Showing posts with label Lazarus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lazarus. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2019

The Best of the 10's - Danny's Best Comic Books of the Decade!



THE BEST COMICS OF THE 2010's:


1. Saga

- In  the oo's, writer Brian K. Vaughan gave us one of the best-ever comic book series in Y: The Last Man. In the 10's, BKV returned with an incredible follow-up that is already a classic - and it's still going. Saga is a sci-fi space epic- beautifully illustrated by Fiona Staples - that mixes family drama with wry social commentary and an incredible sense of imagination and sense of wonder. Read it!


2. The Walking Dead

- The Walking Dead's long run spanned well over a decade, but man, it was still going strong in the '10's. Early in the decade, writer Robert Kirkman shook up his zombie-apocalypse epic with the introduction of iconic psycho-villain Negan. At the end of the decade, Kirkman shocked fans by surprise-ending the book with a powerfully emotional, full-circle ending. A page-turner to the end.


3. Locke & Key

- Joe Hill's masterpiece, Locke & Key put Hill on the map as a gifted writer with a similar knack for mixing chilling horror with grounded characters as his sorta-famous dad (Stephen King!). The book started in 2008, but ultimately reached its incredible conclusion in 2013. In the end, it was one of the great comic books of the decade, if not ever.


4. Lazarus

-Greg Rucka's near-future, post-apocalyptic masterwork is still running (see one of 2019's top comics, Lazarus: Risen) - but it is, easily, one of the best books of the decade. The series imagines a scenario where mega-corporations rule all - and it feels like an all-too-plausible scenario given the world we live in.


5. Sweet Tooth

- Sweet Tooth made me a fan for life of writer/artist Jeff Lemire - multiple works of whom are on this list. But Sweet Tooth - a sprawling, coming-of-age sci-fi epic - is, I think, his magnum opus. It introduced us to Gus - an unassuming boy who's half human, half deer. Gus' strange journey of self-discover leads to an unlikely adventure that's an all-time comic book classic.


6. Ms. Marvel

- The best and most vital superhero fiction of the decade, G. Willow Wilson gave us the Marvel superhero we needed in the 2010's. Kamala Khan was and is awesome - a geeky teen girl, who also happens to be Muslim, who also happens to have stretching powers as a result of an encounter with Terrigan Mist. Kamala is completely ordinary, yet also unlike any superhero we've ever seen before. And her message of hope and unity is so important.


7. Alex + Ada

- Over the last ten years, I became a huge fan of the collected works of the Luna Brothers. I went back and read through their entire back-catalog (Girls, The Sword, Ultra, etc.), and excitedly picked up each issue of Jonathan Luna and Sarah Vaughn's Alex + Ada as they came out. The series was a thought-provoking sci-fi story that covered similar ground to TV series like Westworld and Humans - but with that humanistic touch that the Lunas are so good at.


8. Hawkeye (Matt Fraction / Alex Aja)

- Even if you have no real interest in superheroes or Marvel, I'd still highly recommend this series. Matt Fraction took the least-powerful Avenger and recast him as a down-on-his-luck protector of a shabby New York neighborhood. The series was funny, innovative, and just incredibly well-written.


9. Southern Bastards

- Jason Aaron's southern-gothic crime comic is one of my all-time favorites. It skewers Southern culture while also paying tribute to it. The overarching story - about a folk hero who returns to his backwoods town to clean things up once and for all (targeting a gang led by the town's villainous high school football coach!).


10. Kill or Be Killed

-Ed Brubaker has been one of my favorite writers for the last 20 years or so. And he continues to be at the top of his game, putting out maybe his best work yet in the form of Kill Or Be Killed. This hard-boiled crime comic - with a possibly-supernatural twist - tells the twisted tale of a mentally-unbalanced man convinced he has to kill people, or else fall victim to a vengeful demon who controls his fate. It's weird, crazy, and something that only Brubaker could make work.


THE NEXT BEST:


11. Punk Rock Jesus

- This politically-charged series put writer/artist Sean Murphy on my radar - and he's since gone on to become one of my favorites.


12. Animal Man (Jeff Lemire / Travel Foreman)

- When DC rebooted itself early in the decade with the New 52, the early standout was Lemire's haunting, strange take on Animal Man. 


13. Batman (Scott Snyder / Greg Capullo)

- Speaking of the New 52, writer Scott Snyder gave us one of the definitive runs on Batman following the DC reboot - introducing such instant-classic villains as The Court of Owls.


14. Jonah Hex / All-Star Western

- Writer Jimmy Palmiotti began writing the adventures of DC's classic Western hero Jonah Hex some 15 years ago, but his extended run continued into this decade with many additional years' worth of classic stories.


15. Batgirl (Brian Q. Miller / Lee Garbett)

- I will always have a soft spot for this sadly short-lived run on Batgirl. It took the fan favorite, girl-next-door character of Stephanie Brown - also known as The Spoiler - and promoted her to Batgirl in a run that was a constant delight (and with awesome Lee Garbett artwork to boot).


16. Paper Girls

- Brian K. Vaughan's *other* great work of the decade was Paper Girls. This time-travel adventure took a page from 80's classics like The Goonies, transporting a group of street-smart paper-delivery girls on a time-spanning journey that looked back across the decades to tell us who we were then, who we are now, and who me maybe, just might, be in the decades to come.


17. Invincible

- As for Robert Kirkman's other long-running comic book epic, Invincible began well before 2010, but finished up its long, celebrated run in 2018. In that time, Kirkman used the creative freedom of writing an independent superhero book to age his characters - telling the story of how super-powered Mark Grayson went from awkward teenager to dedicated husband and father. 


18. Silver Surfer (Dan Slott / Mike Allred)

- Dan Slott's take on the Silver Surfer was a whimsical, inspirational cosmic odyssey and an unlikely love story. Mike Allred's one-of-a-kind artwork made the book that much cooler.


19. Multiversity

- In one fell swoop, Grant Morrison re-invented the DC Universe and left it forever changed. Only Morrison could introduce DC's 52-world multiverse with so much imagination, awe, and wonder.


20. Injustice

- One of the most unlikely awesome comics of the decade, to be sure. What could have been a cash-in videogame tie-in instead became one of the best DC Universe epics of the decade, thanks to the great writing of Tom Taylor. 


21. Black Hammer

- Jeff Lemire does it again. Lemire's superhero deconstruction led to an entire universe of stories that played with and subverted decade's worth of comic book tropes and cliches. Lemire's work was both homage and satire, and it was brilliant.


22. Fatale

- Another of the decade's many great Ed Brubaker books, Fatale was a supernatural noir that mixed a classic femme fatale story with Lovecraftian cosmic horror.


23. The Wake

- Scott Snyder writes. Sean Murphy draws. A comic book dream team if ever there was one. This underwater thriller combined Lost-like mystery with crazy monster-horror. 


24. Royal City

- One more from Lemire. This more grounded, personal comic tells the story of a family torn apart, and then reunited under difficult circumstances. Lemire tells a moving, haunting story that is among his best.


25. Mister Miracle

- Writer Tom King and artist Mitch Gerads take Jack Kirby's classic New Gods characters and reinvent them as ... regular people? Well, actually - what's brilliant about this series is how it deftly, sometimes hilariously, mixes everyday issues with the cosmic drama of Kirby's Fourth World.


JUST MISSED THE CUT:

- Superman (Peter Tomasi)
- Batman Inc.
- House of X / Powers of X
- Criminal
- The Fade Out
- Trillium
- Sex Criminals
- Black Magick
- Jupiter's Circle
- Darth Vader (Kieron Gillen)

Friday, December 28, 2018

THE BEST OF 2018 - The Best COMICS Of The Year


THE BEST COMICS OF 2018:

- I read a lot of comics in 2018 - some of them pretty good, some of them really good, and some of them decidedly not-that-good. But sometimes, even not-so-good comics can be just what the doctor ordered. As I get older and (somewhat) wiser, I realize the value of comfort-food pop-culture. At the same time, I even more so understand the value of broadening one's horizons and continuing to seek out cool new stuff. Because while there is something to be said for the warm blanket that is checking in with old-favorites, there is something even more to be said for the rush of reading something brand new and realizing that you've hit upon something special. This is part of what makes the comics medium in general so unique - it's a breeding ground for new voices and new stories. So going into 2019, I urge you to do two things. One is to read comics if you're not already. If you like good stories, then read comics. If you like new stories, then read comics. If you appreciate amazing artwork, read comics. Second thing is to not just read comics, but seek out new ones. Figure out who your favorite writers are - track down their back-catalog (it's easy now, especially with digital stores like Comixology), and check out their new material too. Pick up something random, and see if you like it. Even in comics - where the new and interesting is celebrated more often than not, it's easy to be a part of the hive-mind. I fall into the trap too sometimes. But it's easier to discover and to do deep dives than ever before. So fall into it and tell your friends (or just shout at the internet!) about what you're into.

Case in point: for several years now, I've been a big fan of the Luna Brothers. They should be more well known than they are - they're ridiculously talented. The first thing I read by them was their series Girls, and then Alex + Ada (not technically Luna Brothers, but Jonathan Luna and Sarah Vaughn) - which flat-out blew me away. This year, I decided to fill in the gaps in my Luna Brothers reading, and kept a watchful eye for Comixology discounts on their back-catalog. This led me to read what, I think, will end up as one of my favorite comic series ever - THE SWORD. As someone who loves serialized storytelling, I was somewhat in awe of the way each issue of The Sword ended with a cliffhanger so compelling that I literally *had* to keep reading. I definitely took copious amounts of mental notes from it that I then tried to apply to my own writing. But man, am I glad I finally read this one.

Anyways, there are TONS of great comics being published every month - and as with Peak TV it's almost impossible to keep up. So I'm sure there are tons of great books missing from my Best of 2018 list. But it's fun to share the books that I loved reading this year - hopefully I turn at least a few people on to some new favorite writers, artists, and comic book series. So let's get to it ...

WAIT! Before I get to the list, I have to acknowledge the titanic losses that the comics world - and indeed, the entire pop-culture universe - experienced in 2018. In June, Spider-Man co-creator Steve Ditko passed away. Ditko was a true one-of-a-kind. His art on Spider-Man was legendary - his sense of dynamism and design unmatched, and even today ... the original Spider-Man costume is as iconic and as cool as ever. Ditko also created enduring characters like The Question. His influence will be felt in comics and pop-culture forever.

Then, late in the year, the entire world mourned the passing of the one and only Stan Lee. I could write paragraphs and paragraphs about Stan "The Man" - along with Jack Kirby, he was the architect of the Marvel Universe. And most certainly, he was its voice. Stan Lee became as much of a pop-culture character as the fictional ones he helped create. He was larger than life, and yet he was everyone's jovial, ever-enthusiastic grandfather. He was a champion of social causes, a creator of progressive characters, a one-of-a-kind writer, and in his later years, a king of Marvel movie cameos. I have fond memories of sitting down in front of the TV on Saturday mornings, watching Marvel cartoons introduced by Stan Lee. Nothing could get a kid more excited for some superhero action than Stan's alliterative, exclamation point-punctuated intros. How could one not be a True Believer? Later, I was lucky enough to see Stan speak several times at various Comic-Con events - as recently as last year, when he shared the stage with The Rock at LA Comic-Con. Every time he'd enter a room - even if that room was already filled with huge celebrities - the audience would light up. Stan lived and breathed comic books, and he made comics a cool club that welcomed any and all. His college campus lectures gave his Marvel comics a cult following among adults, and his Merry Marvel Marching Society made kids pledge their loyalty to "Make Mine Marvel!" Stan Lee was an ambassador for comic books and superheroes - but more so than that, for the morals and social justice causes that his heroes fought to uphold. In the 60's and 70's, Stan took to his Soapbox to talk to his readers about the evils of racism, bigotry, and inequality. Still, Stan knew that nobody was perfect - his heroes were flawed. Spider-Man and other Stan Lee characters faced everyday problems and anxieties, which quickly separated them from the "distinguished competition." And Stan Lee, too, was flawed in his own ways. But so are we all, and so are our heroes. And for me, and for many, Stan Lee was indeed a real-life superhero. A man who, even in his nineties, was never lacking in enthusiasm and goodwill. And even behind those trademark tinted glasses, there was always a palpable twinkle in his eye. Stan Lee meant so much to so many of us - and the world is a sadder and emptier and slightly less super place without him. But even as I despair about a world without Stan Lee, I can hear his distinctive voice urging me - urging us all - to carry on and continue to dream, imagine, and to fight the good fight. And so we must soldier on. We raise our fists, we yell "Excelsior!", and we work to honor the vision of Stan Lee as best we can. As the Man would say: 'nuff said!


DANNY'S BEST COMICS OF 2018:


1.) Paper Girls

Once again ... when I think about the best book going today, Paper Girls is the first thing that comes to mind. As Brian K. Vaughan's story about a group of time-lost girls rocketed towards its upcoming endgame - becoming increasingly epic, crazy, and emotionally charged - it also managed to hit a creative high-water mark. The book's narrative momentum led to several vintage Brian K. Vaughan holy-$%&# cliffhangers. At the same time - even as the story's gotten bigger and crazier and more of the book's enigmatic time-travel mythology has been revealed, it's warmth and humor and wit and spot-on characterization of its scrappy protagonists has never been more apparent. Late this year, Vaughan announced that Paper Girls' ending was nigh - it's sad to know that this new classic will soon be drawing to a close, but man, I can't wait to see how it ends. Finally: I've said this before but will say it again ... if you're thinking of trying out a comic book: try Paper Girls. If you like Stranger Things: you'll love Paper Girls. This is the best comic book going, so you've got to read it - trust me!


2.) Kill Or Be Killed

- My #1 comic of 2017 moves down a notch ... not because it wasn't as great as ever in 2018, but because, sadly, it ended in June. But what a series this was. I mean, I've been a huge fan writer Ed Brubaker for ... wow, it's been a couple of decades now. Nobody writes noir or crime books like he does. And Kill Or Be Killed, well, it might just be the best thing he's ever written. It's a dark but thoughtful story about a vigilante plagued by visions of a demon who urges him to find bad people and kill them. And as the series went on, the twists and turns piled up and things got very, very interesting. But through it all, we were kept guessing by the book's not-quite-reliable narrator - brilliantly given voice by Brubaker. If you like hard-boiled crime fiction, pick this one up asap.


3.) Black Hammer (and various spin-offs)

- For a few years now, writer Jeff Lemire has been working wonders with his ever-expanding Black Hammer universe. I think some were skeptical of this one at first - it was yet another superhero deconstruction that showed unexpected sides of various superhero and villain archetypes. But I trusted Lemire to deliver - he's written some of the best comics of the last decade. And deliver he did. Black Hammer is a unique, surprising, brilliantly-written take on superheroes and comic books and it's very distinctly Lemire. What's interesting is that the original Black Hammer book actually ended in 2017, closing the first chapter of the story. In 2018, Lemire started a new chapter with Black Hammer: Age of Doom - focusing on the daughter of the titular character entering the strange world that her father's friends have been banished to. We also got The Quantum Age - a look at a far-flung future inspired by the original series' characters, Doctor Star - a riff on James Robinson's classic Starman series, and Cthu-Louise - a darkly funny look at the daughter of a notorious Lovecraftian supervillain.


4.) Saga

- After some fits and starts, Brian K. Vaughan's superlative Saga was back in full force in 2018. Running monthly from February through July, Saga picked up the pace this year, before going out on a shocking cliffhanger prior to the book's year-long hiatus. For those not in the know, Saga is Vaughan's most ambitious and long-running story since Y: The Last Man - since launching in 2012, it's told us an epic sci-fi story of forbidden love in outer space. But what's so brilliant about Vaughan's work is that he never gets too caught up in sci-fi minutiae - he focuses on characters first, and even amidst a backdrop of cosmic war and far-out alien planets, everything feels real and grounded and very much derived from the world we live in. Pair that with the always-amazing artwork of Fiona Staples, and you've got a book that is legendary in its own time. And: you've got a book that has legions of fans counting down until next summer when Saga finally returns. It went out on a jaw-dropping twist that will change the story forever - so you can bet that Saga's return will be one of 2019's can't-miss comic book events.


5.) Captain America - by Mark Waid

- Coming off of Nick Spencer's controversial run on Captain America last year, which chronicled an alt-universe evil Cap who was raised by Hydra and took over the Marvel Universe - fans, I think, were ready for some more traditional tales of classic Cap heroism. Now I actually was a big fan of Spencer's run. But man, old hand Mark Waid came onboard for a short-term run and just absolutely killed it. Things started off solidly, with a few stories about a Cap - traumatized after coming to terms with the whole Hydra thing - traveling across the country and restoring his good name. But then, things took a crazy turn leading up to the landmark Cap #700, with Cap finding himself - again! - frozen in ice, and waking up in a dystopian near-future where Marvel's heroes had been vanquished. This then led to another story-arc about another future - hundreds of years later - in which an ancestor of Steve Rogers has to find a way to vanquish his world's authoritarian regime. It's all just great, clean, classic storytelling from Waid - one of the best straight-up runs on a mainstream superhero books in years.


6.) Royal City

- Even as he was deconstructing superhero universes with Black Hammer, Jeff Lemire was also putting out a very personal project with Royal City. No capes, no monsters ... okay, some ghosts ... maybe. But mostly, this was a moving story about a bunch of adult siblings returning to their rundown factory town after their father's health takes a turn for the worse, and uncovering and coming to terms with various long-hidden family secrets. This was quite simply a great story about families, about home towns, about old ghosts. It was tragic and heartfelt and brilliantly drawn by Lemire - whose dreamlike art style was a perfect fit for this story.


7.) Lazarus

- Lazarus has been one of my favorite comics for several years now - with the only real knock against it being its sporadic publishing schedule. That said, writer Greg Rucka delivered some great stories in the Lazarus universe this year. What is Lazarus, you ask? Imagine Game of Thrones-style warring kingdoms, except in a near-future dystopia where governments have fallen and corporations rule all. The corporations are ruled by families. Those who directly serve the families live comfortably. All others are "waste." Oh - and each family has a "Lazarus" - their symbolic military leader, crafted via genetic engineering and cloning tech, designed to be a human war machine. Anyways, in 2018 Rucka gave us a fantastic story about Jonah Carlyle - presumed-dead member of the all-powerful Carlyle family - who finds himself near death in faraway enemy territory. Jonah creates a new identity for himself, falls in love, and begins a road that could lead him towards direct opposition of his own family.


8.) Hawkeye - by Kelly Thompson

- In 2018, writer Kelly Thompson wrapped up her brilliant run writing the Kate Bishop version of Marvel's Hawkeye. When Thompson first began on the book, it was coming off of Matt Fraction's classic run on Hawkeye, during which he helped make Kate into a beloved character - more so even than the original Clint Barton version. But Thompson did great things with Kate, too. Her take on Hawkeye was funny, witty, action-packed, and just plain cool. It was modern and fresh but also evoked old film noir and made great use of its LA setting. Kate Bishop, as written by Thompson, was flawed but incredibly likable. She was the dorky girl-next-door who could also slay with a bow and arrow. When Marvel announced the book's cancellation, I was genuinely bummed out. But if nothing else, it made Thompson a writer I'll now follow through thick and thin. But man, I hope that, someday, she gets to write more Hawkeye.


9.) Skyward

- This was my favorite new comic of 2018 - a high-concept sci-fi adventure from Lucifer TV series showrunner Joe Henderson. It's about a near-future where physics have gone haywire and gravity has all but disappeared. People float, fly, and soar. There are new dangers, new evolutions of tech and surprising side effects on mother nature. Amidst this backdrop, one girl discovers the conspiracy to keep things as they are and prevent the restoration of gravity - and is on the run from those who want to keep her knowledge hidden. This is all gorgeously rendered by one of my favorite artists, Lee Garbett - who brings both a sense of humanity to the characters and a sense of awe and wonder to the sci-fi setting. Highly recommend.


10.) Mister Miracle

- DC Comics' best book of 2018 was undoubtedly Tom King and Mitch Gerads' Mr. Miracle. They took the classic Jack Kirby New Gods character and made him and wife Big Barda a regular, relatable couple faced with problems both mundane and cosmic. They told a story about marriage and parenthood and relationships and responsibility, but also about crazy Fourth World gods and going into battle against the evil forces of Darkseid. They did this all with humor and heart and more than a bit of trippiness thrown in for good measure. Gerads' art humanized Kirby's cosmic characters and King's writing made them more than just colorful space gods. This was one hell of a series.


THE NEXT BEST:


11.) Ms. Marvel

- G. Willow Wilson's groundbreaking run on Ms. Marvel - now confirmed as coming to an end in 2019 - continued to be one of the best things in comics this year. Wilson writes Kamala Khan with such warmth, humor, and heart that it's no wonder that this relatively new hero has become arguably the most beloved in the modern Marvel pantheon.


12.) Silencer

- This one was a real sleeper from DC Comics. Imagine the DC Universe version of John Wick, except this time you've got a former assassin for Talia Al Ghoul's secret Leviathan organization - forced back into action when she's hunted by her former employers. Writer Dan Abnett (truly one of DC's MVP's this year) has made this a consistently fun book month in, month out.


13.) Batman - by Tom King

- Aside from Mr. Miracle, Tom King was also busy writing the continuing adventures of The Dark Knight. Now, I'll be honest - King can be a hit-and-miss writer for me, and there are times where he's lost me during his run on Batman. A story-arc this year involving Booster Gold and alternate realities, for example, really fell flat for me (and this coming from a die-hard Booster fan). And yet ... just when I become frustrated with King's take, he does something that really wows me. Case in point: a phenomenal story-arc from late this year in which Bruce Wayne has jury duty, and has to help decide the guilt of Mr. Freeze in a crime that he may actually not have committed. King's take on Batman can at times be frustrating - but man, when he hits a home run, he really is the best in the biz.


14.) Snotgirl

- Scott Pilgrim creator Bryan Lee O'Malley's oddly endearing comic Snotgirl continued to surprise me in 2018. O'Malley somehow takes characters that should be completely unlikable - a clique of self-absorbed, self-loathing twenty-something fashion bloggers - and makes them into characters who, well, maybe you don't *like* them per se, but you do find yourself becoming absorbed into their strange and vapid world. It helps that our main protagonist - green-hairedm runny-nosed Lottie - finds herself wrapped up in a surreal murder mystery. And it helps that Lottie - full of insecurities - is rendered with funny and self-effacing nuance by O'Malley. Snotgirl is definitely not quite like anything I've read before. but it's fascinating and funny and uniquely O'Malley. Check it out.


15.) Mera: Queen of Atlantis

- For the last couple of years, writer Dan Abnett has been doing a bang-up job with DC's Aquaman. He's taken a character who's had precious few memorable stories in his long history, and really crafted a long-term epic that nicely set the stage for the character's high-profile big-screen debut. Picking up on some of the world-building that Geoff Johns had done previously, Abnett has been telling a pretty kick-ass story about an Aquaman who's been removed from the throne of Atlantis and forced into anonymous exile. But I think the high point of Abnett's run was actually his spin-off Mera miniseries, detailing the warrior from Xebel's quest to restore peace to Atlantis in her husband's absence. This was just great stuff - and awesomely illustrated by Lan Medina to boot. Abnett gave us twists, turns, betrayals - and he made Mera truly badass in a way that not even the recent movie could match.


16.) Descender

- Okay, so Jeff Lemire killed it this year with Black Hammer, and with Royal City. And somehow, he also found time to wrap up his epic space-saga Descender (evocatively drawn by Dustin Nguyen) in grand fashion. Descender - the story of a future world in which humans and robots wage war following a mysterious invasion - was a somewhat Spielbergian take on a Mass Effect-like sci-fi setting ... focusing its story on a child-like robot named Tim 21 and his quest to figure out the mystery at the center of the human/robot conflict. Lemire really went for broke with the ending - which, in a surprise twist, set the stage for an upcoming sequel series titled Ascender. Bring it on.


17.) Gideon Falls

- But wait, there's more! Lemire did one other really cool comic in 2018 - this one brand new! - that I feel obligated to mention. Gideon Falls is his take on Twin Peaks-esque existential horror. It's about a group of seemingly unconnected people who have nightmarish visions of a mysterious Black Barn - and about how these people gradually come together to understand the nature of the Barn and the evil it portends. Moodily rendered by Andrea Sorrentino, Gideon Falls was another new favorite in 2018 - and yet another feather in the cap for one of the best writers working today.


18.) Batman: White Knight

- Sean Murphy is one of those unique voices in comics whose work I'm always curious about. He's a writer/artist who always brings a dark, punk-rock, rule-breaking tone to his comics - matched by art that's at once retro and cutting-edge cool. Anyways, his take on Batman, "White Knight," kicked off in 2017 and reached its thrilling conclusion in 2018. This was one hell of a Batman story - it told of an off-the-rails and hardened Bruce Wayne, suddenly confronted with a reformed, cured Joker who usurps Batman as Gotham's most beloved hero. It's a great read, and one of the best Batman stories of the last few years.


19.) The Walking Dead

- I may have officially dropped the TV series a while back, but I still look forward to each new issue of The Walking Dead comic. Why? Because Robert Kirkman still knows how to craft a page-turner. And while the nature of the comic occasionally forces him to slow the pacing a bit in order to set the stage for the next big conflict, you can always count on Kirkman to ratchet up the intensity at just the right moment. Case in point: the current story arc, which sees Rick and company visit the seemingly utopian community called The Commonwealth. At first, Kirkman takes his time - giving us some interesting commentary on the hidden cost of forming a society with a comfortable upper and middle class. But after some slow-build, Kirkman finally blows things up and sets the stage for another of his trademark, ultra-intense epic. Bonus: Carl is still alive in the comics.


20.) Oblivion Song

- This is a new comic that launched from Robert Kirkman in 2018, and I've been really digging it. It's about a world in which a reality-bending science experiment went wrong, opening up a portal to a Lovecraftian universe and trapping large segments of the populace within. Now, years later, a man tasked with rescuing survivors still trapped in the monster dimension has to come to grips with the full scale of what happened and his role in it. It's compelling stuff, and Kirkman has me very curious where it's all going.


21.) Penny Dreadful

- So I was a huge fan of the too-short-lived Showtime series Penny Dreadful - but like many, I was thrown by it's abrupt ending following its third season. Surely, there was more story to tell and numerous dangling plot threads still to resolve. Well, the recent Penny Dreadful comic - a continuation of the series from some of its writers - helped give some much-needed closure to the events of the series. If you were at all a fan of the show, you 100% owe it to yourself to check out this comic - a de facto Season 4 that, thanks to it being a comic, gets to go to some pretty crazy and epic places with no TV budgets to limit its scope. Just beware: there were some earlier, not-very-good Penny Dreadful comics - don't bother with those. Seek out the most recent, 12-issue series and enjoy!


22.) Jimmy's Bastards

- From Garth Ennis, the man who brought you Preacher and The Boys, comes Jimmy's Bastards - and if you liked those series, you will very much also like this one. It's Ennis taking the piss out of James Bond - that's the short version. But if you like Ennis, you know that behind his over-the-top humor and ultraviolence usually lies some astute commentary on politics and pop-culture - and that is definitely the case here. The book's also got fantastic art by Russ Braun, whose work I loved on comics like Jack of Fables. His cartoonish, expressive art is a perfect match for the story Ennis is telling. This one is a quick, addictive read and any fans of Ennis should immediately check it out.


23.) Eternal Empire

- I wrote above about my love for all things Luna Brothers, and Eternal Empire (which kicked off in 2017 and wrapped up in 2018) was the latest from the Alex + Ada team of Jonathan Luna and Sarah Vaughn. Truth be told, I don't know if this one 100% matched the quality of their previous work. Still Luna and Vaughn's latest was a really interesting take on the epic fantasy genre - telling the story of two long-lost siblings blessed with mysterious powers, destined to help overthrow their kingdom's tyrannical queen. And as per usual, they give us big, high-concepts made palatable thanks to grounded characters. Well worth a read. And of course, that Jonathan Luna art is always striking with its elegant simplicity.


24.) Darth Vader

- I didn't really read most of Marvel's Star Wars line of comics in 2018, but I carved out time for Darth Vader. Why? Because following a great run on the title from Cullen Bunn, writer Charles Soule carried the torch and delivered great story after great story - skillfully filling in gaps from the films, drawing new connections between the original trilogy and the prequels, and just giving us some really badass Darth Vader stories in the process. Soule is a reliably great writer, and he worked his magic again with Vader, seemingly channeling the full powers of the dark side to give us a truly notable run. Sadly, the recent issue #25 served as the series' grand finale. But if you missed it and are in any way a Star Wars nerd, definitely track these issues down.


25.) Sex Criminals

- This one was right on the line between being included here and being relegated to my "Great Comics With Too Few Issues In 2018" category below. But writer Matt Fraction and artist Chip Zdarsky's surreal sex-comedy-caper series churned out just enough new issues this year to make the cut. And the fact is, Fraction is so good that, when this book does come out, it's always a must-read. And I know, the name is a bit daunting, perhaps. But trust me, Sex Criminals is so great. It's a funny, weird, endearing. Give it a shot.


HONORABLE MENTIONS

- Justice League Dark
- Mystik U
- Deathstroke - by Christopher Priest
- The Flash - by Joshua Williamson
- Aquaman - by Dan Abnett
- Hit-Girl
- New Super-Man
- Suicide Squad - by Rob Williams
- The Magic Order
- Deathbed
- Detective Comics by Bryan Hill


GREAT COMICS WITH TOO FEW NEW ISSUES IN 2018:

- Southern Bastards
- Black Magick


ONES TO WATCH IN 2019:

American Carnage

- Writer Bryan Hill's dark crime thriller - about a light-skinned black man who's gone undercover in a white supremacist organization - just kicked off late in 2018. But it's off to a fantastic start, and I'm telling anyone who will listen to get onboard with it now. This one is going to be one of 2019's best, no question.

The Fantastic Four - by Dan Slott

- This is another one that's just revving up, but I can already tell that Slott is going to bring the same sort of whimsy and wonder and adventure that he's brought to other Marvel books (like his sorely missed Silver Surfer) to Marvel's first family. He's started things off with a bang - returning the FF to the Marvel Universe proper and finally giving us the wedding of Ben "The Thing" Grimm and Alicia Masters. I still felt like it was too early to include this in my official Best Of list above ... but it's likely a sure thing for 2019.

Doomsday Clock

- And then there's Doomsday Clock. Geoff John's ambitious maxiseries is both a pseudo-sequel to Watchmen, a massive DC Comics continuity-reshaping crisis event, and a dark, ominous commentary on current political and social issues. It's A LOT. And honestly, halfway though, I still have no idea what to make of it. There've been some really great standalone issues, and some that felt like feet-dragging. But it still feels impossible to tell what the endgame of all this will be. But because so much of the final judgement of this series will rest on its conclusion, I'm holding off on assessing it until I can see the forest for the trees. To be continued ...

Shazam! - by Geoff Johns

- Meanwhile, Geoff Johns just kicked off a new Shazam! series - his first regular DC ongoing in quite some time. This is the kind of things that Johns excels at, and his previous Shazam stories (backups in the pages of his Justice League run) were really great - so I've no doubt that this will be at minimum really good and at best amazing. Or maybe I should say "marvelous." No doubt, Johns and all of DC are motivated to do right by Captain Marvel (not the Brie Larson one) prior to the Shazam! movie's release in the Spring.


Wonder Woman - by G. Willow Wilson

- Lastly, it will be interesting to keep an eye on Wonder Woman. G. Willow Wilson - who's put Ms. Marvel on the map over the last several years - is now the writer of DC's flagship Wonder Woman book. So far, it's hard to exactly gauge where Wilson is going with the character - but I have faith that, if nothing else, it will be a unique and different sort of WW than we've seen before at DC. We'll see if Wilson can bring the sort of fun and sense of, well, wonder, that she brought to Ms. Marvel to the iconic Amazonian hero.


WRITERS OF THE YEAR:

1.) Brian K. Vaughan (Paper Girls, Saga)
2.) Jeff Lemire (Black Hammer, Royal City, Descender, Gideon Falls)
3.) Tom King (Mister Miracle, Batman)
4.) Mark Waid (Captain America)
5.) Ed Brubaker (Kill Or Be Killed)
6.) Dan Abnett (Mera, Aquaman, Silencer)
7.) G. Willow Wilson (Ms. Marvel, Wonder Woman)
8.) Robert Kirkman (The Walking Dead, Invincible, Oblivion Song)
9.) Kelly Thompson (Hawkeye)
10.) Joe Henderson (Skyward)

ARTISTS OF THE YEAR:

1.) Mitch Gerads (Mister Miracle)
2.) Cliff Chiang (Paper Girls)
3.) Sean Phillips (Kill Or Be Killed)4
4.) Lee Garbett (Skyward)
5.) Fiona Staples (Saga)
6.) Leslie Hung (Snotgirl)
7.) Lan Medina (Mera: Queen of Atlantis)8
8.) Gary Frank (Doomsday Clock)
9.) Sean Murphy (Batman: White Knight)
10.) Ricardo Federici (Aquaman)

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Comics You Should Read: LAZARUS

Comics You Should Read: LAZARUS



LAZARUS

Greg Rucka is one of those can't-miss comic book writers whose work I've followed for many years. Like many of my favorites, this is a guy who I first discovered through his work on more mainstream superhero books, but then followed as he branched out to more independent, creator-owned creations. Rucka made his mark with me as a Batman guy. In the late 90's and early 00's, he was one of the instrumental writers in the epic Batman saga "No Man's Land," and went on to have long runs on various Batman books, combining great, character-driven soap-operatics with a dark, grim, noirish tone. Later, he and another fave writer, Ed Brubaker, teamed to write a book called Gotham Central. Along with artist Michael Lark, the two created a gritty, sophisticated, and incredibly well-crafted look at the inner workings of the Gotham City Police Department. Basically, it felt like an HBO-style take on the GCPD, and it was one of the best books that DC Comics has ever put out.

Recently, Rucka brought his talents to Image (as many of the top comic book creators have, over the last few years), and re-teamed with Lark for a new book called LAZARUS. Very quickly, it's become one of the absolute must-reads in comics.

LAZARUS takes place in a ruinous near-future world in which the world economy has collapsed, and earth is now ruled by a handful of powerful families - each grasping power due to their corporate wealth, which prospered even as governments and other institutions fell. In this brave new world, you're either a member of one of the families, an elite lieutenant of the families, a soldier in one of their armies, or "waste." It's an extreme version of the whole "99%" thing. While the families live in lavish compounds, most of the population live in terrible conditions, in makeshift camps, in total poverty. As we enter the world of Lazarus, we arrive at a time of relative stability - the families co-exist in a tenuous peace with each other, and the waste has been utterly demoralized, and lacks the will or resources to revolt. However, as Rucka's story picks up, the seeds of change are being planted. Tensions begin to brew between the families. Sparks of revolution flare among the waste. And the biggest x-factor of all ... is the Lazarus.

The primary family that the book follows are the Carlyles. Who, by the way, have more issues than the Lannisters. But they also have a Lazarus - a genetically-engineered supersoldier who has been raised as a daughter of the Carlyle family, albeit a daughter who's learned to kill and fight since birth. Her name is Forever, and not only has she been physically enhanced, but mentally, she's been completely brainwashed into being the unquestioning lapdog of her family. That, of course, is on the cusp of changing, and that self-awakening is what, surely, will lead to a crack in the system that proves irreversible.

Rucka is doing some fine work here. There is *a lot* going on in this world, but part of the intrigue of the book is watching Rucka slowly peel back the layers, revealing to us all the ins and outs of this dystopian future, and how it got to be this way. Rucka has clearly thought though things in great detail, as evidenced by the detailed essays in the back of each issue - about current advances in science and other news items - that inform his writing and the world of Lazarus. There is some massive-scale world-building going on here, but what's cool is how much of it is informed by our current state of affairs. Ultimately though, what drives the storytelling is the character work, in particular the ongoing evolution of Forever. Watching this woman slowly awaken to the reality of her world is making for some really compelling reading. It's a slow build, at times, but I think the eventual payoffs will be worth it.

Meanwhile, Lark's artwork is fantastic, as always. The guy does very naturalistic, realistic drawing that still has a certain stylized quality to it. He makes Forever Carlyle into a real badass, but also shows that she can be vulnerable and in over her head, with his great knack for expressive and evocative art. Lark just gives the book an incredible sense of gritty atmosphere that perfectly complements that ominous tone that Rucka is going for.

Like a dystopian Game of Thrones that mixes a healthy dose of real-world politics with its war of ruling families, LAZARUS is quickly laying the foundation to become a true epic. The book is only 9 issues in (also available in two easily-digestible paperback collections), so it's pretty painless to get onboard at the moment. Check it out.





READ IT IF YOU LIKE: Game of Thrones, Orphan Black, The Hunger Games, Gotham Central, dystopian fiction, badass female protagonists, science-y stuff, socio-political commentary ...

Monday, December 30, 2013

THE BEST OF 2013 - The Best COMICS Of The Year



THE BEST COMICS OF 2013:

- What began in 2012 continued into 2013. Yes, last year I dove knee-deep into the digital comics revolution, and as I predicted, the way that I've enjoyed the medium has continued to evolve. More and more, it's easy to sample less mainstream comics, and more and more, publishers like Image are monopolizing a lot of the best talent and stories in the business. In 2013, creators who once split their time between established superhero books and creator-owned comics went full-blown indie. The best writers in the biz - Rucka, Brubaker, Vaughan, Lemire, Snyder, Hickman, Fraction, and more - were all doing amazing work this year on 100% original books. Sure, guys like Snyder and Lemire and Hickman were still doing some excellent books for DC or Marvel, but it feels to me like the beating heart of the comics industry has officially shifted from the established superheroes to original characters whose stories comprise a variety of genres - sci-fi, romance, noir, horror, Western, and more. These types of books always seem to bring out the best in their creators, and it was a thrill to see new books like The Wake, Lazarus, and Trillium quickly rise to the top of my must-read list this year.

Interestingly enough though, it was the Big Two that produced some of the most interesting experiments in digital-only comics this year. In 2013, some of the best superhero stories I read were weekly, digital-only, out-of-continuity comics. If you haven't sampled Batman '66, you've got to give it a look. Written and drawn in the style of the old Adam West TV show, the comic is absolutely hilarious - reintroducing classic villains from the old show, and also intermixing some ideas from more modern Batman interpretations. Even cooler, many issues of Batman '66 take advantage of the digital format with semi-animated panels and more digital-friendly storytelling devices. The experience of reading on an iPad is just plain fun. DC scored another weekly digital hit this year with Injustice, based on the videogame of the same name. On paper, I never would have thought that a digital comic based on a game would be anything special. But I was proven wrong - writer Tom Taylor produced the best DC Comics big-event story of the year - an exciting, twist-filled yarn about a world in which a grieving Superman snaps, and decides to rule the earth with an iron fist - crushing any remaining heroes who would dare oppose him. Taylor came out of nowhere to quickly become a writer to watch. More and more, it felt like some of the best superhero stories being told were in the digital format. In addition to Injustice and Batman '66, digital-only comics like Adventures of Superman and Legends of the Dark Knight gave an assortment of top creators the chance to tell one-off Superman or Batman stories free from the constraints of DC's regular continuity. The result was some fantastic stories. Increasingly, I can see these sorts of digital-only comics becoming the norm, and becoming the best place to find great stories.

Of course, a big discussion point this year among fans was gender politics. With more and more female readers getting into comics, it stands to reason that there is now a lot more scrutiny on the industry as a whole. This isn't a new phenomena, but fans were more vocal than ever in their desire to see strong female characters, as well as to see high-profile books written and drawn by women. The major publishers are getting better at this than before. Many of this year's best books - Lazarus, Trillium, Saga, The Wake, Sex Criminals, and more - featured great, compelling, well-written female protagonists or co-leads. There is still a lot of work to be done - especially with the superhero books - but it does feel like there is starting to be much more diversity in the stories being told, and much more diversity in terms of the top-selling and most buzzed-about books, that reflects a new and more-diverse-than-ever audience. Hopefully things continue to improve to an even larger extent. But, going back to the ongoing theme of how digital comics are changing the industry, the ease by which comics can now be bought and read is going to be, I think, a huge factor in that continued diversification of material and readership. A quick glance at Comixology's current best-seller list shows books like Locke & Key and Saga selling neck-and-neck with Batman and Justice League, so as you can see, the times, they are a-changing.


DANNY'S BEST COMICS OF 2013:

1.) The Wake

- The Wake has been an awesome read month-in, month out since it kicked off earlier this year. And that's no surprise, as it comes from a comics dream team of writer Scott Snyder and artist Sean Murphy. Snyder has become one of the best and most prolific writers in the biz over the last couple of years, but The Wake might actually be my favorite thing he's done to date. It started out as an ultra-intense, ultra-mysterious sci-fi/horror adventure - a page-turning mix of The Abyss, Alien, The X-Files, and HP Lovecraft. The book, thus far, has been about a team of scientists brought down to a top-secret underwater military base, to study a new species of human-like creatures discovered in the deep. Of course, things begin to go very wrong, as the creatures are not happy about being held captive and studied. What gives the book an extra layer of intrigue though is the brief flashes we've seen to the far future - a post-apocalyptic earth submerged in water. Presumably, the events in the present will result in this strange future, but how we get from Point A to Point B is going to be a hell of a ride. Meanwhile, the art by Sean Murphy is amazing - the guy does gritty, atmospheric drawing like no one else. Act One of The Wake just wrapped up this past month, setting the stage for a new chapter that promises to take the story in a whole new direction. I can't wait.


2.) Trillium

- I was really sad to see writer/artist Jeff Lemire's last book for DC's Vertigo imprint, Sweet Tooth, end at the beginning of the year. Sweet Tooth was one of my favorite comics of the last several years, and its spectacular final issue made it ending all the more bittersweet. But hey, that loss was more than made up for by the launch, a few months later, of Lemire's latest Vertigo book, Trillium. As with Sweet Tooth, it mixes high-concept ideas with a hefty dose of humanity. Trillium is a sci-fi romance, in which two explorers - one from the early 1900's, another from the distant future, meet thanks to a strange portal that traverses time and space. With innovative storytelling and imaginative art, Trillium has already wowed me, but I feel like it's only just revving up. The next year's worth of issues should be something special.


3.) Saga

- Now in its second year, Saga continues to be the gold standard for ongoing comics. Brian K. Vaughan is the master at writing real-world characters in extraordinary settings. Even though Saga is an oftentimes mind-bending story involving intergalactic warfare, sinister robots, feuding bounty hunters, and giant monsters, the dialogue and characters are 100% of this world. Vaughan worked a similar sort of magic with his seminal Y: The Last Man, and as it goes on, Saga keeps inching closer to that high watermark of quality. It doesn't hurt that Fiona Staple's art is amazing and utterly unique in the comics world. Her streamlined, iconic images make Saga consistently one of the most eye-popping comics you'll find.


4.) Lazarus

- This new book from writer Greg Rucka and artist Michael Lark is like Game of Thrones but in a near-future apocalyptic setting. Rucka deftly imagines a world not too far removed from our own, in which the 1% has evolved into a ruling class of five families. All others serve the families, and all others live in poverty and oppression. There's some great, intriguing world-building going on here, and it's all very-much based off of current politics. The hero of the book, however, is a young female soldier known as a Lazarus - a genetically engineered super-soldier designed to protect her "family's" interests. But what happens when this soldier begins to rebel against not just her family, but the whole system? Watching this world get uprooted is going to be a lot of fun in the coming year. Rucka is doing top-notch work on this one, and the gritty pencils of Lark are always appreciated.


5.) Fatale

- Here's another favorite from last year that kept on impressing me in 2013. Ed Brubaker's Fatale reached new film-noir heights this year, as it delved more into the backstory of its cursed protagonist Josephine - an immortal woman caught up in a dangerous conspiracy. A flashback issue taking place in the Old West was a highlight, as has been the current storyline that inserts Jo as a sort of Yoko Ono-like figure in a 90's-era grunge band. Each new chapter of Fatale reveals more about the strange circumstances of Josephine's life, while at the same time furthering the book's mysterious, Lovecraftian mythology. And no other comic is more densely atmospheric - you can practically smell the gin and cigarettes as you read each issue.


6.) Animal Man

- Jeff Lemire's take on the classic DC Comics B-lister has been one of the true highlights of the New 52 DC reboot. The book has been incredibly consistent, and had a great year in 2013. From the epic "Rotworld" saga, to a major death-in-the-family, to the gripping current story-arc involving villain Brother Blood, Lemire has delivered a great mix of Alan Moore-esque heroes and horror that keeps me eagerly awaiting each new issue. Recently, it was announced that Animal Man will be ending in 2014. It's a shame - this has been DC's best ongoing book for the last two years. But when all is said and done, Lemire will have given us one of the all-time classic superhero book runs.


7.) Injustice

- This is, easily, the most unlikely pick on this list. Like I said above, I never imagined that a weekly digital-only comic that also happened to be a videogame tie-in would be among my favorite reads of the year. But I, and a lot of others, jumped on the Injustice bandwagon when it became apparent that this was, believe it or not, the best big, epic, superhero book that DC was putting out. How did that happen? For one thing, writer Tom Taylor took what could have been a throwaway assignment and made it his own. He imbued Injustice with smart dialogue, well-drawn characters, and most of all, epic twists and cliffhangers that often paid tribute to fondly-remembered moments in DC Comics lore. While the main-line New 52 books were trying their hardest not to call back to the pre-reboot storylines, Taylor was clearly having a blast playing in the DC sandbox. I gave the book a try on a whim after enjoying the game, but quickly found myself chomping at the bit to read each new weekly installment.


8.) Batman

- Scott Snyder continues to nail it with his work on Batman. Earlier this year, he wrapped up the dark, ultra-intense Joker story "Death of the Family" in fantastic fashion. Since then, he's done a great job of making "Zero Year" - a reimagined look at Bruce Wayne's first year as Batman - into a must-read storyline. As much as it frustrates me to see origins endlessly retold, I'll give Zero Year a pass simply because it's so darn good. Snyder and artist Greg Capullo simply know how to do the big, cinematic moments to perfection. At the same time, the book has a darkness and a grittiness and intensity that calls to mind the Christopher Nolan movies. With Snyder at the helm, Batman continues to be one of the must-read books in DC's stable.


9.) The Walking Dead

- The Walking Dead hit a bit of a slump for a while, but it's been roaring back thanks to the ongoing "All Out War" story-arc - a multifaceted, unpredictable saga that sees Rick's makeshift community join with other neighboring villages to take down the tyrannical psychopath Negan. Negan is sort of a controversial villain among Walking Dead fans - in some respects, he does feel a bit like a retread of The Governor. But I give Robert Kirkman credit - Negan is his own wholly unique brand of crazy, and he's been built up to be so evil, so horrible, that man, rarely have I ever been so desperate for a villain to get his comeuppance. I'm slightly behind here, as I continue to read The Walking Dead via collected editions, but I can't wait to see how "All Out War" wraps up. Kirkman is the master of the jaw-dropping, holy-$#%& moment, so I have faith he'll deliver yet again.


10.) Batman '66

- Holy comebacks, Batman - in 2013, the 1966 Batman was back with a vengeance! Here's another one that turned out improbably good. New stories set in the universe of the old Adam West Batman TV show? I was skeptical, but curious. As it turned out, this digital weekly is one of the craziest, funniest comics I've read - it takes the old show's psychedelic campiness and cranks it up to eleven. The unlimited budget of the comics format means that the dynamic duo can have more out-there, far bigger adventures than they ever did on the small screen. And writer Jeff Parker masterfully captures the mannerisms and humor of Adam West, Burt Ward, and the rest of the old cast, amping up the ridiculousness to even greater and more hilarious heights.

THE NEXT BEST:

11.) The Manhattan Projects

- Jonathan Hickman's insane alternate history mind-bender - in which real-life scientists like Albert Einstein and Enrico Fermi work in secret on all manner of space-age government projects - continued to entertain this year.

12.) Sex Criminals

- Still only a few issues in, but Matt Fraction's oddball book - about a couple who can freeze time whenever they get busy - is one of the best new comic debuts of the year. It sounds strange, sure, but the writing is spot-on and the characters are well-drawn.

13.) All-Star Western

- The ongoing adventures of scarred Old West bounty hunter Jonah Hex took a strange turn this year, when Hex was time-warped into the present day. What could have been cheesy has actually turned out sort of awesome, as writers Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray have used the device to satirize and explore modern society vs. that of Hex's native wild west.

14.) Time Warp

- For the last couple of years, Vertigo has been releasing a series of oversized anthology specials, packed with thematically-linked short stories from all manner of top talent. My favorite yet was this year's Time Warp special, a collection of time-travel themed stories from a bevvy of talented writers and artists. My favorite? A fun, twisty time-loop story from Lost showrunner Damon Lindeloff, in which time-travelling hero Rip Hunter must continually save his younger self from certain death, creating a never-ending paradox. Keep these anthologies coming, Vertigo.

15.) The Adventures of Superman

- Yet another digital weekly comic that makes the list. Whereas the main-line Superman titles have been a very mixed bag this year, the short story arcs in this weekly series have been by and large fantastic. These are simple, continuity-free tales that give us classic, iconic Superman stories without the baggage of whatever's going on in the main storylines. So far, that includes a wonderful riff on "Flowers For Algernon" starring Bizarro, a harrowing tale about a busy day in the life of Superman, and a fascinating "what-if" about a Superman who decides to get tough on crime by moonlighting as a Punisher-esque vigilante.

RUNNERS UP:

FBP: Federal Bureau of Physics
Detective Comics
Judge Dredd
The Phantom Stranger
Batwing
Fables / Fairest
Swamp Thing
Justice League Dark
Batgirl
Green Arrow
Batman & Robin
Earth 2
Kick-Ass 3
Infinity
Jupiter's Legacy
Talon

SPECIAL MENTIONS:

- Geoff Johns' final issue of GREEN LANTERN in May capped off a several-year run on the title that marked a modern-day renaissance for the character. While the title had had its ups and downs over the last few years, Johns delivered a memorable finale - tying up years worth of plot threads and character development into an action and emotion-packed send-off. Johns' work on GL, in its prime, was absolute must-read stuff, with story after story that was an instant classic - from the epic Sinestro Corps War to Blackest Night. Johns expanded the GL universe, introducing an entire spectrum of ring-wielders and coalescing decades of continuity into one giant, sprawling mythology. Under Johns, GL was grand space opera - the Star Wars of superhero comics.

- Similarly, I've also got to note the end of Grant Morrison's several-year long Batman saga in the pages of BATMAN, INC. Morrison first began writing ongoing Batman stories years ago, later making waves by introducing Damian Wayne, the son of Bruce Wayne and Talia Al Ghul, and having him become the latest to assume the name of Robin. While other Bat-books rebooted as part of the New 52, Morrison's increasingly self-contained saga continued, with things coming full-circle. Batman and his allies had to fight a global terrorist network - Leviathan - fronted by Talia, and Damian was caught in the crosshairs. And so, Morrison's story again wove back into the greater DCU, as he penned the tragic death of Damian. Robin, once again, was dead. It's hard to know how to rate this final run on Batman, Inc., because it was so weird, so insular, and so uniquely Morrison. But the legendary writer deserves props for writing a globe-trotting, psychedelic Batman saga in an age where grim n' gritty Batman was par for the course.

- I continue to follow INVINCIBLE in trade-paperback format, and still count myself as a huge fan of Robert Kirkman's modern spin on classic superhero fiction. I'm behind enough on the current storylines that I didn't feel I should include this one in my Best-of-the-Year list. Suffice it to say, it remains one of my favorite reads.

- Speaking of which, LOCKE & KEY will undoubtedly go down as one of the best comic book series of this decade. Earlier this year, I read through Volume 5 of the series, and was completely blown away by the story that author Joe Hill had built towards. I've yet to read the series' final issues that came out recently, but I've read the glowing reviews and have seen them atop many year-end lists. I'll be picking up the sixth and final collected volume when it's released in February, but I had to give this book a shout-out now. It really has been the best comic book going for the last few years, and I hope that Hill has something new up his sleeve in the not-too-distant future, because I and many others will surely be going through Locke & Key withdrawal.


WRITERS OF THE YEAR:

1.) Scott Snyder (Batman, The Wake)
2.) Jeff Lemire (Trillium, Animal Man, Green Arrow)
3.) Brian K. Vaughan (Saga)
4.) Ed Bruabaker (Fatale)
5.) Greg Rucka (Lazarus)
6.) Tom Taylor (Injustice, Earth 2)
7.) Robert Kirkman (Walking Dead, Invincible)
8.) Jeff Parker (Batman '66)
9.) Jonathan Hickman (The Manhattan Projects, Infinity)
10.) Matt Fraction (Sex Criminals)

ARTISTS OF THE YEAR:

1.) Sean Murphy (The Wake)
2.) Fiona Staples (Saga)
3.) Jeff Lemire (Trillium)
4.) Jason Fabok (Detective Comics)
5.) Greg Capullo (Batman)
6.) Patrick Gleason (Batman & Robin)
7.) Sean Phillips (Fatale)
8.) Nick Pitarra (Manhattan Projects)
9.) Ivan Reiss (Aquaman, Justice League)
10.) Michael Lark (Lazarus)