Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Spy Seal: The Corten-Steel Phoenix #3 (2026 Comic Book & Graphic Novel Reading Challenge)

If Herge's Tintin and Carl Barks' Disney Ducks had a baby together, the end product would be Rich Tommaso's Spy Seal. 

Anthropomorphic seal Malcolm Warner has just been recruited by MI-6 to become a spy. To help him with his training is the veteran secret agent, Kes, a stunning kestrel that acts as a potential love interest for Malcolm. Set in the middle of the Cold War 1960s, Spy Seal's first mission involves finding a Soviet double agent while trying to get behind the secret of a mysterious work of art called the Corten-Steel Phoenix. 

You might be wondering why I started with issue #3. The answer is simple. I don't have issue #1 or 2 of this 4-issue mini from 2008. In fact, this might not even be something that I keep. I found the issue in a comic book grab bag, enthralled by the stunning cover of a speeding train engulfed in what looks like a snowy Alpine scene. Plus Tommaso's name is on the cover and I have had wonderful experiences with his work on many Barks' Library collections and international Disney books.

There's a big difference between the animals in this book and the mice and ducks of Disney. Whereas Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse look like animals, they're treated more as a animal representation of human beings, the animal characters in this story actually are animals. That means that Kes can fly and Malcolm has amazing underwater abilities. It's a good thing the characters still retain their amazing abilities. I just wish Rich Tommaso had told me! There was one scene that left me stunned until Kes flew to the rescue. The female spy kept saying at the first of this issue that maybe Malcolm and her should fly to their next destination. I didn't know that she meant that literally.

I enjoyed what I read. It got action. It's got heart. It's even got a avian female spy that shouldn't be that attractive wearing a negligee... I wouldn't mind getting my hands on the other 3 issues in the miniseries from Image Comics. It's got a kitsch appeal to it and no, I'm not talking about Kes the Kestrel.

Completing this review completes Task #33 (An Image Comic) of the 2026 Comic Book and Graphic Novel Reading Challenge.

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.

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