That’s Elton John….
Spinal Tap II: The End Continues is coming in September!
That’s Elton John….
Spinal Tap II: The End Continues is coming in September!
July 31
July has just about come to a conclusion. It the world of comic books, this week is the fifth week of the month which means that many of the companies use it as a skip week. They drop annuals or not many huge books. There were still some good stuff released.
Books this week:

Spider-Man & Wolverine #3. “The Savage Hunt” Written by Marc Guggenheim with art by Kaare Andrews. Cover art was done by Kaare Andrews. I am still not happy with the way this book writes Spider-Man. I just do not feel that they understand the character of Spider-Man. His dialogue and actions just do not fit Spidey. Still, Spidey and Wolverine in the Savage Land is always fun.
Nightwing #120-125. I was able to finish reading the remaining post-Tom Taylor Nightwing run that I had picked up after I started collecting Nightwing with #126. While they are not equal to the Tom Taylor books, these were decent. I do like the character of Nightwing a lot.

One World Under Doom: G.O.D.S. #1. Written by Ryan North and art by Francesco Mortarino. Valerio Schiti & Federico Blee did the cover art. I collected the whole G.O.D.S. series but it was never a book that made a lot of sense. It was a tough read and so I was never connected to it. This was the first time that I really loved the characters from that book. Wyn and Mia were brought to life in the best way so far by Ryan North. I kind of would like a book with Wyn and Mia written by North.
The War #1. Written by Garth Ennis and illustrated by Becky Cloonan. This is a reprint issue of the story The War from Hello Darkness. That part of Hello Darkness was not my most favorite story in that anthology, but it is definitely a premiere story. The covers on these are just spectacular. I nearly bought the main three covers, but I thought it was just too much for a book that was just a reprint. I left the Cover A on the shelf. Cover B was by Jay Shaw (Gold Medalist) and Cover C by Tula Lotay (Silver Medalist).

Spider-Man vs. the Sinister Sixteen #1. Written by J. Michael Straczynski and art by Phil Noto. Terry and Rachel Dodson did the cover art. Superheroes and supervillains meet Hulu’s The Bear. Invites to all of these characters to come to the opening night of a new restaurant. Will it be a chaotic night or are they all just hungry enough to be on their best behaviors? This was a strange book.
Ultimate Spider-Man #19. Written by Jonathan Hickman and Marco Checchetto did the art. Marco Checchetto and Matthew Wilson did the cover art. Mary Jane is at her wits end and she is unhappy with Peter and Richard’s actions. She wants to be kept in the loop. That feels like some issue coming for the happy family.

Out of Alcatraz #5. “Boundary Bay.” Written by Christopher Cantwell and art and cover art by Tyler Crook. This has been a fantastic comic book from Oni Press. The fifth issue wraps up the story of the escapees of Alcatraz. It was an excellent conclusion, wrapping everything up in a satisfying manner, which is not always an easy thing to do.
Werewolf By Night: Blood Moon Rise #1. “Nail in the Coffin.” Written by Michael Giacchino with art by David Messina. Tyler Kirkham & Arif Prianto did the cover art. I guess this is not bloody enough for a red band, like the previous Werewolf by Night book (honestly, that last WBN book did not need to be a red band book either). I did not know that this book was written by Michael Giacchino, who is the composer of so many classic films and the director of the Marvel Studios special feature Werewolf By Night. This is always fun with the Werewolf By Night (and Dracula, btw).

Speed Racer #1. “Life in the Fast Lane” Written by David Pepose and art by Davide Tinto. Cover art was done by Alessio Zonno. Mad Cave is pulling it best Dynamite Comics imitation by bringing up an old cartoon IP in a new style. In fact, David Pepose has done a lot of those Dynamite books. I like this book because it brought a new feel to this character.
The Ultimates #14. Written by Deniz Camp and art by Juan Frigeri. Cover art was done by Dike Ruan & Neeraj Menon. We get the Ultimates debut of Quicksilver and Scarlet Witch. It feels very much like their appearance in Avengers: Age of Ultron. Great battle with the twins and Captain America and Hawkeye.

The Thing #3. “The King of Yancy Street Part Three“. Written by Tony Fleecs and art by Justin Mason. Cover art was done by Nick Bradshaw & Rachelle Rosenberg. The Thing is out to protect a little girl that is wanted by the criminal underworld. Thing fights off Bullseye and the Wrecking Crew. Thing looked kick ass in this issue, though trouble is coming at the end with an appearance by Juggernaut.
Incredible Hulk #27. “The Falling Down Tree.” Written by Phillip Kennedy Johnson and penciled by Kev Walker. Nic Klein did the cover art. This was one of the best Hulk issues we have had in a long time. It had a different feel to it and I really enjoyed the depth of the story. Hulk and little boy. Good stuff.
Space Quest #3. Written by Joe Casey and art by Sebastian Piriz. Cover A art was done by Mark Spears (Bronze Medalist) and Cover B art was done by Joshua Middleton. Crossover between Space Ghost and Jonny Quest continues in this Dynamite Comics book as the kids swap places. Lots of Space Ghost villains appear too.

You’ll Do Bad Things #5. Written by Tyler Boss and art by Adriano Turtulici. Tyler Boss also did the cover art. Penultimate issue of this book places out people where they need to be for the big finale. Looked like the questions about our serial killer have been answered. We’ll see how it turns out next month.
Justice League: Dark Tomorrow Special #1. Written by Marc Guggenheim & Mark Waid. Cian Tormey did the art for the cover. Time travelers are in trouble as the displaced heroes (and Jonah Hex) face the aftermath of the “We are Tomorrow” arc. I did like this crew together, including Plastic Man, Batman Beyond and Jonah Hex. This special did not feel like it wrapped anything up. In fact, it leaves things dangling for future books. We’ll see how things go for this group. I already get ore DC than I am used to.
Vision & Scarlet Witch #3. Written by Steve Orlando and art by Lorenzo Tammetta & Jacopo Camagni/ Russell Dauterman did the cover art. I like this book so far because it feels like a spiritual sequel to the Vision series by Tom King, which is one of my all-time favorite stories. With Vin Vision playing a role, this has some real emotion to it.

News from the Fallout #2. Written by Chris Condon and art by Jeffrey Alan Love. Cover art was done by Jeffrey Alan Love. What a great book this is. I love the mysterious story and the art absolutely keeps things uncertain and moody. Chris Condon consistently provides some original storytelling and books that are different than you are used to as this falls right into that category.
Nightwing Annual #1. “Death Trap.” Written by Dan Watters and drawn by and cover art by Francesco Francavilla. This annual spends time with Olivia Pearce and Commissioner Sawyer. No sign of Nightwing in the book, outside the final panel and some hints during some comics featuring the Grey Ghost. This was probably the best it was going to be without any sign of Nightwing.
Other books this week: Bring on the Bad Guys: Loki #1, Assorted Crisis Events #5, I, Tyrant #1, Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III #1 Ashcan, and Missionary #3.

Quick Hits: The final issue of the Marvel/Disney What If…? books came out this week. What If…? Goofy Became Spider-Man #1 wrapped up this cute little crossovers. Anything but cute, Savage Wolverine #1 which is a one-shot (I believe) was very brutal and violent. Not the same as Goofy. The Terminator #9 returned after a length wait with a book that felt very much like T2: Judgment Day. Another returning book, but for different reasons, is The Lucky Devils #4. At the back of the issue, there was a conversation between Charles Soule and Ryan Browne about why the publication of this book stalled. Apparently, Ryan Browne suffered a stroke and was recovering. He still had trouble breaking the written word into a page to draw so they called in Zander Cannon to help with the art breakdown. Ryan Browne seems to be recovering, and they said the book would be released on a bi-monthly schedule to give them extra time. I certainly wish all the positive thoughts to Ryan Browne in his recovery. His art is still breathtaking and it was a shocking revelation. Get well soon! Moving on, Exquisite Corpses #1 released a third printing with an awesome cover, so I picked it up too. I am not sure I love this trend of reprinting books multiple times with amazing covers that make me want to spend more money on a book I already have. Diabolical! I picked up a book called 4th Rope #1 from a small company called Noir Caesar. It is about an intergalactic wrestling organization. Honestly, I love wrestling, but this issue did not appeal to me much. I am glad to own it. Crush Depth #5 and Dark Pyramid #5 both came to a conclusion this week with interesting issues. Both series from Mad Cave got weirder with each issue. Sam and Twitch Case Files #16 is pretty good as this arc seems to be coming to a conclusion soon. The Oddly Pedestrian Life of Christopher Chaos: Children of the Night #2 featured the longest title of any book right now and included Dr. Jekyll. Zdarsky Comic News #13 came out, but I am missing #11 and #12. Not sure why they did not show up at my shop in Bettendorf. I’ll have to look again.
July 31
August is right around the curtain and the fifth week of July is finishing up with the Favorite Comic Covers of the Week.
Also-Rans: Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #1 Ashcan, Exquisite Corpses #1 (Third Printing), Lucky Devils #4, The Terminator #9, Vision & Scarlet Witch #3, I, Tyrant (variant B cover), and News from the Fallout #2.


Bronze Medalist
Space Quest #3
Cover art by Mark Spears
I picked up the A cover for this Dynamite book today after getting Cover B yesterday. Once again, Mark Spears is hitting on all cylinders. Every cover he does is a beautiful piece of art. I wonder if we are taking him for granted because of his consistent talent?


Silver Medalist
The War #1
Variant Cover C
Cover art by Tula Lotay
This imagery on this cover is stunning. With the obviously pregnant woman front and center before an exploding nuke? What a powerful cover. This is the C cover for this short series featuring a reprinting of the story from Hello Darkness by Garth Ennis. This gives me a truly tragic feel about the story.


Gold Medalist
The War #1
Variant Cover B
Cover art by Jay Shaw
The War finished one and two this week, and I have to tell you that I had to struggle to resist cover A and a virgin variant of that same cover. I really almost bought them, but I decided that I did not need four separate covers for the one reprint book. They were all just spectacular though. It really could have been all three medalists this week had I picked up cover A. I love this black and white cover, though the tone of it does give me a different vibe than cover C does.
Spoilers
So I wrapped up the final two episodes of WWE Unreal tonight with two episodes that I thought were the best ones of the series.
Episode 4 featured the heel turn of John Cena, including the parts of the story involving Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. Episode 5 was Wrestlemania 41.
There were a lot of cool moments in these episodes. I did enjoy listening to the planning behind the Elimination Chamber where what exactly they wanted to do with the Rock/Cody story was determined. With it leading to John Cena’s heel turn, the writer’s room was pretty cool.
I did enjoy hearing CM Punk give the idea for the ending of the men’s Elimination Chamber where Seth stomps Punk and Cena puts him into the STF. It went exactly as Punk had laid out and hearing that was an awesome moment. Especially with all six participants surrounding Triple H in the planning. It showed how professional these men were.
My favorite part of the entire series was seeing how emotional CM Punk was over finally main eventing Wrestlemania. He had tears in his eyes before heading out for the match. Triple H told him that he had always been a main event performer and you could see how much that meant to Punk. The tears after the match were so powerful too. He spoke about how he had accomplished his lifelong dream and it was not just a written promo. This was Phil Brooks (CM Punk’s real name) speaking from his heart.
The show did mention some of the negatives that lead up to Wrestlemania, such as Jey Uso’s troubles where we saw a ZOOM meeting where creative had discussed not putting the title on him because of his malaise. They also addressed the Charlotte Flair-Tiffany Stratton promo that had gotten too real on an episode of Smackdown.
It still felt as if there could have been more that we saw, but, perhaps the dirt sheets that report all these things, do not necessarily get things correct. The relationship between Rock and Triple H is supposed to be very bad, but there was no even slight example of that in this docu-series.
This was an interesting docu-series and I do believe it was well put together. It was certainly produced carefully, but it was fun seeing the backstage parts.
Spoilers
“A Beating Heart…”
“Camera Shy”
I started the new Dexter series on Prime today. I was not sure whether or not I was going to watch this after watching the up and down quality of Dexter: Original Sin. Add that to the fact that I did not watch the last several years of Dexter and I did not know the back story of what happened and I was not sure if I wanted to donate the time needed.
However, I have heard some positive word of mouth about the series and Dexter: Original Sin did have some upside to it. I have the opening in the schedule as I just finished two Apple + series so I decided to give this new version of Dexter a shot.
I will say that I enjoyed the first two episodes of this as Dexter came out of his coma after being shot in the chest by his son. Dexter followed Harrison, his son, to New York to do what he could to help him.
There is another serial killer in New York using the moniker, Dark Passenger, which ticks Dexter off right away.
If there is one thing that I would say about this series is that it feels like New York is really small. Dexter made his way around the city easily, maybe too easily.
I liked the scene that saw David Zayas reprise his role as Angel Batista from the original show, facing off with Dexter after he had awakened from his coma. Batista suspected that Dexter was the Bay Harbor Butcher, but he had no evidence. Dexter was able to escape from the hospital before Batista returned to see him again.
There are two more episodes currently active on Prime (via Paramount + with Showtime) and released on Fridays.
Spoilers
The new docu-series dropped on Netflix today called WWE Unreal. It was a series that takes the audience behind the scenes to see what happens to create the magic of the WWE.
The show focused on the time period starting around the Netflix debut of RAW through Wrestlemania 41.
WWE has always been great at documentaries and there was some definitely controversy about WWE pulling the curtains back. I did enjoy this, but I am going to say that Unreal was clearly too clean… too produced.
What I mean is that we do not really see any negative things that might happen or that was rumored to happen. They did not mention Seth Rollins’s absolute hatred of CM Punk, which feels like would be a major piece of what happened backstage.
However, I did like the few looks into the writer’s room with how they were putting together ideas for the matches.
The first three episodes featured in on CM Punk, Rhea Ripley, Chelsea Green, Charlotte Flair, Bianca Belair, Jey Uso, and Cody Rhodes (in particular with his matches against Kevin Owens).
What we got was fun, but it did feel very homogenized. I like seeing the wrestlers backstage out of character and how they bond with each other. Watching the group of female wrestlers heading out for the Elimination Chamber match praying together was fascinating.
The show did continue to show that this was not just scripted material, but that these men and women truly put their careers on the line every night they go out to perform. They talked about injuries to Rhea Ripley, CM Punk and Charlotte Flair. One of my favorite moments was when Kevin Owens was discussing a spot he had with Cody Rhodes during the ladder match when he gave Cody a fisherman’s buster off the second rope into a ladder. KO was worried because of the way the ladder had been set up and he was afraid Cody’s neck would be injured.
Another great moment was watching the backstage agents dealing with the matches. Chris Park, who used to wrestle under the moniker of Abyss, was in charge of the Netflix RAW debut main event CM Punk vs. Seth Rollins. The match is a great match and will be on a list of the best of the year, but Park was facing pressures because the match was running long. Park, trying to get approval from Bruce Prichard, who was pushing him to get the match to go to the finish. I felt for Chris Park because it felt like he was in trouble despite this being a classic match.
There are two more episodes of this docu-series that have dropped. One of them is focused in on the John Cena heel turn and another one on Wrestlemania 41. Both could have some major news, including an original match lineup for Wrestlemania 41 before things get switched around. This list was released as news from the series so I look forward to finishing up the series.
Spoilers
I binged season five of What We Do in the Shadows today and it was a great season once again. This show is one of the most consistently funny shows on television.
This season had several running storylines that carried through most of the year. These included:
My favorite episode of the season was “Local News”, which was an episode featuring a local news reporter covering the story of a water main break on the street of the vampires’ house. They interviewed Nandor and he believed he accidentally let slip that he had lived in the house for centuries. Believing that he had given away the truth that they were vampires, the group started going crazy. It was really funny and resolved wonderfully. It also crossed over with Guillermo going to see his mom to tell her about his life choice.
Another thing I really loved was the development of the character of Guillermo over the ten episodes. He was learning a lot about himself, to the point where he realized that he was not going to be able to become a vampire. His Van Helsing blood had been fighting off the vampirism all season, keeping him from fully turning.
I loved how, when Nandor finally discovered the truth, it led to another truth. Nandor never turned Guillermo into a vampire over the years because he knew that Guillermo did not have the stomach for the killing involved. Nandor really showed that he knew Guillermo well, but also cared for his familiar/bodyguard.
I also liked how the other vampires showed some concern for Guillermo, way more than they had ever done. I would go as far as to say that they all had accepted him as part of their lives. Laszlo, Nadja, Colin Robinson and even The Guide went out of their way to try and help Guillermo. That was way different than the first season.
Cameo of the season: Patton Oswalt. He became a major component in helping Nandor get past his hurt feelings, allowing him to save his friendship with Guillermo. And he did all this before being thrown to his death.
I am also a fan of how characters from previous episodes/seasons keep showing up. It gives the show a real flavor and world that has a lived in feel to it. The Baron, Derek, The Doll, Topher, Djinn etc.
Although I could see this change a bit, here is my current list of seasons in order of my favorites:
I could see seasons 4 & 5 flipping places after more time to reflect. Season six has 11 episodes instead of 10 and it is the final season of the show.
Spoilers
“All Systems Red”
“The Perimeter”
I loved this series. I did not expect to feel this way about this series. A sci-fi/action/comedy featuring a robot that goes rogue and becomes a murderer. And yet, I found this to be fully entertaining and I was enthralled with the entire series.
I will say that the final episode left me feeling sad as Sec Unit left the others, departing for a new adventure. I did not expect that to happen. Sec Unit choosing to leave behind the humans who he had done so much to protect and who had rescued him from being melted in acid.
I wonder if the group would have let Sec Unit put on his armor and resume his role as their bodyguard if he would have made a different decision.
Sec Unit got on a transport ship, posing as a servant bot and said that he did not want anyone telling him what he could do, even his favorite humans, meaning Mensah.
Murderbot has apparently been renewed for a second season and showrunner Chris Weitz suggested that the second season would be adapting the next three books. I have not read any of them, but I do hope that the cast that I have enjoyed so much this season would be able to join Alexander Skarsgård for season two. At first I was not much of a fan of David Dastmalchian’s Gurathin, but he did grow on me after he stopped being such an opposition to Sec Unit.
Could we get more The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon next season? That was a real fun little show-within-a-show example and I love seeing Clark Gregg anytime I can.
Murderbot is on Apple TV + and is definitely worth it for any sci-fi fan.
Spoilers
“Déjà Vu All Over Again”
I finished up the first season of Stick on Apple TV + tonight with the finale, entitled “Déjà Vu All Over Again.”
The episode featured the final day of the ReadySafe Invitational golf tourney with Santi right in the race to win. Last episode, we meet Santi’s father for the first time who showed up with all the right words for his son. We would find out that, unfortunately, little had changed.
I am going to say this about the season finale of Stick. It was extremely satisfying and I liked how things worked themselves out. However, the episode was really predictable. It followed my expectations really tightly. Yet, predictable is not always a bad thing. The episode worked narratively and the result was an enjoyable final show.
Owen Wilson is a charming and engaging actor and he does a fantastic job in this show. he had great chemistry with Peter Dager, who played Santi. Their relationship was very real and went through a lot of different stages during the ten episode season. I believed everything that happened and I felt badly for Pryce when Santi asked him to step aside so his father could caddy for him. It was clear that the choice would turn out poorly, but Pryce allowed the kid the chance to find out for himself. Then, Pryce came back and helped Santi reclaim his mindset, giving him a chance to make an unbelievable shot, even in defeat.
I wonder if this is a series that will continue into a second season. I am not sure where the story will go, unless the hints at the end of Pryce getting back into shape and rejoining the tour is where they will go. No matter what, this first season was excellent and definitely worth the watch.
SPOILERS

Part Two
The A & E documentary KISStory Part two is the story of the rock band Kiss, in the second part of their careers.
I still feel as if there are some things missing without Ace Frehley and Peter Criss’s actual involvement in the documentary. Any time Peter or Ace is heard in the doc, it is from archival footage or interviews and the doc started off with a message saying that they chose not to participate and they “do not endorse the views of this program.” That meant that this doc was from the POV of Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley. I am truly curious how the story might differ.
This part of the doc started off with the band in some internal trouble, though they tried to force their way through it.
HOT TAKE: The Elder is my favorite Kiss album.
However, I may be the only one as the concept album seemed to be mentioned as one of the big mistakes of the group.
Peter Criss left the band, apparently after a concert where he was messing with the timing of the songs. That is one of the main functions of the drummer, and I could understand the feeling of betrayal that would bring up.
Ace Frehley was gone too, not long after Peter, leaving Kiss struggling with new musicians and characters from the band. They no longer had the Catman or the Spaceman in the group.
The doc showed the historic moment on MTV where KISS, for the first time, revealed themselves without the make-up and followed the band as it became another 1980s hair band.
The MTV Unplugged series was the first place where Peter and Ace returned for some songs, giving the idea that there could be a reunion at some point. The reunion tour was huge business and seemed to be a success at the start. However, the same demons that had pulled them apart in the late 70s apparently remained at this time. It was portrayed that Peter was upset over money and the perceived secondary status in the band behind Gene and Paul. I wish I had his official POV to see how accurate that was. Ace appeared to not be one who could handle the fame at the level KISS had reached.
I found myself with so much more respect for guitarist Tommy Thayer and drummer Eric Singer, who were in the band and were removed when Ace and Peter returned. That felt tough, but they were total professionals. Tommy was even brought back in to help Peter and Ace get back to their levels of performance, and he wound up doing much of the tour manager duties.
It was a tough section involving the drummer who had replaced Peter in Kiss came up. Eric Carr came into the group and wound up dying form cancer. Paul and Gene told the story of Eric begging them to play on the song “God Gave Rock ‘N Roll To You” for the video, a song they recorded for the Bill & Ted Bogus Journey film. Paul’s description of Eric playing on that video was heartbreaking.
Both weeks of this doc ended really quickly, as it felt like something was being cut off.
I enjoyed this as I was always a fan of KISS, especially when I was younger. I was never an obsessed fan and I would be curious to hear what a deep fan thought of this documentary.
With this two-part doc series done, next week we start with a new show for the Sunday Morning Sidewalk. I think the series that will be next is the HBO show, Lovecraft Country.
July 26
The last Comic Cavalcade of July is another biggie. There are a bunch of books this week that were A covers from Marvel books from last week that had not been delivered to Comic World. I had picked up most of them with variant covers last week. These included New Avengers #2, Ultimate Black Panther #18, The World To Come #2, Exceptional X-Men #11, Death of the Silver Surfer #2, and Spider-Girl #2.
Books this week:

Mark Spears Monsters #6. “No Such Thing as a Superhero.” Written, illustrated and cover art by Mark Spears. So, technically, this is one of next week’s books. This does not release until July 30, but I got it from Keenspot directly. This is ironic too because when I ordered #4 and 5 from Keenspot, it took FOREVER to receive the package of these books. With number six arriving early, it was such a neat surprise. I got the A, B, and C cover in the package.
Amazing Spider-Man #8. Written by Joe Kelly and penciled by John Romita Jr. with Todd Nauck. Cover art was done by John Romita Jr., Scott Hanna and Marcio Menyz. I also got the retro vision variant version by Dan Panosian. Spidey’s battle continued on with Hellgate as Spidey struggled to try and stop the powerhouse.

Six Shots #1. “It’s Inside All of Us.” Written by Brian Phillipson & Jordan Lichtman with art and cover art by Alex Cormack. I got this via eBay this week. It is from a small time comic company called Bliss on Tap and Todd could not find it in Des Moines at all. It is a fascinating story involving a six gun and a demon. It is only a two part series so this is the first issue and the penultimate one.
X-Men: Age of Revelation #0. Written by Jed MacKay and penciled by Humberto Ramos. Cover art by Ryan Stegman & Marte Gracia. Doug Ramsey is the heir of Apocalypse and this is a potential future that sees Doug, aka Revelation, joined the X-Men and seeing how things went badly quickly. This is leading to a huge X-Men crossover event in a few months. I will say, this was an interesting start.

Rocketfellers #7. Written by Peter J. Tomasi and art by Francis Manapul and Siya Oum. Cover art was done by Francis Manapul. I also got the FF homage variant with art by Ramon Bachs. This story was a flashback…to the future??? Yes, this was a story that mostly took place in the Rocketfellers’ past, which would be the future to where they are now.
Runaways #2. “Think of the Children Part Two” Written by Rainbow Rowell and art by Elena Casagrande and Roberta Ingramata. Cover art was done by Stephanie Hans. Chase is back and he brought the drama with him. Honestly, I found this to be an epic issue as the troubles between the Runaways was all over the place. This reminded me of the best of the Runaways.

Godzilla: Kai-Sei #1. Written by Tim Seeley with art and cover art by Nikola Čižmešija. Godzilla has been on fire in 2025, and this is yet another fun series from IDW. Tim Seeley has done some of my favorite books over the last few years and I am looking forward to seeing this progress. It feels like anew twist to a Godzilla story that we haven’t seen before.
Wolverine #11. “Only a Mother.” Written by Saladin Ahmed with art by Martin Coccolo. Cover art was done by Martin Coccolo and Bryan Valenza. Wolverine vs. Sabretooth brutally battles over Logan’s mother. The question about how Logan’s mother could be here was answered in a heartbreaking manner.

Look Into My Eyes #1. Written by and art by Rubine. Cover art is done by Rubine Francesco Segala. Suzie has disappeared. Conspiracy-obsessed teen RJ Nguyen wants to find out where she went. I love these weird small town stuff (like Twin Peaks, Stillwater etc.) and this was exciting. It also has several QR codes throughout to expand the storytelling. Creative new book from Mad Cave, who has been excellent lately.
Moon Knight #10. (aka LEGACY #300). “God of Gangsters.” Written by Jed MacKay and art by Devmalya Pramanik. Cover art was by Davide Paratore. Big Moon Knight issue as the comic reminds us how much Moon Knight kicks ass.

Sleep #3. Written, drawn and cover art by Zander Cannon. Sleep has been exceptional so far and this issue shows us the chaos that happened while Jonathan is asleep. The brutality across the town is causing Jonathan to be anxious and scared about what exactly is happening to him. Sleep has been a great book so far and this is one of the more beautifully art designed books around today.
Minor Arcana #9. Written by Jeff Lemire and illustrated by Letizia Cadonici. Cover art was done by Jeff Lemire. Theresa, against her better thoughts, opened the psychic store to the public and a line of people wanted to contact those who have passed.

Geiger #16. Written by Geoff Johns and penciled by Eamon Winkle. Cover art is done by Gary Frank and Brad Anderson. The Glowing Man is in bad shape and there are some major explosions. Still, this felt like a mid-issue preparing for the big trial starting out next issue.
Space Ghost Annual #1. Written by David Pepose with art by Jonathan Lau. Cover art was done by Francesco Mattina. This annual seems like it ends the first group of issues while leading into the next series. Space Ghost has been a solid book for Dynamite and I am a fan of it.
West Coast Avengers #9. Written by Gerry Duggan and art by Danny Kim. Cover art was done by Josemaria Casanovas. I have really enjoyed this team of West Coast Avengers. The group of heroes that they have brought together have been intriguing and mix nicely. The idea of a heroic Ultron is awesome. I have heard this one is ending with #10, but I hope that is not the case. This has been really good.

Star Trek: Red Shirts #1. Written by Christopher Cantwell and art by Megan Levens. Variant cover art by JJ Lendl. I like Star Trek, but I would not call myself a fan. However, this idea of having the lead of this book be part of the “red shirts” which was the canon fodder of the show, those that would die on missions, made me interested in seeing what this would be about.
Feral #15. Written by Tony Fleecs and art by Trish Forstner and Tone Rodriguez. Variant cover art by Trish Forstner and Passalaqua (Bronze Medalist). Feral has been very tense and filled with some of the best horror writing in comics. There are amazing scares in this book even with the main characters being cats.

Blue Palo Verde #2. Written by Ray Fawkes and art and cover art by Rimanti. Kris is back from prison and trying to contact her father, who is on a sick bed. However, the town seems to want her to leave. This has been very compelling so far. Like a couple of the other books this week, the weird little town is one of my favorite sub-genres and this one is playing right into it.
Exquisite Corpses #3. Written by Pornsak Pichetshote with James Tynion IV and art by Valentine De Landro with Michael Walsh. I got three different covers for this book. Cover A was Michael Walsh. Cover B by Valentine De Landro. Cover D is the stealth variant also by Valentine De Landro (Gold Medalist). More excitement from the tournament. This has been one of the best books of the month every month since it had been released.

Captain Planet and the Planeteers #2. Written by David Pepose and art by Eman Casallos. Cover A art was by Chad Hardin while cover B variant was done by Jae Lee & June Chung. We spend some more time with the Planeteers as they are starting to discover their powers. I do like this book quite a bit so I am glad it seems like it is finally on a regular release schedule.
TexArcanum #1. Written by Christopher Monfette and illustrated by Miguel Martos. Who is cowboy arcanist Avery Belle? He has traveled the land in battle with ghosts, demons, spirits and gods. Another new book with a really creative concept. This is a Dark Horse book and it was a fun read.

Hero Hiro #1. Written by Jeff McClelland with art by Michael “Gecko” Adams. Cover art is done by Michael Adams. I had not known anything about this book from Keenspot and, when I saw it on the wall in Bettendorf, I gave it a shot. The main superhero is called The Hero and my first thoughts of that character was that he reminded me of Captain Amazing from Mystery Men. Interesting premise for this book too with a power transfer from The Hero to a kid named Hiro. This felt lighter than some of the other independent books lately and I thought it was a good change of pace.
The Voice Said Kill #1. Written by Si Spurrier and art and cover art by Vanesa Del Rey. Speaking about the darker independents, this is an example of that. Murder and bloody violence in the Louisiana Bayou. This is a crime story with an intriguing protagonist.
Uncanny X-Men #18. “Corn Dogs and Carnage.” Written by Gail Simone with art by Luciano Vecchio. David Marquez & Matthew Wilson did the cover art. New Orleans and friendship… what would be better than having a carnival! This was a fun switch as the city is starting to celebrate the mutants instead of what we are used to.

Ice Cream Man #44. Written by W. Maxwell Prince and art by Martin Morazzo. Cover art by Martin Morazzo and Chris O’Halloran. Okay, so I think, this was an origin story for the Ice Cream Man himself. It was an intriguing story of Craig Alabaster and the troubles he faced at his job.
Storm #10. “Thunder War Begins” Written by Murewa Ayodele and art by Lucas Werneck. Cover art by Mateus Manhanini. The last two pages of this book is what rally stands out. Man Storm is a kick ass right now.
Phoenix #13. Written by Stephanie Phillips and art by Roi Mercado. Cover art was done by Lucas Werneck. Cable is here with his step-mother Jean with the truth about the supposed resurrection of Jean’s sister and why it is a terrible thing.
Hornsby & Halo #8. Storytellers for this book are Peter J. Tomasi & Peter Snejbjerg. Cover art is done by Peter Snejbjerg & John Kalisz. Zach and Rose join a school play. This was a fun story that was featuring the characters. I liked this as it felt like a break from the book.

The Last Boy #4. Written by Dan Panosian and illustrated by Alessio Avallone with assistance by Alberto Canale. Cover art was done by Dan Panosian. Peter Pan is out to make new allies and lead Captain Hook’s old crew? Whoa? Oh and it looked like Peter may have lost a hand.
The Department of Truth #32. Written by James Tynion IV and art by Letizia Cadonici. Cover art was done by Martin Simmonds. More about the mysterious Hatman. Another original style to tell this story. The Department of Truth has experimented with different ways to tell a story and this one is new again. I love the way this book keeps you on your toes.
Justice League Unlimited #9. Written by Mark Waid and art and cover art by Dan Mora. This is listed as the “We Are Yesterday Epilogue”. I think I am ready for this time travel story to be over. They are able to save Air Wave.

The Great British Bump Off: Kill or Be Quilt #4. Written by John Allison and art by Sarin. This is the final issue of this Dark Horse book. It was a silly book with a mystery that was kind of fun. It had some humor and funny writing, but it turned out to be nothing major.
Other books this week: New History of the DC Universe #2, Blade Forger #5, Fantastic Four Presents Franklin Richards: Son of a Genius #1, Seasons #6, Spider-Verse vs. Venomverse #3, Dark Honor #3, Absolute Martian Manhunter #5, and Mr. Terrific Year One #3.

Quick Hits: Insurgent Iron Man #10 brings that series to an end. Iron Man sounds like he will be back in the Age of Revelation event with a book with Emma Frost. Speaking of Emma, Emma Frost: White Queen #2 is also out this week. A story back in the old days prior to the Dark Phoenix saga. Things are getting messy in Eddie Brock: Carnage #6. Predator versus Spider-Man #4 brought this new Predator mini series to an end from the 20th Century Studios imprint. Vanishing Point #3 continued the sci-fi anthology book. The silver medalist cover winner this week was Vampirella Armageddon #1. Mark Spears did the cover with his characters from Monsters on the cover. Vampirella took her place on Monsters #6 cover C in an exchange. Mark Spears also had a 3rd printing of Mark Spears Monsters #2 this week. How many reprints will there be? How many will I keep buying? With the big movie coming out this week, Fantastic Four Fanfare #3 was released and had some Thing-centric stories. Silverhawks #5 finally returned after several problems from Dynamite and Diamond. Last night, Absolute Wonder Woman won the Eisner Award for Best New Series so Absolute Wonder Woman #10 is out this week. Absolute Wonder Woman also made news at San Diego Comic Con when we learned that this book was going to feature the first meeting of Wonder Woman and Batman in the Absolute universe. Doom’s Division ended its five-issue series with the return of Sunfire. Psylocke #9, Lost Fantasy #3 and Void Rivals #21 wrap up the week. Wooooo what a week.
The 2025 Eisner Awards were presented Friday, July 25 at the San Diego Comic Con. The Eisner Awards are the biggest prize among the comic book industry.
Inductees into the Will Eisner Comic Awards Hall of Fame included: Junji Ito; Kyle Baker; Eddie Campbell; Roz Chast; Dan Clowes; Todd Klein; and John Romita, Jr. The inductees are voted on by fans from a list of 18 nominees given by a panel of experts. Adding to that list was the group chosen by the judges which included: Chosen by judges: Steve Bissette, Lucy Shelton Caswell, Philippe Druillet, Phoebe Gloeckner, Joe Sacco, Bill Schanes, Steve Schanes, Frank Stack and Angelo Torres and, chosen in memorium, Peter Arno, Gus Arriola, Wilhelm Busch, Richard “Grass” Green, Rea Irvin, Jack Kamen, Joe Maneely, Shigeru Mizuki, Bob Oksner, Bob Powell, Ira Schnapp, Phil Seuling.
Other awards:
Bob Clampett Humanitarian Award: Mad Cave Studios for their LA Strong charity comic
Russ Manning Promising Newcomer Award: Richard Blake
Will Eisner Spirit of Comics Retailing Award: Akira Comics in Madrid, Spain
Bill Finger Award for Excellence in Comic Book Writing: Don Glut and Sheldon Mayer