever he’s […]

Master Keaton vol. 12

Yeah, it’s been quite some time since I’ve mentioned this series.  What happened?  Well, the series never really got out of its groove of providing familiar and competent modern adventure stories with a dash of action and/or archaeology.  It’s the kind of thing that goes down smoothly enough thanks to writer/artist Naoki Urasawa’s storytelling confidence, […]

The Old Guard, Book One: Opening Fire

Andronika the Scythian, “Andy” to her friends, has been a soldier of fortune for a very, very long time now.  She’s not immortal, she just hasn’t found the right time to die yet.  Same goes for her comrades Booker, who lived through Napoleon’s march into Russia, Joe and Nicky, both veterans on opposite sides of […]

Batman vol. 3: I Am Bane

Retroactively speaking, there was one good thing about how writer Tom King delivered an utterly formulaic and predictable start to his “Batman” run with “I Am Gotham.”  It meant that he had a relatively low bar to clear with subsequent volumes, which he did with (mostly) relative ease on “I Am Suicide.”  With “I Am […]