A book is like the TARDIS. Open it up and it's bigger on the inside. One part reading journal, one part educational tool for pop culture newbies and parents of young geeks. This blog is your portal into the world of movies, TV, superheroes, and of course books!
Showing posts with label Joelle Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joelle Jones. Show all posts
Saturday, August 25, 2018
Supergirl: Being Super
Imagine if Kara Zor-El made it to Earth before Clark Kent became Superman. With no memory of her people and no Man of Steel to inspire her, she grows up knowing that she is special and that's about it. Forced to live secretly as an average teenage girl, Kara Danvers goes through life knowing that there is something different about her and it makes her special. However, now that she has turned 16, something about her powers is off and it endangers her adoptive family and friends.
This was a unique take on Supergirl. I passed on this series when it first came out and I blame poor marketing by the publisher. The story by Mariko Tamaki (This One Summer) was actually quite good. But the way DC Comics was trying to sell this story sounded so wrong.
See, DC tried to make this coming of age story seem to be the new reboot of one of my all-time favorite characters. Supergirl had just been literally rebooted having become de-aged and depowered from her time as a Red Lantern with the whole Rebirth thing just a few months earlier. I was really digging the Rebirth series and didn't need another reboot. Had DC Comics actually presented it as an Earth One or Elseworlds type story, I would have bought every issue of Being Super new on the day it came out in print!
Joelle Jones (Catwoman) is a fantastic artist and she does not disappoint. I love the Supergirl inspired track suit Kara wears at one of her meets. And the last third act is just amazing action all throughout.
The ending was bittersweet but the very last 3 pages were absolutely awesome! I would love for Tamaki and Jones to do a sequel. But when it happens, the marketing team at DC needs to let people know that this is an alternate version of Kara Danvers. If they do that, I think it would entice more fans of the Maid of Might instead of scare them off of yet another retooling of a character that has not gotten the respect she deserves since her death in the pages of Crisis.
Worth Consuming!
Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Troublemaker Book One
Comic Bento is a monthly subscription service for comic book collectors. It’s a lot like the Jelly of the Month Club. Only instead of a variety of jams to smear on your toast, you get several graphic novels to read. There’s theme-months, like Marvel Females or School Days. You can subscribe for one, three, or six months, as well as a year. You can enroll yourself or a friend could register you for a Bento as a gift.
Troublemaker by Janet Evanovich and Alex Evanovich was one such graphic novel I got from a Comic Bento my wife gave me. I’m not sure of the themes I got it from, but this was one of the books I unearthed. Saying that this one isn’t really in my wheelhouse is an understatement. I have never read a Janet Evanovich book before and until now, I don’t think I would have ever planned to.
This book was a graphic novel companion in Evanovich’s series of novels following the exploits of renegade mechanic Alex Barnaby and race car driver Sam Hooker. They solve crimes around the Miami area along with their giant St. Bernard, Beans.
In this opening chapter, a friend of Alex's named Rosa has been kidnapped. Normally, if Rosa disappears, it’s because she meet a guy and had a fling in Jamaica. But when someone tries to kill Alex and Sam, it’s pretty clear that this time Rosa is in real danger.
The investigation will take Alex and Sam to places best left unexplored: a retirement community full of NASCAR fans, the Everglades, and a nightclub where Sam’s newly cougarized mother is on the prowl. It's all part of the madcap fun that includes voodoo, strawberry milkshakes, and attempted murder.
The story ends on a semi-cliffhanger. There’s an acceptable ending but it also leads to a part two. I would like to get my hands on the further adventures and I am racking my brain as to where I thought I saw some of the books in this series. My local library perhaps?
This mystery was very funny with a sort of Moonlighting sexual tension between the two lead characters. There was some elements of Dexter mixed it what with this taking place in Miami. I wonder if the two were ever meet in a crossover- that would be awesome.
Great artwork by Lady Killer’s Joelle Jones. It was very clean and extremely expressive.
This is just another reason why I love grab bags or subscription services like Comic Bento (which act as a sort of grab bag.) The randomness of choice really opens me up to books and series that I otherwise would not have given a second glance at.
Worth Consuming!
Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.
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