Friday, June 5, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: DREAMING EAGLES #1

DREAMING EAGLES No. 1 (OF 6)
AFTERSHOCK COMICS – @AfterShockComix

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Garth Ennis
ARTIST: Simon Coleby
COLORS: John Kalisz
LETTERS: Rob Steen
COVER: Francesco Francavilla
VARIANT COVERS: Brian Stelfreeze; Phil Hester
32pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (December 2015)

For mature readers

Dreaming Eagles created by Garth Ennis

“We Cannot Consecrate”


Okay.  So back on September 11, 2015, Comic Book Resources posted an interview that assistant editor, Brett White, conducted with comic book luminary, Garth Ennis, concerning his then-upcoming miniseries, Dreaming Eagles.  Drawn by Simon Coleby, Dreaming Eagles tells the story of the first African-American fighter pilots to join the United States Army Air Force in World War II.  The series also deals with the 1960s Civil Right movement.

The first question that White asked Ennis was related to Mark Waid and J.G. Jones' current miniseries, Strange Fruit.  That comic book blends superhero comics to tell a story of racism during the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927.  Prior to the release of the first issue, there was some criticism by African-Americans leveled at Wade and Jones for telling their story in this manner, especially as privileged White American comic book creators.

So White asked Ennis, “Do you have any concern that you'll face similar scrutiny in writing about the Tuskegee airmen and their experiences?”

Ennis' response is so typically American White male privilege that it is hard to believe that he is originally from Northern Ireland:  “My attitude to that is that it's going to be what it's going to be; it's so far beyond my control that there's no point worrying about it. I'll write the best and most honest story I can, with appropriate attention to detail in terms of historical research. If you think I have no right to tell the story because I'm white, don't read it. If you don't think that and you're interested, give it a try.”

It is not that Black people do not want White people telling stories about Black people and African-American subject matter or featuring Black characters.  The complaint or grievance is that the same opportunity to produce such comic is, in large measure, not afforded to Black comic book creators.  Unless the story would be tailored to one of their characters, neither Marvel nor DC Comics would publish something like Dreaming Eagles produced by an African-American creative team.  In fact, it is unlikely that any of the major independents that publish creator-owned comic books would publish something like Dreaming Eagles by a team of Black creators.

How do I know that?  Well, they haven't...  A few times a year, Image Comics makes a big deal out of announcing its slate of upcoming creator-owned titles, and none are by African-American creative teams.  I think once, out of embarrassment, Image tossed in a token Negro title, which I have yet to see.  So AfterShock Comics is doing the same as the other publishers, and Garth Ennis is officially an American White male, willfully blind to his unearned White privilege.

So, onto the review...

Dreaming Eagles #1 (“We Cannot Consecrate”) opens in 1966, at night, outside “The Silver Pony” (a restaurant in New York City?).  The place is owned by a Black man, WWII veteran, Reggie Atkinson.  Tonight, he is thinking about his son, Lee, who is a budding activist in the 1960s Civil Rights movement.  Father and son don't agree on the movement, but tonight, Atkinson will finally tell Lee about his time as Lt. Reggie Atkinson, one of the first African-American fighter pilots in the United States Army Air Force in WWII.  And those first Black men had to prove a lot of White men wrong about a lot of things.

My diatribe to open this review aside, I like this first issue of Dreaming Eagles, which will be a six-issue miniseries.  The conflict between father and son is nothing new.  The old Black man versus the young brotha' conflict has popped up in much of the fiction and storytelling about the Black struggle for equality and dignity in the United States (most recently in the film, Lee Daniels' The Butler).  What I like is that Garth Ennis is depicting the father-son struggle as not being toxic, but instead, as a matter of perspective and worldview brought on by different life experiences.

Ennis is also blunt and to-the-point in stating the obstacles facing Black men in the U.S. military before and during WWII.  Ennis' storytelling has always been blunt and to-the-point which gives the drama and action in his stories the force of a series of jabs that keeps the readers always on his feet and engaged with the story.

If this comic book were published by DC Comics' Vertigo imprint, which published practically all of Ennis' work for about a decade, Simon Coleby would be the artist and this story would not look different.  He is not a fall-back choice for a name writer looking for as an artist.  Coleby gives each panel just the right amount of drama that is needed, from subdued to momentous.  He does not force a mood to pander to reader expectations, simply because he understands the build up to moments – immediately and for later chapters.

I think that this first issue is rather languid compared to what I expect to come in later issues, but I could be wrong.  My sense of expectation suggests that readers of Garth Ennis' war comics will want to read beyond the first issue.  However, I don't know that people who have enjoyed Ennis' work on comic books like Preacher and The Punisher will care for this.

A-

[This comic book includes a five-page preview of the comic book , Replica #2, by Paul Jenkins and Andy Clarke.]

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


The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.


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Thursday, June 4, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: KAIJU GIRL CARAMELISE Volume 3

KAIJU GIRL CARAMELISE, VOL. 3
YEN PRESS

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

MANGAKA: Spica Aoki
TRANSLATION: Taylor Engel
LETTERS: Lys Blakeslee
ISBN: 978-1-9753-0860-5; paperback (April 2020); Rated “T” for “Teen”
164pp, B&W, $13.00 U.S., $17.00 CAN

Otome Kaiju Kyaramerize is a manga written and illustrated by Spica Aoki.  It was serialized in the seinen manga magazine, Monthly Comic Alive, starting in early 2018.  Yen Press is publishing an English-language edition of the manga in North America as a series of graphic novels under the title, Kaiju Girl Caramelise.

Kaiju Girl Caramelise focuses on an outcast girl named Kuroe Akaishi.  She is suffering from a rare, incurable illness that causes frightening changes to her body, and she spends her high school days avoiding all her classmates.  Then, she draws the attention of class idol, Arata Minami, so now, Kuroe questions the weird feelings she has when she is around this popular boy.  But Kuroe's mother, Yuriko Akaishi, knows the truth.  Her daughter is the Godzilla-like kaiju known as “Harugon!”

Kaiju Girl Caramelise, Vol. 3 (Chapters 11 to 16) opens shortly after Harugon's latest appearance.  But Kuroe's real problem is that the new school semester is beginning.  Despite her best efforts to keep her budding relationship with Insta-famous classmate, Arata Minami, a secret from her classmates, Kuroe is thrust into the spotlight.  [“Insta” is this series' Instagram-like social media app.]

Now, the socially awkward girl finds herself attracting unwanted attention from girls who are jealous of her relationship with Minami.  Luckily, she meets a new friend, a gorgeous classmate named Raimu Kouno a.k.a. “Rairi.”  But this uber-attractive girl who has a knack for make-up hides her own dark secret regarding physical transformations.

[This volume includes an “Afterword” in comics form.]

The Kaiju Girl Caramelise manga is another new title to me.  My Yen Press rep included it in a batch of titles for review.

Kaiju Girl Caramelise Graphic Novel Volume 3 won't confuse you, dear readers, if it is your first encounter with the series.  It is too damn good to be confusing.  Creator Spica Aoki hits upon themes and plots that are timeless and familiar in juvenile fiction.  Self-confidence, self-hate, the fear of unwanted attention, acceptance of peers, young love, teen angst, friendship, physical appearance, having a secret side, and more are all there in Vol. 3.

Also Aoki has created such a lovable cast of characters.  Kuroe is endearing, and her friends, classmates, and contemporaries (even the jerks) are engaging characters.  It is just a blast to read their adventures, especially because of Taylor Engel's adaptation, which captures the narrative's serious moments and its comic and sugary side.  Lys Blakeslee's lettering also goes a long way in giving each moment its correct tone.

From what I gather via my research, Vol. 3 may be the final volume of the series... for the time being.  This volume ends with a “to be continued.”  I hope so; this is the best Yen Press manga that I have read to date.

9 out of 10

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


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The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and  syndication rights and fees.


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Wednesday, June 3, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: THE DEMON PRINCE OF MOMOCHI HOUSE Volume 13

THE DEMON PRINCE OF MOMOCHI HOUSE, VOL. 13
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia

MANGAKA: Aya Shouoto
TRANSLATION: JN Productions
LETTERS: Inori Fukuda Trant
EDITOR: Nancy Thislethwaite
ISBN: 978-1-9747-0402-6; paperback (January 2019); Rated “T” for “Teen”
172pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK

The Demon Prince of Momochi House is a supernatural and romance manga series written and illustrated by Aya Shouoto.  It began serialization in Kadokawa Shoten's shojo manga magazine, Monthly Asuka, in July 2013. VIZ Media has been publishing an English-language edition of the manga as a graphic novel series under its “Shojo Beat” imprint since July 2015.

The Demon Prince of Momochi House focuses on Himari Momochi.  When she reaches her 16th birthday, Himari learns that she has inherited an old house located deep in the woods.  She has never seen this domicile, which is called “the Momochi House,” and does not know that it already has three inhabitants.  One of them, 17-year-old Aoi Nanamori, is the “Nue,” the “Demon Prince” of Momochi House, which acts as a barrier between the human world and the spiritual realms.

As The Demon Prince of Momochi House, Vol. 13 (Chapters 47 to 51) opens, Himari believes that she is dead because the conniving ayakashi, Kasha, shot her with a pistol.  However, what Kasha shot Himari with was really an “ayakashi item.”  It only removed Himari's spirit from her body, and while she isn't dead, the struggle to return Himari to her body is... well, quite a struggle.

Kasha has plans and ulterior motives, and even his agreement to return Himari to her body is a ruse.  But everyone will be shocked when Kasha reveals his true intent.  Plus, Himari gets help from two returning supporting characters.

[This volume includes miscellaneous illustrations.]

THE LOWDOWN:  The Demon Prince of Momochi House manga is delightfully infused with a sense of magic and mystery.  Practically every page of this delicious series is populated by ayakashi (yokai), but sometimes the series seems too dreamy for its own good.

The Demon Prince of Momochi House Graphic Novel Volume 13 pays off the killer of a cliffhanger ending that Vol. 12 presented.  Kasha shot Himari at the end of the previous volume.  That leads to this – Vol. 13 being one of the best volumes of the series.  What makes it so good?  The answer is first, conflict, and secondly, is hindrance.

Kasha and a special guest star both force Himari to struggle for what she wants, and one of the characters proves to be not only a tremendous adversary for Aoi, but also something else.  The chapters in this volume, all five of them, are one long series of hindrances in the way of Himari's determination to make everything right again.

So conflict and hindrance create drama, and Vol. 13 offers some of The Demon Prince of Momochi House's most potent drama to date, and JN Productions' translation conveys that drama in all its potency.  And as ever, letterer Inori Fukuda Trant offers stylish lettering and word balloons that bring out the beauty in the supernatural chaos and strife.

I READS YOU RECOMMENDS:  Fans of high school supernatural romance and of yokai fiction will want to visit the “Shojo Beat” title, The Demon Prince of Momochi House.

A
9 out of 10

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


The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and  syndication rights and fees.



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Tuesday, June 2, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: SP BABY Volume 2

SP BABY, VOL. 2
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia

CARTOONIST: Maki Enjoji
TRANSLATION: JN Productions
LETTERS: Inori Fukuda Trant
EDITOR: Nancy Thislethwaite
ISBN: 978-1-4215-9375-3; paperback (February 2018); Rated “+” for “Older Teen”
200pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK

SP x Baby is a manga written and drawn by Maki Enjoji.  It was serialized in the Japanese shojo manga magazine, Petit Comic, from 2014 to 2015.  VIZ Media published an English-language edition of the manga as a two-volume graphic novel series, entitled SP Baby, from 2017 to 2018 under its “Shojo Beat” imprint.

SP Baby centers on 23-year-old Tamaki Hasegawa, who wants to join the “Security Police” (SP) and works hard towards that goal.  One day, she is on the way to an interview for a much-needed job when she stops to help a young man whom she believes is being assaulted.  That young man turns out to be Kagetora Sugou, the nephew of the prime minister of Japan.  Now, Kagetora wants Tamaki to be his bodyguard, and although she accepts, Tamaki does not realize that she has met Kagetora in the past.

As SP Baby, Vol. 2 (Chapters 6 to 9 to Final Mission) begins, Tamaki isn't feeling well.  She perks up, however, when her younger brother, Taishi Hasegawa, informs her that the most important man in her life, longtime friend, Natsuo “Natsu” Shino, is coming for a visit.  Meanwhile, the 25-year-old who wants to be the most important man in her life, Kagetora, also stops by for a visit.

With Kagetora acting more like a boyfriend than a boss, he is bound to give Natsu the wrong idea about their relationship, which is supposed to be strictly professional.  Natsu, however, also has some big news to share with Tamaki.  So will Tamaki let her guard down and accept Kagetora's advances?  Will she become his “SP Baby?”

[This volume includes a five-page bonus SP Baby manga story.]

The SP Baby manga is written and illustrated by Maki Enjoji.  She is one of the current reigning queens of shojo romance.  Enjoji specializes in chronicling the evolution of romances between young females and young males whose personalities clash, as seen in VIZ Media's current Enjoji project, An Incurable Case of Love.

SP Baby Graphic Novel Volume 2 is the final volume of this two-volume series.  Vol. 1 was not so much a love story as it was a “Me Too” era violation.  Enjoji depicted Kagetora as a bore who did not respect Tamaki's space.  He acted like a privileged brat, and his actions sometime bordered on being criminal.  Tamaki was depicted as plucky and determined, but she lacked the good sense to quit her job as Kagetora's bodyguard.  In fact, if she had trusted her feelings, she would not have taken the job in the first place.

Vol. 2 is a more traditional frothy shojo romance story.  Kagetora comes across more as a desperate pest who is madly in love with Tamaki.  The plucky Tamaki of the first volume is still plucky in Vol. 2, but her feelings are more conflicted.  Also, now, her feelings lean more towards accepting Kagetora's courtship.  JN Productions' translation conveys the sharp change in narrative tone from the first volume to the second.  As usual, Inori Fukuda Trant's lettering is perfect for a Maki Enjoji manga.

In her afterword, Enjoji writes that she was pregnant will producing the chapters that comprise the first volume and struggling with a newborn child will producing the chapters for the second volume.  That might explain the shifts in tone from the first half to the second half of the series.

So, SP Baby is not a great series, and I think that it is the least of her works in terms of quality that I have read to date.  But the ending is nice.

B
6 out of 10

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


The text is copyright © 2020 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and  syndication rights and fees.

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Monday, June 1, 2020

BOOM! Studios from Diamond Distributors for June 3, 2020

BOOM! STUDIOS

FEB201295    BUFFY EVERY GENERATION #1 CVR A MAIN    $7.99
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Dark Horse Comics from Diamond Distributors for June 3, 2020

DARK HORSE COMICS

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DC Comics from Diamond Distributors for June 3, 2020

DC COMICS

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