Comic Picks by the Glick

Manga and Comic Reviews

Heart in a Box

Emma Elliot is in the midst of an epically bad breakup.  The kind where she’s been curled up in her bed for the past two weeks before some inspired needling from her roommate finally gets her to rejoin society again.  However, it isn’t until she meets a mysterious man named Bob that Emma finally has […]

Batman: Earth One vol. 3

Writer Geoff Johns and artist Gary Frank didn’t heed my advice at all, and so here we are, six years after vol. 2, with the latest volume of their “Batman:  Earth One” graphic novel series.  To give you an indication of how long it has taken them to get this volume out, Grant Morrison and […]

Steeple vol. 2: The Silvery Moon

The original “Steeple” miniseries from creator John Allison was delightful.  It wasn’t just the fact that it was enjoyably quirky in a deeply English way, it was also very funny with two winning leads in curate-turned-satanic-priestess Billie, and satanic-priestess-turned-curate Maggie.  I wasn’t expecting a sequel, so the appearance of “The Silvery Moon” in the solicitations […]

Redneck vol. 5: Tall Tales

“Tall Tales” wants to be “The Godfather, Part II” of this series.  I say this because its story moves both backwards and forwards, telling the history of vampires while also expanding on the present day story of the Bowman clan.  The history is centered around one character, Nicodemus, who became the very first vampire after […]

Maison Ikkoku vol. 4

I’m… starting to wonder if I was mistaken about this series. My impression was that I’d be getting a slimmed-down, all killer/no filler version of the legendary romance between hapless college student Yusaku Godai and pensive widow-turned-landlord Kyoko Otonashi.  Compared to the overlong 96-episode anime series that started out strong, but was waylaid by filler.  […]

Fire Power vol. 3: Flame War

So, the Scorched Earth Clan are actually the good guys and the Temple of the Flaming Fist, now led by Master Chou, are the bad guys.  That’s a hell of a reveal to pull after you’ve just finished introducing them, but I’m sure years of writing “Invincible” have taught Robert Kirkman that there’s never not […]