Comic Picks by the Glick

Manga and Comic Reviews

20th Century Men

While I let my expectations with established talent dictate a lot of what I read, there’s something to be said for picking up a comic from creators I’m unfamiliar with and being entertained by it.  This has happened before and it’ll happen again.  Of course, there’s always the chance that you might wind up with […]

Night of the Ghoul

Forest Innman makes his living digitizing old films for a movie studio.  It’s a decent living, but a constantly depressing reminder to him that he never made it as a filmmaker himself.  Then he comes across a canister of film for “Night of the Ghoul.”  Thought to be lost, it was a horror film made […]

Superman: Space Age

How would you live your life if you knew that it was all going to end at a certain point?  That’s the question which hangs over this miniseries from writer Mark Russell and artist Mike Allred, and the person who has to ponder it is the Man of Steel himself.  Not right away, though, as […]

Murcielago vol. 21

The mystery of the Yamatsukami family is finally unraveled in this volume and there’s plenty of violence, blood, and sexual creepiness to be had in the process.  It starts off with Hinako, Narumi, and Chiyo investigating a previously unexplored part of the mountain at night at Kuroko’s request.  What they find there is a field […]

Bloodborne: The Lady of the Lanterns

I really liked the first volume of Titan Comics’ “Boodborne” series by writer Ales Kot and artist Piotr Kowalski.  It managed the really tricky task of adapting a game with a famously abstract/inscrutable/hard-to-parse story and communicated its style quite well into the medium of sequential art.  That didn’t last as while vol. 2 was solid, […]

Black Adam vol. 1: Theogony

Theo Teth-Adam – Black Adam to his friends, enemies, and the general superhero community – is dying.  The reason why is a mystery, but the time has come for him to pass on his legacy to one of his descendants.  In this case, the lucky recipient winds up being one Malik White, an African-American medical […]

Keep Your Hands Off Eizouken vol. 5

Mangaka Sumito Oowara has made a habit of keeping each volume of “Eizouken” relatively self-contained.  In that each volume is about the Moving Pictures Club’s latest animation project.  That’s not a bad thing, though, the lack of strong continuity between volumes leaves each one to stand on its own, as this one does a little […]