Friday, November 29, 2019

Book Review: PIECES OF HER

PIECES OF HER
HARPERCOLLINS/William Morrow – @HarperCollins; @WmMorrowBks

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

AUTHOR: Karin Slaughter – @SlaughterKarin
ISBN: 978-0-06-288309-4; paperback; 5.31 in x 8.00 in (May 21, 2019)
494pp, B&W, $16.99 U.S., $21.00 CAN

Pieces of Her is a 2018 novel by author Karin Slaughter.  It was published in hardcover by William Morrow (an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers) in August 2018, and the first trade paperback edition was released May 2019.  It is the paperback edition, a review copy of which I received from the publisher, that is the subject of this review, dear readers.  A thriller, Pieces of Her focuses on a young woman forced to grapple with this question:  What if the person you thought you knew best turns out to be someone you never knew at all?

Pieces of Her introduces Andrea “Andy” Eloise, a 31-year-old woman who is adrift in life.  She left New York City and her dreams of being an artist to return to her hometown of Belle Isle, Georgia.  There, she took care for her mother, Laura Oliver, who had been diagnosed with breast cancer.  A few years later, Andy is still in Belle Isle, now a 911 operator.

On Andy's 31st birthday, Andy and Laura are having lunch at a local diner, “Rise-n-Dine,” located in the Mall of Belle Isle.  During the birthday meal, something unthinkable happens that will forever change Andy's life.  A young man starts shooting people in the diner.  Almost as shocking is the fact that Laura Oliver tries to talk the young man down and stop him from shooting more people, before she violently disposes of him as threat.  WTF, indeed?

Andy thought she knew her mother.  Laura Oliver is the woman who has spent her whole life in a beach-side town.  She is the woman who always wanted to do nothing more than live a quiet life as a pillar of the community... isn't she?  However, video of the mall incident has exposed Laura to her enemies from her past... because before Laura Oliver was Laura Oliver, she was someone else entirely.  Andy even wonders about her stepfather, Gordon Oliver.  What does he know?  Now, on the run, Andy follows a trail of crumbs from her mother's past, and she has to uncover the truth about Laura Oliver's past if her and her mother want to have a future.

I recently read my first Karin Slaughter book, the most excellent police procedural/crime thriller, The Last Widow, which was published just this past August (2019).  Like that book, Pieces of Her is a multi-genre thriller, so it is hard to pin it down to being one kind of novel.

The Library of Congress catalog for Pieces of Her (included on the copyright and indicia page at the front of the book) describes this book using the following categories of fiction: mothers and daughters, violence, identity (psychology), family secrets, mystery and detective, police procedural, women sleuths, and suspense.  Pieces of Her is all of that and more.  It is like a box of chocolates from the mystery genre candy-maker.  There is something for every reader who ever read a story about a character trying to unravel a mystery – whether that character was civilian, amateur, or professional mystery solver and “untangler” of secrets.

Like I was with The Last Widow, I am determined to spoil as little as possible of Pieces of Her.  After she has her character, Laura Oliver, kill the mall shooter, author Karin Slaughter reveals a past for Laura that is so shocking and unexpected that the readers might rightly think that Slaughter is dealing with a character entirely separate from Laura.  Initially, I thought so; then, I was so shocked at what Slaughter slapped in my face that I hoped the past Laura was not the same as the Laura at the beginning of the novel.  If that were not enough, Slaughter sends Andy on a breathtaking, pulse-pounding, and sometimes blood-chilling misadventure in uncovering secrets.

While this novel does have a few dry spots, to describe Pieces of Her as a good read is liking describing a cancer diagnosis as bad news.  Yes, both are true, but they are also enormous understatements.  If you want to read a thriller that beats your imagination into submission, then, read Pieces of Her.

9 out of 10

https://www.karinslaughter.com/

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2019 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for syndication rights and fees.

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Thursday, November 28, 2019

Review: ECTYRON: Rise of Nemehiss

ECTYRON: RISE OF NEMEHISS
CANDLE LIGHT PRESS/Warning Comics – @candlelightpres @attila71

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: Carter Allen
SCRIPT: John Ira Thomas
ART: Carter Allen – @attila71
LETTERS: John Ira Thomas
COVER: Carter Allen
BACK COVER: Will Grant
28pp, Color, $5.00 U.S. (2018)

Ectyron: Rise of Nemehiss is a 2018 comic book published by Candle Light Press (CLP).  It is written by CLP stalwarts Carter Allen (plot) and John Ira Thomas (script/letters) and drawn by Allen.  This comic book focuses on Ectyron, a giant-sized chicken that battles monsters known as “kaiju.”  This term is used to describe a genre of Japanese films that feature giant monsters, and the term is also used to describe the giant monsters themselves.  [Godzilla is an example of a kaiju.]

Ectyron: Rise of Nemehiss opens in South Chippewa Basin, Lake MichiganThe USCGS Narcissus, a shallow water submarine, has been chasing a sonar shadow that suddenly changes from shadow to monster.  Meanwhile at “Sustenatione Stabilitas Base” in the Great Basin Desert, kaiju fighter Jake is working on the latest kaiju-fighting vehicle.  “Tonnerre Blue,” a “suborbital hopper” that can transport and fight in the battle against the kaiju.

Jake and his colleague, Iowa, will need this new kaiju-fighting tech when the giant-goose kaiju, known as Nemehiss, terrorizes a small Minnesota town.  The kaiju fighters will also need all the help they can get... from Ectyron!

Ectyron: Rise of Nemehiss, like the previous Ectyron Against Lagaxtu, is the kind of monster comic that writer, artist, cartoonist, designer, and graphic novelist, Carter Allen does so well.  His Gozilla-sized creations, which includes monsters, beasts, machines, contraptions, and heroes, are pure comic book fun.

The Ectyron series offers big monster fun told with big illustrations and graphics.  John Ira Thomas' dry humor adds a nice touch, and his dialogue, as polished as the kind you would find in a screenplay for a big Hollywood event movie, helps the readers take the action seriously.  Ectyron: Rise of Nemehiss is both monster comic book and sci-tech action adventure.

The truth is that readers get a little more than they expect from Ectyron: Rise of Nemehiss.  In fact, they get enough to want more.  Plus, the back cover features another delightful Will Grant full-color illustration.  [Since the publication of Ectyron: Rise of Nemehiss, CLP has published a third Ectyron comic book.]

8.5 out of 10

http://candlelightpress.tumblr.com/
www.warningcomics.com

Reviewed by Leroy Douesseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2019 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for syndication rights and fees.

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Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Review: THE MAGIC ORDER #6

THE MAGIC ORDER No. 6 (OF 6)
IMAGE COMICS/Netflix – @ImageComics @TheMagicOrder @netflix

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Mark Millar – @mrmarkmillar
ARTIST: Olivier Coipel
COLORS: Dave Stewart
LETTERS: Peter Doherty
EDITOR: Rachel Fulton
COVER: Oliver Coipel with Dave Stewart
VARIANT COVER: Karl Kerschl
36pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (February 2019)

Rated M / Mature

The Magic Order is a six-issue comic book miniseries created by writer Mark Millar (Kick-Ass, Chrononauts) and artist Olivier Coipel (Thor).  It is also the first new and original comic book series created by Millar since he sold his organization, Millarworld, to Netflix in August of 2017.  Colorist Dave Stewart and letterer Peter Doherty complete the creative team.  The Magic Order recently ended (although there will be another miniseries in near future).

The Magic Order focuses on the sorcerers, magicians, and wizards that protect humanity from darkness and from monsters of impossible sizes.  The Order's leader, Leonard Moonstone, and his children:  Regan, Cordelia, and Gabriel must deal with a mob-like war and conspiracy that is killing off members of The Magic Order.  Their adversary is Madame Albany and her cohorts who are stealing magical objects, with Albany focusing on the object she wants the most, the magical book, “the Orichalcum.”

The Magic Order #6 opens with the full conspiracy revealed.  The wayward Cordelia stands alone on the side of The Magic Order, and the identity of Albany's assassin, “The Venetian,” is a shocker.  As an ally of Albany prepares to snatch the Orichalcum, Cordelia has to fight or die, and she has to show that she is not exactly the wayward girl many think she is.

I think The Magic Order is my favorite Mark Millar written, creator-owned comic book.  It is a thrilling introduction to a new world and new universe of magic, magical beings, and magical conspiracies.  The Magic Order is really like a blend of Harry Potter and Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them with a Martin Scorsese mob film – leaning more towards Fantastic Beasts, but with a strong sense of Casino.  Millar has also shown that these characters are multi-layered and have much to show us beyond what we see in this first series.  Peter Doherty's lettering brings a sharp edge to Millar's dialogue, which in turn makes the scenes featuring characters engaged in violence explode.  So as this series ends, Millar gives us a little more, perhaps to set us up for a return to this Order.

After reading the first issue, I was not all that crazy about artist Olivier Coipel, but I was so wrong.  So much about The Magic Order works because of Coipel's graphical storytelling.  Coipel's art sells the idea that The Magic Order is a massive world of magic and history and that it is a world hidden in the shadows, just out of view of the eyes of humans.  Dave Stewart's muted colors add a layer to Coipel's art, creating a sense of mystery and mysticism.

I am as excited by Millar's premise now as I was when I read the first issue of this comic book last summer (2018).  Millar, Coipel, Stewart, and Doherty have created a special comic book, and The Magic Order #6 is the superb ending that a superb miniseries deserves.

9 out of 10

http://www.millarworld.tv/
www.imagecomics.com

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2019 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

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Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Review: BATMAN: Creature of the Night #1

BATMAN: CREATURE OF THE NIGHT No. 1
DC COMICS – @DCComics

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: Kurt Busiek
ART/COLORS: John Paul Leon
LETTERS: Todd Klein
COVER: John Paul Leon
48pp, Color, $5.99 U.S. (January 2018)

Rated “T+” for “Teen Plus”

Batman created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger

Book One: “I Shall Become...”

Batman: Creature of the Night is a four-issue, prestige comic book miniseries published by DC Comics.  It is written by Kurt Busiek and drawn and colored by John Paul LeonTodd Klein, one of the all-time greats, does the lettering for this series.  Creature of the Night takes place in a real world-like setting in which Batman is a fictional character.

Batman: Creature of the Night #1 (“I Shall Become...”) introduces an eight-year boy named Bruce Wainwright, who is a huge fan of Batman.  Of course, he loves reading Batman comic books, and he surrounds himself with products bearing Batman's image.  Frankly, the little fellow is obsessed with Batman.  In fact, when Bruce tells people his name, he pronounces it “Wain...wright,” putting an obvious pause between “Wain” and “wright.”

Bruce has an great-uncle, Alton Frederick Jepson (the only living relative on either side of Bruce's family).  The boy has taken the “Al” in the first name and “Fred” in the second and turned his uncle into Uncle Alfred, like Batman's butler, Alfred Pennyworth.  Bruce even thinks of his hometown of Boston as Gotham City.

It is all fun and games, until that Halloween night when Bruce's parents, Carole and Henry Wainwright, are brutally murdered.  As Bruce's grief and rage grow in the aftermath of his parents' murders, something strange takes flight in Boston.

Batman: Creature of the Night is apparently the spiritual companion to the 2004 miniseries, Superman: Secret Identity, also written by Kurt Busiek (and drawn by Stuart Immonen).  Batman: Creature of the Night puts a spin on the world and fictional mythology of Batman.  This series seems to ask, what if Batman could exist in the real world?

This first issue, however, focuses not only on young Bruce Wainwright's grief and rage over his parents' murders, but also on his bitterness about his fate, especially because he feels abandoned by those who should care, to one extent or another, about him and what he needs.  In a way, this first issue deals with a child who experiences a break from reality, something that seems possible because of his total obsession not only with Batman, but also with being like Batman.  All of it is in the context of the great loss which he has suffered.

Kurt Busiek delivers powerful character development.  Busiek does not focus only on Bruce's Batman obsession; he also depicts a child in crisis, struggling with where his life is going, even as those who could help him to truly move forward only lie to themselves that they are doing what is best for young Bruce.  The result is potent and engaging character drama, simply because the reader can find young Bruce Wainwright fascinating or a fascinating character study.

Artist John Paul Leon conveys all of this in art and graphics that capture not so much a gritty reality as it does a tortured soul.  Leon creates effective storytelling that depicts Bruce's crisis and perhaps, his fanaticism and the fantastical elements, all of which are equally powerful and interesting.

Todd Klein, as always, is not merely a letterer; he is a graphical artist as much as the illustrator.  His lettering captures Busiek's shifting points of view from character to character – not just in external dialogue, but also in the internal monologue.  He does this using an array of visually striking fonts.  Klein plays a big part in keeping the readers in suspense regarding the mystery of Batman: Creature of the Night's phantom player.  Is it a break with reality or the arrival of something fantastic, but real?

Batman: Creature of the Night #1 is the real deal.  It is not just another Bat-book, and it certainly makes me want to get the second issue.

9 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2017 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

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Monday, November 25, 2019

BOOM! Studios from Diamond Distributors for November 27, 2019

BOOM! STUDIOS

SEP191273    ANGEL #7 CVR A MAIN PANOSIAN    $3.99
SEP191274    ANGEL #7 CVR B CONNECTING REBELKA VAR    $3.99
SEP191275    ANGEL #7 CVR C PREORDER BUONCRISTIANO    $3.99
SEP198458    FOLKLORDS #1 (OF 5) (2ND PTG)    $3.99
SEP191298    LUMBERJANES #68 CVR A LEYH    $3.99
SEP191299    LUMBERJANES #68 CVR B PREORDER MILLEDGE VAR    $3.99
SEP191288    MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #45 CVR A CAMPBELL    $3.99
SEP198699    MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #45 FOC MORA VAR    $3.99
SEP191290    MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #45 FOIL MONTES VAR    $4.99
AUG191415    PLATE TECTONICS ILLUS MEMOIR ORIGINAL GN HC (RES)    $24.99
JUL191325    RUGRATS ORIGINAL GN VOL 01 LAST TOKEN    $14.99
JUL191341    WOODS YEARBOOK ED TP VOL 03    $29.99

Dark Horse Comics from Diamond Distributors for November 27, 2019

DARK HORSE COMICS

JUN190342    AVATAR TSU TEYS PATH TP VOL 01    $19.99
JUL190433    BRAVEST WARRIORS 4 PACK MAGNET SET    $9.99
JUL190432    BRAVEST WARRIORS COASTER SET    $9.99
JUL190434    BRAVEST WARRIORS ENAMEL PIN SET    $14.99
JUL190435    BRAVEST WARRIORS MAGNET SET    $8.99
SEP190277    ETHER DISAPPEARANCE OF VIOLET BELL #3 (OF 5) CVR A RUBIN    $3.99
SEP190278    ETHER DISAPPEARANCE OF VIOLET BELL #3 (OF 5) CVR B THOMPSON    $3.99
SEP190273    FIGHT CLUB 3 #11 CVR A MACK (MR)    $3.99
SEP190274    FIGHT CLUB 3 #11 CVR B WILKERSON (MR)    $3.99
SEP190296    INVISIBLE KINGDOM #7 (MR)    $3.99
SEP190291    MACHINE GUN WIZARDS #4 (OF 4) CVR A WARD    $3.99
SEP190292    MACHINE GUN WIZARDS #4 (OF 4) CVR B WALTA    $3.99
JUL190353    STRANGER THINGS TP VOL 02 SIX    $17.99
JUL190346    UMBRELLA ACADEMY LIBRARY EDITION HC VOL 02 DALLAS    $39.99
JUL190404    WITCHFINDER OMNIBUS HC VOL 01    $34.99
SEP190254    WITCHFINDER REIGN OF DARKNESS #1 (OF 5)    $3.99

DC Comics from Diamond Distributors for November 27, 2019

DC COMICS

AUG190594    ACTION COMICS #1017 CARD STOCK VAR ED YOTV    $4.99
AUG190593    ACTION COMICS #1017 YOTV ACETATE    $3.99
AUG190645    AQUAMAN SWORD OF ATLANTIS TP BOOK 01    $39.99
SEP190519    BASKETFUL OF HEADS #2 (OF 6) (MR)    $3.99
SEP190520    BASKETFUL OF HEADS #2 (OF 7) VAR ED (MR)    $3.99
AUG190598    BATGIRL #41 CARD STOCK VAR ED YOTV    $4.99
AUG190597    BATGIRL #41 YOTV ACETATE    $3.99
APR190530    BATMAN & ROBIN BY TOMASI AND GLEASON OMNIBUS HC NEW PTG    $125.00
SEP190475    BATMAN BEYOND #38    $3.99
SEP190476    BATMAN BEYOND #38 VAR ED    $3.99
APR190590    BATMAN BLACK & WHITE MINI PVC FIGURE 7 PACK SET 4    $40.00
AUG190492    BATMAN CREATURE OF THE NIGHT #4 (OF 4) (RES)    $5.99
AUG190497    BATMAN VS RAS AL GHUL #3 (OF 6)    $3.99
SEP190521    BOOKS OF MAGIC #14 (MR)    $3.99
JUN190576    BOOSTER GOLD THE BIG FALL HC    $39.99
MAR190573    DC COMICS THE ART OF JIM LEE HC VOL 01    $39.99
APR190585    DC DESIGNER SER BATMAN BY FRANK MILLER STATUE    $150.00
OCT190003    DC PREVIEWS #20 DECEMBER 2019 EXTRAS    $PI
SEP190484    DETECTIVE COMICS #1016    $3.99
SEP190485    DETECTIVE COMICS #1016 CARD STOCK VAR ED    $4.99
SEP190534    DOLLAR COMICS INFINITE CRISIS #1    $1.00
SEP190488    FLASH #83    $3.99
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SEP190492    FREEDOM FIGHTERS #11 (OF 12)    $3.99
SEP190456    JOHN CONSTANTINE HELLBLAZER #1 (MR)    $3.99
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SEP190506    LOONEY TUNES #252    $2.99
SEP190508    MARTIAN MANHUNTER #10 (OF 12)    $3.99
SEP190509    MARTIAN MANHUNTER #10 (OF 12) VAR ED    $3.99
AUG190626    RED HOOD OUTLAW #40 VAR ED YOTV    $3.99
AUG190625    RED HOOD OUTLAW #40 YOTV ACETATE    $3.99
AUG190677    RED HOOD OUTLAW TP VOL 02 PRINCE OF GOTHAM    $16.99
MAY190445    SHAZAM #8    $3.99
MAY190446    SHAZAM #8 VAR ED    $3.99
SEP190514    SUPERGIRL ANNUAL #2    $4.99
SEP190448    SWAMP THING GIANT #2    $4.99
SEP190469    TALES FROM THE DARK MULTIVERSE INFINITE CRISIS #1    $5.99
AUG190634    TERRIFICS #22 VAR ED YOTV    $3.99
AUG190633    TERRIFICS #22 YOTV ACETATE    $3.99