Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Comics As Holiday Gifts

Something a little different today, kiddie cops. I’ve read a couple books since the last post, but instead of more reviews, today I’m gonna tell you a little about giving comics as presents, specifically at Christmas, but birthdays or just whenever work as well.

The idea isn’t a new one. I’ve been reading the suggestion and discussions about the pros and cons online for a couple years now. Handing out single issues of kid-friendly titles as Halloween treats is another variation. Especially when kids are involved, the giver might just be helping to create another generation of comics readers.

I don’t know any young children I can give comics to at the moment, but I do know some friends and family members who have expressed mild interest in comics before or who I feel might be willing to try them if the subject matter was of interest. Most of these intended recipients aren’t going to care much for superhero stories unless there was something else to it, but that’s not all I read either.

I’ve selected four titles I think these people might have an interest in (I can’t tell you who is getting what, they might be reading) and decided to go with the first trade paperback collection from each series. And I decided to post about them in case someone out there might also be inspired to try one of these books, if he/she hasn’t already.

Transmetropolitan
The first title is one we haven’t talked about here before because I don’t actually own a single copy of the book. Transmetropolitan was a series created and written by Warren Ellis. Most often, the artist was Darick Robertson. The series lasted for 60 issues between 1997 and 2002 and has been collected into, I believe, 11 trades. I’d always been curious about it, and finally had a chance to borrow the entire series from a co-worker. I was both surprised and revolted by what I found, enough so that I plan to buy myself copies of the trades, and figured a few of my more twisted friends might enjoy sampling the series.

The Comics Buyers Guide Standard Catalog of Comic Books describes the series thus: “Taking its title from a rowdy song by Irish rockers, the Pogues, and basing its main character on legendary “gonzo journalist” Dr. Hunter S. Thompson (author of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and the model for another famous comic strip character, Doonesbury’s Uncle Duke), Transmetropolitan positions itself squarely at the acid-etched edge of 1990s hip culture. Transmetropolitan follows the adventures of psychotic writer Spider Jerusalem in a nightmarish near-future, cyber-nightmare world of drugs, aliens, androids, mutants, technology gone mad, and lots more drugs.” I’d add that my favorite character, next to Spider himself, is the two-headed, chain-smoking cat he adopts in the series.

Fallen Angel
This next book has had an interesting life. Fallen Angel, written by Peter David and originally illustrated by David Lopez and Ferdinand Blanco, was never part of the mainstream DC Universe, but it was not published by DC’s more mature Vertigo imprint, either. That made it hard for the series to find an audience, and DC finally called it quits after 20 issues between 2003 and 2005. But just this last year, IDW Publishing picked up the series. To date, they have published 10 issues from David and new artist David Woodward.

Here’s how DC described the series: “Welcome to Bete Noire ... where dreams come to die. Quiet, almost mundane by day, Bete Noire’s shadows seem imbued with life by night. Criminals conduct their business unafraid, and the uncommon is commonplace. And moving through it all like broken glass — smooth, yet cunning — is the woman called the Fallen Angel, who helps people in need when they find themselves at a crossroads in their lives. But the Fallen Angel’s help isn’t always what it seems. If she deems you worthy, she can be your savior. If not, you’ll walk away from her worse off than you were before ... if at all.” The series explores just who and what the Fallen Angel is, and while she isn’t the typical “hero,” her exploits in Bete Noire are quite entertaining.

Fables
This DC Vertigo series, of course, came from the mind of Bill Willingham, and involves many of those famous fairy tale characters secretly living in New York among the rest of us Mundanes. Familiar faces are given added dimensions in these modern tales of the Fable folk, and readers learn that their lives really aren’t always “happily ever after,” especially when you consider most of these Fables have been around for centuries. And there’s also the little matter of why they are living here, having been driven from their Homelands by the mysterious Adversary.

The first arc of this ongoing comic book introduces us to the hierarchy of Fabletown with the capable administrator Snow White, constable Bigby Wolf, lothario Prince Charming, perennial con-man Jack Horner and a host of others as they are confronted by the disappearance, and probably murder, of Snow’s sister, Rose Red.

Boneyard
And lastly we have the first collected volume of Richard Moore’s great monster tale, Boneyard, from NBM. This quarterly comic started in 2001 and explains how everyman Michael Paris comes to inherit a cemetery which just happens to be filled with talking gargoyles, a biker werewolf, a card-playing skeleton, a bumbling witch, a wise-cracking raven, a vampish sea creature and a thoroughly enchanting vampiress. The denizens of the cemetery — or boneyard — try to convince Paris to save their home, while the townsfolk hope to buy the property and bulldoze it under.

So, there’s some of the comics-themed presents I’ll be giving this year. Maybe there’s something for you in there, too.

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