5 Comics to Pick up this Week (07/24/19)

Some weeks are DC-heavy, some weeks there are several amazing independent titles, but HOLY SMOKES, Marvel is PACKING A PUNCH. We’ve got some serious heavy-hitter comics releasing this week! Hold onto your butts, folks, this is going to be an epic New-Release-Wednesday.

House of X #1 (OF 6)

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Jonathan Hickman (A/CA) Pepe Larraz
OF COURSE this has to be on my list this week: X-MEN (soft) REBOOT. Uncanny X-Men and X-Force have ended and the next chapter of X-Men begins with Hickman’s House of X and Powers of X, the mini series that will bring Mutants “out of the shadows and into the light.”

There has been an astronomical amount of hype around this mini-series and his additional series Powers of X, (which will allegedly change the way we see the past, present and future of mutants) and my hope is that this series can make itself worthy of all of this hype. House of X and Powers of X seem to be all anyone wants to talk about for the past two months and although I do not typically get excited over modern X-Men stories, I am SUPER intrigued about this — and if it will really be as revolutionary as the Marvel / Diamond descriptions and solicitations are making it seem!

Fearless #1 (of 4) Frison Connecting Variant

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Seanan McGuire & Various (A) Claire Roe, Carmen Nunez Carnero (CA) Jenny Frison
A celebration of the women of Marvel, this mini-series showcases an amazing collection of female characters who have fought, overcome, loved, and have been an inspiration to so many. From an all-female creative team, it’s so powerful to see women celebrating women and I am HERE for this series!

Valkyrie: Jane Foster #1

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Jason Aaron, Al Ewing (A) CAFU (CA) Mahmud A. Asrar
First, she was Dr. Jane Foster, then she became Thor, the Goddess of Thunder, and spinning from the pages of War of the Realms, she is now VALKYRIE. Jane Foster is one bad-B and I am so pumped to see Jason Aaron’s story of Jane Foster as Valkyrie, guide and ferry-woman to the dead.

Web of Venom: Funeral Pyre #1

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Cullen Bunn (A) Alberto Jimenez Alburquerque, Joshua Cassara (CA) Declan Shalvey
An “Absolute Carnage” tie-in/prequel, Carnage has been hunting all former symbiote hosts and killing them off. This one-shot story tells the tale of the hunting down of his next victim, Andi Benton, formerly Mania (living in Philadelphia) without a symbiote to save her from the destruction of Carnage.

Batman: Curse of the White Knight #1 (of 8)

DC Comics
(Wr/A/CA) Sean Murphy
In this sequel to Batman White Knight series (retroactively part of DC’s Black Label), Joker recruits Azreal to run Gotham into the ground by revealing a shocking secret about the Wayne family. While fighting to save his city, Bruce deals with how the secret begins to unravel and exposes the true history of his ancestry. This sequel series promises “new villains,” (which hooks me in), and the success of the first series is setting this series up to be a must-have!

Star Pig #1 (of 4) Cvr A Richard

IDW Publishing
(Wr) Delilah S Dawson (A) Francesco Gaston (CA) Sara Richard
“Perfect for fans of Saga and Guardians of the Galaxy,” this is the story of a 16-year-old girl, going to Space Camp (in space), who is rescued by a space-faring Water-Bear after a shuttle accident sets her flying through space. This trippy yet adorable story looks like it will be a lot of fun, and I’m excited for this adventure to begin!

5 Comics to Pick up this Week (07/17/19)

Loki #1

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Daniel Kibblesmith (CA) Ozgur Yildirim
*Spoiler Alert*
Loki died in War of the Realms, and now he is BACK. This mischievous, handsome troublemaker returns with a whole new set of responsibilities, and Thor is not letting him weasel his way out of them. This story looks like it is going to be — if not hilarious — at least strongly entertaining. I am very excited to scoop it up this week!

Silver Surfer Black #2 (OF 5)

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Donny Cates (A/CA) Tradd Moore
The first issue of this series was AMAZING. Though the artwork was a bit of a throw-off, the story trumped the awkwardness of some of the panels and spreads. I know there will be similar artwork in this second issue, but this story is a MUST HAVE in every comic fan’s collection.

Resonant #1

Vault Comics
(Wr) David Andry (A/CA) Alejandro Aragon
This is post-apocalyptic, dark, and suspenseful tale of a family being torn apart and desperately fighting to reunite against all odds. This looks like an emotional (and possibly pretty predictable) story about the importance of fighting for the ones we love.

Blade Runner 2019 #1

Titan Comics
(Wr) Michael Green, Mike Johnson (A) Andres Guinaldo (CA) Artgerm, Stanley Lau
Set in “present day” Neo-Noir Los Angeles, issue one tells the story of Ash, a veteran Blade Runner on a mission to find a billionaire’s wife and child who were kidnapped to be used for “dark purposes.” I have never taken the plunge into any Blade Runner story, so I’m picking up this canon story to dip my toes into this dark and mysterious world.

Collapser #1 (OF 6)

DC Comics
(Wr) Mikey Way, Shaun Simon (A/CA)  Ilias Kyriazis
Our main character, Liam James gets sent a…black hole…in the mail…and he gets superpowers from it… totally normal. I have no idea what to say about this comic, but I am both bewildered and intrigued. I feel compelled to pick this comic up this week to figure out how in the HECK someone sends a black hole in the mail, but that’s the world of comics, folks! BUCKLE UP!


Invisible Woman #1 Review: Has Potential to Be about Infidelity, But Probably Won’t Be

Susan Storm is one bored MILF.

I assume that bored moms let their minds wander to the past, a time when they were less bored. If a bored mom is unemployed now, she might think about former career highlights. If her children are young, and if there are a lot of them, she might fantasize about the days when all she had to worry about was herself. If she’s unhappy in their marriage, she might think about more emotionally and sexually attentive boyfriends and lovers from the past.

From what I can see in issue #1 of Invisible Woman, Susan Storm is a bored mom. This is very clear, and yet I think I’m the first one to come out and just say it already. The creative team connects the past and present in issue one to explore Susan’s determination to break free from matronly routines.

What happens in issue #1?

Writer Mark Waid opens the series with a flashback to back to more than a decade ago, during Susan’s espionage mission for S.H.I.E.L.D.. What happens in that mission doesn’t matter at all. The scene merely exists to establish her relationship to her handsome partner, Aidan Tintreach (whom she calls Squarejaw), and their differing approaches to their line of work. He is fine with killing if it means surviving a mission; she isn’t.

Credit: Marvel Entertainment

That’s not where their differences end. Aidan/Squarejaw wants to be with his beloved “Stormy” romantically. She denies him that honor because she’s busy with the Fantastic Four. She’s also engaged to Reed Richards.

Fast-forward several years later, during which Susan doesn’t age at all. There’s some internal monologuing about she’s fine with being stuck in a routine before she is summoned to the C.I.A. headquarters. There, she learns that Aidan has been captured by terrorists/spies and is being tortured for intel. As he was being captured, he left a coded message: Stormy. How romantic!

Naturally, the old, white C.I.A. man tells her that she is not to intervene whatsoever. Naturally, Susan flies to Moravia, the fictional Marvel country where Aidan is likely being held hostage. Once she’s there, she meets the Black Widow, who bears a freaky resemblance to Nicole Kidman. Marvel just can not resist a crossover.

Rating 5/10

Until the series concludes, I’ll tag along for the distinct pleasure of looking at Mattia de Iulis’s art. It’s as if he’s spent his whole life analyzing the way light bathes objects and people. The way he renders fabrics — cloth, suits, cotton, denim, and leather — is overwhelmingly satisfying, better than real life. If someone from 1910 saw the realism of his art, they would have died from shock.

Mark Waid, if left to his own devices, might make this a story about Aidan and Susan’s chemistry, which might boil over into something physical when they inevitably meet again. Marvel, if left to its own devices, will not let that happen. Marital infidelity is not part of Disney’s (and by extension, Marvel’s) brand. I expect some lukewarm compromise between these two possibilities, filled with mostly action scenes.

6 Comics to Pick up this Week (07/10/19)

Second Coming #1 Cover A (Connor)

Ahoy Comics
(Wr) Mark Russell (A) Richard Pace (CA) Amanda Connor
After DC dropped this title for being too “controversial,” it was picked up by Ahoy Comics. This makes me wonder if the series is considered controversial simply because Jesus is involved? Whatever the reasoning is, I want to read this issue just to see why DC thought it unfit to print.

Earth’s most famous super-hero, Sunstar, is asked to accept Jesus as a roommate and teach him to use his powers. Jesus finds out how people have been misconstruing his teaching and vows to set the stories straight. 

Black Hammer Justice League #1 (of 5) Cover A

Dark Horse Comics
(Wr) Jeff Lemire (A/CA) Michael Walsh

This first issue of the crossover between Image’s Black Hammer with DC’s Justice League does not look it will disappoint. I have loved everything that I have read from Jeff Lemire, so I am really excited to pick this issue up — especially to see how he depicts the Justice League being thrust into the world of Black Hammer.

Reaver #1

Image Comics
(Wr) Justin Jordan (A) Rebekah Isaacs, Alex Guimaraes (CA) Becky Cloonan
This story reminds me of a high-fantasy Suicide Squad, and is promised to keep us satiated in a post-Game of Thrones world. A team of six of the “most despicable prisoners” must band together to prevent the end of the new world. 

Invisible Woman #1 (of 5)

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Mark Waid (A) Mattia De Iulis (CA) Adam Hughes
Susan Storm, or Invisible Woman, worked years ago for S.H.I.E.L.D. Years later, this story picks up when she has to save her former partner from death after being captured by international terrorists. Being that this is Invisible Woman’s first solo-series, I am absolutely going to pick this up and show support for this incredible female character, brought to life by a stellar creative team!

Amazing Spider-Man #25

Marvel Comics
(W) Nick Spencer (A) Ryan Ottley & Various (CA) Ryan Ottley
Classic “CAN SPIDEY SAVE MJ” from Mysterio story…I’m not terribly interested in the story since we have so often seen Spidey saving MJ, but the possibility that MJ saves Spidey in this story piques my interest. This oversized issue marks the two-year run of this story by powerhouse team Nick Spencer and Ryan Ottley. 

Batman Universe #1 (of 6)

DC Comics
(Wr) Brian Michael Bendis (A/CA) Nick Derington
Slim-pickings for DC Comics that are releasing this week. That’s because many DC comics this week are Year of the Villain tie-ins. This is the only comic that is a first issue, and looks like it will be an interesting story of cat and mouse between Batman and Riddler. Batman will be tracking down a Faberge egg and bringing it back to its rightful owner: Jinny Hex, descendant of Jonah Hex! 


7 Comics to Pick up this Week (06/26/19)

ASCENDER #3

IMAGE COMICS
(Wr) Jeff Lemire (A/CA) Dustin Nguyen
This is the third installment of Ascender‘s five-part story arc, with STUNNING artwork that plays perfectly with a captivating story of a father and daughter’s fight for their lives against the All-Powerful “Mother.” 

CANTO #1 (OF 6) COVER A ZUCKER

IDW PUBLISHING
(Wr) David M. Booher (A/CA) Drew Zucker
“Canto’s people once had hearts, now they have clocks.” 
 This all-ages story looks like a fantastical trip of mystery and adventure that the whole family will love.

ISOLA #8 CVR A KERSCHL

IMAGE COMICS
(Wr) Brenden Fletcher, Karl Kerschl (A) Karl Kerschl, Msassyk (CA) Karl Kerschl
I LOVE THIS SERIES. We have had to patiently wait for this issue after Isola #7 was released in March, but it is so worth the wait. It does not happen often when the artwork in a comic book takes you on an emotional trip and leaves you absolutely breathless, but the artist, Karl Kerschel does this in every single issue. I am SO excited to pick this comic up on Wednesday. 

THANOS #3 (OF 6)

MARVEL COMICS
(Wr) Tini Howard (A) Ariel Olivetti (CA) Jeff Dekal
This series has been a really interesting read. It explores the early interactions and relationship of Gamora and her “father-figure,” Thanos. While we all may be feeling a little burned out from Thanos, this is a refreshing take on the character and I have really enjoyed this mini-series so far.

WOLVERINE EXIT WOUNDS #1

MARVEL COMICS
(Wr) Chris Claremont & Various (A) Salvador Larroca & Various (CA) Ryan Stegman
WOLVERINE, CHRIS CLAREMONT, SALVADOR LARROCA, and RYAN STEGMAN…NEED I SAY MORE, BUB? This issue is going to be amazing. A superstar lineup of creators come together to give us brand new stories of our beloved Wolverine. It’s bound to be bloody and I am here for it!

BATMAN DAMNED #3 (OF 3) (MR)

DC COMICS
(Wr) Brian Azzarello (A/CA) Lee Bermejo
Holy smokes, we have waited what feels like an ETERNITY for the finale of the series that shook comic fans to the core. All Bat-Wang jokes aside, the only thing that was disappointing about this series was how long we have had to wait for this final issue of this “Mature Audiences” story.

From my understanding, after the controversy of BATMAN DAMNED #1 from the now infamous “First Appearance” that flashed in a shadowy panel at the Bat-Cave, the higher-ups at DC decided to revise the rest of the series to avoid any more upset. I am supportive of the creative team’s initial decisions, and am bummed that after the controversy it was censored and revised, but I am still interested in the story and curious how they wrap it up.

WONDER WOMAN #73 VAR ED

DC COMICS
(WR) G. Willow Wilson (A) Jesus Merino (CA) Jenny Frison
While I am not currently reading WONDER WOMAN, I can never pass up a Jenny Frison cover — all of them are jaw-droppingly gorgeous.

Secret Society Comics had the pleasure of meeting her and getting a few things signed by her at Heroes Con in North Carolina.

Top 5 Releases of 2019 (So Far!)

Alright, it’s June!!! Halfway thought the year, and we have so many exciting new releases already. I wanted to take the time to tell you what I’m currently freaking out over and what has my full attention.

5. METALSHARK BRO by Bob Frantz, Kevin Cuffe, & Walt Ostlie

This new Scout Comics release was only sold as a single issue, with the rest of the story being released as a trade on July 31st this year. It’s a really fun story about a Shark who eats a man who’s meant to claim all the souls that pledged allegiance to Satan. As punishment, the Shark becomes anthropomorphized and has to kill all the people who swore their lives to Satan. Until he is done with his task, he can’t become a regular shark again. The premise for this comic is wild, and it’s a very entertaining read.

4. GHOST TREE by Bobby Curnow & Simon Gale

This IDW series is a four-part mini that tells the story of a man who returns to his grandpa’s house 10 years after his death to meet beneath a certain tree, like his grandfather asked of him. When he arrives at the tree, he sees his grandfather’s ghost — along with all of his ancestors! It’s a really beautiful story that has a suspenseful arc underlying the main plot. We’re only half way through, so my eyes are glued to the calendar as I await issue #3. 

3. BATMAN: LAST KNIGHT ON EARTH by Scott Snyder & Greg Capullo

I consider Snyder and Capullo to be legendary Batman creators at this point; their stamp is firmly set onto the history of Batman. This is the last dance, the final hurrah, the curtain call for Snyder and Capullo. Of course, they’re going to hit us with some crazy plot to put Bruce Wayne through the ringer. Only one issue in and I am chomping at the bit to get the next issue. (Don’t be surprised if you see this on my end of the year list.)

2. SPIDER-MAN: LIFE STORY by Chip Zdarsky & Mark Bagley

This is an amazing read. Go get it right now if you haven’t. This is not your typical Spidey story. Chip Zdarsky masterfully weaves modern American history into a history of Spider-Man told in real time. The book is cute, and funny at first, right up until the end of issue one when Flash Thompson volunteers to go fight in the Vietnam War. Don’t be surprised if you cry while reading. 

DAREDEVIL by Chip Zdarsky & Marco Checcetto

I consider this to be the best book out right now. Matt Murdock is framed for murder. It isn’t clear if he did or he didn’t commit the crime. Matt certainly doesn’t think he did, and that fact that even readers aren’t sure yet makes you feel so involved with the story. Additionally, Marco Checcetto’s interior work is some of the best Daredevil art I’ve ever seen. On top of that smorgasbord of awesome, the always-incredible Julian Tedesco is drawing the covers. If anything else I hope that by end of this read you pick up Daredevil. Trust me it’s the best thing out right now and you can take that straight to the bank!

7 Comics to Pick Up on 06/19/19

CRUCIFIED #1

Scout Comics
(Wr) Sheldon Allen (A) Armin Ozdic

The introduction of a brand new series about a NGO on a mission to kill a man believed to be the modern day Jesus — at any cost.

FAITHLESS #3 (of 5) Cover B Erotica Strips Variant

BOOM! Studios
(Wr) Brian Azzarello (A) Maria Llovet (CA) Dani Strips

Polybagged erotic cover art & the continuation of a truly amazing mini-series. Check out Reece’s review of FAITHLESS #1 here!

LAB RAIDER #1 (of 4) (MR)

Black Mask Studios
(Wr) Matt Miner (A/CA) Creees Lee

Young vigilantes break into a lab to free animals from being experimented on, and they discover that top-secret experiments are being performed on these animals to turn them into monstrous weapons. The rescuers quickly become the prey in the introduction of this highly anticipated mini-series. 

AQUAMAN #49 Variant

DC COMICS
(Wr) Kelly Sue DeConnick (A) Viktor Bogdanovic, Jonathan Glapion (CA) Joshua Middleton

I will definitely be picking this comic up, simply because Joshua Middleton’s cover is just THAT stunning. 

SUPERMAN YEAR ONE #1 (of 3)

DC Comics
(Wr) Frank Miller (A/CA) Danny Miki, John Romita Jr

DC’s premiere issue of Black Label, BATMAN DAMNED #1, shook comics fans across the world. This next phase of their Black Label retells Superman’s origin, putting fans in an absolute tizzy. I’m not particularly thrilled about either cover, but I will definitely be picking up a copy to read Frank Miller and John Romita Jr’s rendition of Superman’s origin.

MARVELS ANNOTATED #4 (of 4)

Marvel Comics
(W) Kurt Busiek (A/CA) Alex Ross

The final issue of the 25th Anniversary reprint of MARVELS, which changed the way we view super-heroes. These issues have been chalk-full of commentary from the creators and are an amazing addition to any comic collector’s vault.

GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY #6

Marvel Comics
(W) Donny Cates (A) Geoff Shaw (CA) David Marquez

This issue is promised to be action packed with Guardians vs Dark Guardians vs Hela and Black Order. It’s also been teased that Thanos will be resurrected.

Review of SILVER SURFER: BLACK from Donny Cates and Marvel Comics

Silver Surfer: Black is a passion project for Donny Cates, and it shows. It’s the culmination of boyhood dreams, professional ambition, meticulous plotting, expansive imagination, and hours spent writing, refining, writing again.

Issue one of Silver Surfer: Black is a cosmic blend of Donny Cates’s soul and Marvel corporate. Each an invincible force gleaming with incomprehensible power like the Surfer himself.

In order to write something this plotted, you have to really love comics. I’m not sure enough people know that Editorial at Marvel really does love comics. Sure, their names are credited in the issue, but…

Since Marvel’s Editorial team so relentlessly and effortlessly interweaves story arcs, characters, and universes, I’ll leave it to them to catch you up on the cosmos before we get into Silver Surfer: Black.

To save his planet, Norrin Radd surrendered his freedom to become herald to the world-devouring Galactus. Coated with galactic glaze, given a surfboard obeying his mental commands and granted the power cosmic, he now soars the universe as a shining sentinel of the spaceways! The galaxy was in chaos after Thanos, the mad titan, was killed. The cosmos’ greatest warriors gathered to hear the reading of his last will and testament — only to be attacked by Thanos’ Black Order! In the ensuing battle, the Black Order opened a black hole and cast several heroes — including the Silver Surfer — into the abyss. Now, drowning and unmoored in an endless void, the surfer is lost…

Silver Surfer Black, issue one preface

Reading experience

For us, Silver Surfer: Black is a comics zeitgeist moment. A tribute to the past and beginnings of the Marvel Universe, publisher in a time when the future of comics never seemed so bright, from self-published webcomics to global movie domination. This comic is a spectacle worthy of the infinite variant covers it has spawned. It’s the most poetic and vulnerable comic I’ve ever read.

For Marvel, it’s a boon. A comic that can increase their dominant market share just a bit more, get readers to buy into new universes. To fully understand this departure from reality in your hands, I’d say you need to know your Guardians of the Galaxy — and Donny Cates’ entire magnum opus. (I took Marvel Editorial up on their advice and acquainted myself with Guardians of the Galaxy — Annual #1 and Guardians of the Galaxy #1, both released in 2019.)

Cates’s writing is poetic and ambitious. (My favorite line: “Celestial tides crash upon me, starless and infinite.” My favorite words: “felled,” “cull,” “unmoored,” “bedlam.”) The story reads as if it is fresh off the lips of an omniscient being shouldering the trauma of millions, rather than a guy in Austin, Texas.

The framing of the story is equally poetic. Cates’s Silver Surfer begins by saying he is known as Death, and ends by affirming “I am not death. I am a blazing light in the abyss — and though drowning in the shadows — overwhelmed and suffocated by the dark —I ignite. I shine.”

How’s the art in SILVER SURFER BLACK?

There is, of course, another poetic element to this story. The dynamism between the words and art shows just how far back Cates and Tradd Moore go, from former classmates at Savannah College of Art and Design to the top of the most world-renowned comic book company.

The history here — between Cates and Moore, Cates and Stan Lee, and Lee and Kirby’s surfer plus the Surfer of 2000s movies & modern angst — is something to behold. And it is a visual spectacle to behold, indeed — with a texture, weight, arrangement, and palate unlike anything else currently published.

The fluid expressions of Moore’s lines, Stewart’s colors, and Cowles’s letters are perfect for this epic. It’s hard to imagine the fabric of reality tearing apart into something timeless and infinite, but these guys can.

My favorite visual moments:

  • Silver Surfer crying as he relives the worst period of his life. The tear fades into a speed trail.
  • The black hole pages have psychedelic borders made of earthy tones. If there were a shirt with these patterns on it, I’d buy.
  • The physical and atmospheric deformities caused by the torrent of motion and time in the black hole.
  • The revelation of the Surfer’s black, iridescent hand is absolutely iconic.

Contains Spoilers: What happens in SILVER SURFER BLACK issue one?

Norrin Radd — the Silver Surfer, Sentinel of the Spaceways, the Herald of Galactus unchained — goes by many names, including death. Throughout, he grapples with his complicity in decimating people and planets by Galactus’s side. He feels remorse over his “cold stare” and “stone inaction.” He sheds a silver tear.

After this recap, we see Norrin fall into an endless wormhole with the other Guardians of the Galaxy. He implores Beta Ray Bill to summon Stormbreaker and create a chasm black hole. (If you don’t take my word for it, then consult an interdimensional galactic physicist or Donny Cates.) After this disruption, the Silver Surfer tears through the abyss, his speed and power cosmic eventually breaching the fabric long enough for his fellow heroes to escape.

After they are safe, he collapses. Saving pantheons of heroes absolves his guilt only partially. Now he must ponder his guilt indefinitely as he careens through something beyond spacetime. He floats and falls for years, hurting, healing.

Suddenly, he senses that there is a planet eons away where evil forces are killing the innocent. He answers the call and is confronted with three giant sentries guarding some phallic metal thing. They engage in a battle, against the Surfer’s wishes and pleas for help.

Instead of killing the sentries, he restores light to this dark, barren world. The hand he used to birth that infant star becomes black and iridescent.

Is the black hole part of him now? It seems so. It seems the blackness might consume him.

The sentries are revealed to be “goddesses of some abandoned pantheon.” They must have been under some spell, because their faces are revealed when they were concealed before, and their faces are beautiful.

He investigates the mysterious metal structure, now opened. In a Marvel-Cates checkmate moment, Knull awaits the Surfer inside. (It is implied that the Surfer was catapulted to the beginning of time, and now he stands before the father of Symbiotes, Knull.)

9/10 Rating

6 Comics to Pick Up This Week (06/12/19)

BATMAN WHO LAUGHS #6 (of 7)

DC Comics
(Writer) Scott Snyder (Artist) Jock (Variant Cover Art) Jenny Frison

Mini-series extended to 7 issues. Features stunning cover by super-star, Jenny Frison.

EVENT LEVIATHAN #1 (OF 6)

DC Comics
(Wr) Brian Michael Bendis (A/CA) Alex Maleev

Monthly mini-series spans the DC Universe and threatens to bring every character to their knees.

SILVER SURFER BLACK #1 (OF 5)

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Donny Cates (A/CA) Tradd Moore

After Silver Surfer is “blown” through a black hole, he has to fight to save his soul in order to survive. Donny Cates, writer of COSMIC GHOST RIDER, is sure to make this a story you’ll never forget. There are 12 covers for this trippy series debut.

VENOM #15

Marvel Comics
(Wr) Cullen Bunn (A) Iban Coello, Alberto Jimenez Alburquerque (CA) Kyle Hotz

This WAR OF THE REALMS tie-in should be an incredible read. Goblins, Giants, and Symbiotes? OH MY!

ARCHIE #705: ARCHIE & SABRINA PART 1)

Archie Comic Publications
(Wr) Nick Spencer (A) Sandy Jarrell (CA) Veronica Fish

This issue introduces the beginning of a new story arc: a romance between Archie and Sabrina the Teenage Witch!

SONATA #1 CVR A HABERLIN & VAN DYKE (MR)

Image Comics
(Wr) David Hine, Brian Haberlin (A/CA) Brian Haberlin, Geirrod Van Dyke

This issue introduces the world of a peace-loving people meeting a group of war-mongers in a land that belongs to neither, and a girl who is willing to put everything on the line to find her own path somewhere amidst the chaos.

Review of FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD SPIDER-MAN #1

Written by Tom Taylor, FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD SPIDER-MAN takes the “Neighborhood” part of his nickname and plays within that world.

The first issue of the currently ongoing series opens up with a great sequence where Spidey saves a father and daughter from a potentially fatal car accident by backflipping through the window and pulling them out to safety. After saving them, he offers some advice on how to more effectively navigate rush hour in Queens, reinforcing the idea that this Spider-Man is just being the most perfect ambassador of his neighborhood.

Right after that heroic act, he helps an elderly woman named Marnie bring groceries up to her apartment. (He’s such a good kid.) Peter continues to just be generally helpful and nice to all those whom he encounters.

One of Peter’s neighbors asks him to contact Spider-Man to assist her with a problem that can’t be solved through the police. Peter says he will pass the message along, then goes out for some hot dogs. On his way back, he sees two strange cars double parked outside the apartment building and it triggers his Spidey senses. He rushes to help, and gets knocked out instead.

Overall, this issue does a great job of world-building an intimate community and making every person Peter comes across seem like a potentially important character. I know I was a bit late in diving into this series, but I hope to be caught up soon because it looks to be a wonderfully endearing tale of Peter Parker — and, I mean, who doesn’t love that?