January 13

Review: Guardians Team-Up #10

You are going to get exactly what you think with this one. Deadpool peddling a bike (that is apparently owned by Zelda) with an angry gun-firing Rocket Racoon in the basket sprawls over the cover and inside Rocket and Deadpool kill evil aliens and make smarmy jokes for 32 amusing pages.

There is some continunity, and a cameo too. And pseudo-cameos by a Minion and Beast. (Maybe. Or maybe I was just imagining things.) Did I mention fun and snarky already?

Category: Reviewing | Comments Off on Review: Guardians Team-Up #10
January 8

Review: Angel: Old Friends

It’s not terribly clear whether Old Friends is an alternate to After the Fall or not. In the latter we see L.A. materialized in hell and some major changes to our cast. In Old Friends it’s clear the Wolfram & Hart take over, as well as much of season 5 of Angel happened. But likely Old Friends is before the major Angel finale or not cannon at all.

After some solo thinking (*coughcough male ennui*) Gunn hunts Angel down because evidence suggest that Spike is killing people again. Good people that is. When they begin their patrol the Other Scoobies? Angel’s Angels? Find out pretty quick that it’s not Spike killing, but Life-Model Decoys. In fact everyone has them, even Fred and Cordy, who have at this point in the canon, been killed. I know this is the Angel-verse, but the implication was always that they were dead-dead.

So who is cloning Angel’s friends and sending them to attack the gang, and why?

This graphic novel is big on the bro-snarky-mystery adventure theme. There’s a mystery. A few killers and two vampires with soul, plus their brother-from-another-mother (and an ancient goddess who devoured the soul of their friend) have to solve it and stop them before worse things happen. And true to Angel themed tales rather than Buffy ones, the baddie is after something a little more grown up than “world domination”

Angel: Old Friends is a good read, funny and actiony, with a good balance of art. Only downside? It’s a really short episode when it could have been half a season, at least.

Category: monsterlibrarian | Comments Off on Review: Angel: Old Friends
January 4

Review: Death, Disability and the Superhero

Death, Disability and the Superhero by Jose Alaniz

University Press of Missouri, 2014

ISBN: 1628461179

Available: Print and ebook

This book is a beast. A heavy brick of text with a massive amount of research behind it, it’s not for casual comic book fans. But if you’re passionate about comic books and superheroes as a serious art form, a reflection of culture as much as any other fiction genre, this is a book for you. Alaniz starts out compiling themes and commentary on Golden Age superheroes and the ideals of culture they represented at the time. But the real meat is in his own research and take on the Silver Age of comics, the rise of Marvel and the expansion of superheroes from Ubermench to complicated characters.

Highly recommended because of the rarity of such studies on superheroes and disability culture.

Contains: discussion of violence, rape, and war

Book received from Netgalley.com

Reviewed for MonsterLibrarian.com

Category: monsterlibrarian | Comments Off on Review: Death, Disability and the Superhero
January 3

Onward to 2016

I know I don’t blog so much anymore. It just doesn’t seem like my day to day life is that important. “Hey, I got three pages written today” or “I took a day off and read a whole book today” don’t seem that exciting.

I am trying to get back into reviewing (and am starting to post my reviews here again, as well as managing MonsterLibrarian.com’ YA blog, Reading Bites.) I’m sure there will be weeks where reviews are all I get up here. But I hope, very much, to have real publishing news this year.

Category: My Work | Comments Off on Onward to 2016