Jack Marlowe RIP

My little town of Maquoketa, Iowa recently lost a legend as John Frederick Marlowe, known as Jack, passed away Saturday morning, October 4th.

Jack was an icon in this area. One of the most beloved individuals I have ever met. Jack wrote for the Maquoketa Sentinel-Press, the local newspaper, for decades, as a sportswriter. Jack had a love for sports and a head for stats and number that was unmatched. His encyclopedic knowledge of local sports was amazing. Just talking with Jack about high school sports was an experience where you would always come out amazed.

Jack would be embarrassed with that last paragraph because he was one of the most humble people I have ever had the pleasure to know. He would laugh it off, with that loud and bombastic laugh, and redirect the discussion away from himself. It was not in Jack’s nature to make anything about himself. It was yet one more appealing trait of him.

Every time I would see Jack, he would greet me with a big smile and he’d ask me about my own coaching, especially when I was coaching the team sponsored by the newspaper. Jack was always so kind and genuine, that you knew that he was truly interested in what you had to say.

I felt honored to have played basketball in the Marlowe barn, adding my name to the wall with a list of unbelievable people. Sadly, the barn no longer existed, but the memories will always be there.

Jack worked at the Maquoketa Sentinel Press for 55 years, including writing his own column “Sports Slants” in which Jack mentioned me a few times (which was always such a thrill). Even when he retired as an active sportswriter, Jack would continue with his column. Retirement was not something Jack did well. I remember seeing Jack delivering Sentinel-Press newspapers to local gas stations. He wanted to remain active.

Jack was an award winning writer and a local legend. The town held him in such high esteem that he was inducted into the Maquoketa High School Hall of Fame in 2016 and the Maquoketa Community High School Athletic Complex, which included baseball/softball fields and a track, was named the Jack Marlowe Athletic Complex in his honor.

The plague at the Jack Marlowe Athletic Complex read,  “A 1953 Maquoketa High School Graduate, Hall of Fame Sportswriter and lifelong resident of Jackson County who dedicated his life to highlighting the accomplishments of others while avoiding the spotlight for himself.”

Jack Marlowe loved this community almost as much as the community loved him. He will be missed. Rest in peace, Jack.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #173

October 6

I have so many comics this week. Mainly because I went to the special anniversary celebration at In This Issue in Bettendorf and participated in their bag sale. Everything you could fit into a bag they provided for $45. I went both Friday and Saturday, and did a bag each day. Day one I had 90 books in the bag and Saturday, I was able to get 104 books in the bag.

I picked up 10 Amazing Spider-Man Annuals. I grabbed a bunch of Thor Vol. 1 in the 400s. Several cool independents that I never heard before. I picked up a bunch of variant Amazing Spider-Man covers too.

It was a fun couple of days.

New Books this week:

Spider-Man Noir #1. “The Gwen Stacy Affair” Written by Erik Larsen and art by Andrea Broccardo. Cover art was done by Simon Di Meo. I do like me some noir. Spider-Man Noir is even better. I liked this first issue more than some of the previous Spider-Man Noir stories and the arrival of Gwen Stacy is cool.

The Last Day of H.P. Lovecraft #1. Written by Romualo Giulivo and illustrated and cover art by Jakub Rebelka (Bronze Medalist). One of the more interesting new books from Boom Studios. It chronicled the final day in the life of author H.P. Lovecraft, and, of course, Lovecraft is anything but ordinary. Weird and wild and a lot of fun.

Gotham Academy: First Year #1. “First Day of School.” Written by Brenden Fletcher with art by Marco Ferrari. Cover art by Karl Kerschl. New comic that was giving me Wednesday (Netflix) vibes. Olive Silverlock is our protagonist in this new series. I am not familiar with her. I am not sure if I should have been. However, the issue does a nice job introducing her to me.

X-Men: Age of Revelation-Overture #1. Written by Jed MacKay with pencils by Ryan Stegman. Cover art was done by Ryan Stegman, JP Mayer and Marte Gracia. The next major X-event kicked off with this issue. The consciousness of Cyclops is pulled X years into the future to see the current landscape of the MCU. Doug Ramsey, aka Revelation, the heir of Apocalypse, has become a mutant savior and things are really bad. There are a whole bunch of new X-titles coming out during this event and I hope they are as enjoyable as this one. I am usually not the biggest fan of the alternate futures, but this has been good so far.

Pinupocalypse #6. Written, drawn and cover art by Andrew Tarusov (Cover B- Silver Medalist). So one of the biggest surprises of 2025 came to a close here with a very satisfying final issue. With all of the zombies, UFOs and other things, we have a homage to the Attack of the 50-foot woman. This was such a fun and enjoyable series. Maybe we’ll get some more one day.

Absolute Evil #1. Written by Al Ewing and art and cover art by Giuseppe Camuncoli & Stefano Nesi. I also got the foil variant by Riley Rossmo. A bunch of new Absolute versions of some villains become the Absolute Justice. There was a literal gasp of shock over one big moment. Big book.

Batman #2. “Robin Rides the Black Mariah.” Written by Matt Fraction with art and cove art by Jorge Jimenez. I also picked up the virgin foil of this issue too This issue is focused in on Robin, and the way that the Gotham PD is now going to be treating Batman and Robin. A great spotlight on Robin and his skills.

Rook Exodus #7. Written by Geoff Johns and art by Jason Fabok. Cover art (A & B) by Jason Fabok & Brad Anderson and (Cover C) by Kael Ngu. Rook Exodus is back with the search for the other wardens. Rook encountered some other wardens on the way. It is nice to have this Ghost Machine book back after a long intermission.

White Tiger Reborn #1. “Reborn” Written by Daniel Jose Older with art by Bruno Abdias. Cover art was done by Mike Hawthorne & Federico Blee. I enjoyed the story involving the White Tiger. We get the ghost of Hector following along the White Tiger, his sister Aya Ayala.

Amazing Spider-Man #13. Written by Joe Kelly with art by Pepe Larraz. Cover art was done by Pepe Larraz & Marte Gracia. After not seeing him last issue, we go into space with Peter as he tries to keep everyone safe as always. Pete tries to convince the others to remain non-lethal.

Gunpowder Prophets #1. Written by Justin Jordan and art and cover art by Patrick Piazzalunga. A new Mad Cave book debuted this weekend with yet another winner. Huck and Marley are for hire, and they bring the violence. I liked this new pair with Marley being the big bad. I am intrigued to see what is next.

Ultimate Wolverine #10. Written by Chris Condon and art by Alex Lins. Cover art was done by Phil Noto. Wolverine faces off with Omega Red and, in a shocking moment, wins. What’s in the box???? Wolverine pulls a se7en on Omega Red.

Speed Racer #3. Written by David Pepose and art by Davide Tinto. Cover art was done by Alessio Zonno. Speed Racer takes on Racer X. Nuff said.

Vanishing Point #5. Written by Mark Russell and art by Ryan Alexander-Tanner. Phil Hester & Ryan Cody did the cover art. This story had a definite Twilight Zone feel to it. It had a really good twist to it. It was very surprising end and I thought it was great.

Something is Killing the Children #44. “All Her Monsters” Part Four Written by James Tynion IV and illustrated and cover art by Werther Dell’edera. We continue to see an adventure from the history of Erica Slaughter.

Other books this week: Good Devils: Don’t Play Fair with Evil #1, Deadpool/Wolverine #10, DC’s Zatannic Panic #1, Eat Your Young #2, Kill All Immortals II #1, Toxie Team-Up #4, Tales of the Shadowman #2, Ultimate X-Men #20, Red Hulk #9, and Look Into My Eyes #3.

Quick Hits: Our DC criminals continue to plot out their plan to rip off the Justice League in Cheetah & Cheshire Rob the Justice League #3. I did not like the new Ghost Rider team up book, Spirits of Violence #1, so i will not be buying that one from now on. I picked up this cool Juggernaut cover for X-Men: The Undertow #1. I have been having a lot of fun with Star Trek: Red Shirts #3. It is a clever concept for a Star Trek series. The Justice League: The Omega Act Special #1 is a major kick off for the next big DC event, trying to save the DC Universe. TexArcanum #3 was one of the bronze medal winners this week as we had a tie. I was not planning on getting Starship Godzilla #1 because it reminded me too much of that horrendous arc when the Hulk was a ship, right after the epic Immortal Hulk run. However, I loved the Star Wars homage cover so I picked it up anyway. I do not plan on continuing it either. Speaking of Star Wars, Star Wars #6 was out this week. Be Not Afraid #4 is a bit confusing, but a good looking book. Sam & Twitch Case Files #18 was a solid book this week and the New Avengers #5 brought the evil Reed Richards clone down. Big week.

Sunday Morning Sidewalk #37

Spoilers

“Full Circle”

Our fifth series for the Sunday Morning Sidewalk ended today with the tenth and final episode of HBO’s Lovecraft Country.

I wonder what H.P. Lovecraft would have thought about this series?

I did not see the ending of this show coming. I was very surprised with the death of Atticus in that ceremony, and the victory at the end, bonding Christina from using magic… and all white people… was a cool end.

I especially liked the use of Ji-ah in the finale. I have been wondering the purpose of this character for much of the series and to have that pay off in such a meaningful way makes me feel positive.

Of course, we had the best scene of the series in this episode too. Atticus, Leti, Montrose, Ji-ah, Hippolyta, and Diana were in the car, driving to Ardham, when the song “Sh-Boom” comes on the radio. Diana starts to sing along with the song and, before too long, the entire carload was joining in. It was my favorite moment of the series, giving us a flash of innocence and joy before the final spell.

Couple of things: Ruby’s death off-screen was a bit of a waste, I think, just for the surprise twist of Christina being one step ahead. Then, I am not sure how I feel about Diana crushing Christina’s throat with her bionic arm at the very end.

There felt to be a bunch of dangling threads or things that happened over the course of the show that felt insignificant. Why did Hippolyta have to go on her adventure through time?

Lovecraft Country, for me, was very up and down. Some weeks the show was tremendous, but I do think it lacked a comprehensive vision of what story they wanted to tell. It had some real highs and some lows too, all capsulized in this final epsiode.

Next week, in honor of the month of Halloween, we start the sixth series in the Sunday Morning Sidewalk. It will be Netflix’s series, The Haunting of Hill House.

Sunday Morning Sidewalk #36

Spoilers

“Rewind 1921”

After a short respite on a Friday morning last week, we are back on Sunday morning, BABY!

I went to SiouxperCon last week in South Dakota, which meant that I had to miss a Sunday morning. Instead, I did the Sunday Morning Sidewalk #35 on a Friday morning.

Back on Sunday, I watched the penultimate episode of Lovecraft Country, “Rewind 1921.”

Time travel is always tough, but this trip back to the Tulsa race massacre of 1921 was impeccably done. It brought us back around to a scene from the first episode that featured Jackie Robinson and made it make sense with what our current story is.

Atticus, Leti and Montrose travel through the portal to 1921, thanks to the returning Hippolyta, in search of the Book of Names, in order to save Diana. What they find is horror and loss in a brutal manner as the Tulsa race massacre was in full nightmare.

Montrose, especially, had to go through his own personal anguish, as they witnessed his father beating him with a switch. Montrose went to see the death of a boy that he had had feelings for and, all the while, Montrose knew that he could not do anything to change what happened.

To find out that it was Atticus all along who showed up and saved Montrose and George (aka Jackie Robinson) was one of those wild time travel things that brings everything full circle.

It was an emotional, powerful, painful episode looking back at how these characters were affected by this tragic event in American history.

Leti went through it as well, as she found the Book of Names as the house burned down around her, including Dora’s grandmother, who had given her the book just before horrifically burning to death in front of her.

The episode ended with our heroes clearly affected, but back in their own timeline.

I have a feeling that next week’s finale is not going to provide the satisfactory conclusion I hope as I had heard the show left off on a cliffhanger and it has never been renewed. I hope it is a cliffhanger that is designed to create something new and not one to continue this story moving forward.

EYG Favorite Comic Covers of the Week

September 18

Ahoy all on Talk Like a Pirate Eve! We all be ready to be speakin’ like a buccaneer tomorrow! While we be preparin’, here be the weekly booty of the best covers of the week. Surely full of treas-arrrrr. In honor of Talk Like a Pirate Day, I be puttin’ aside the medals this week in order to be awardin’ beauties, Pirate doubloons. Some of the best Pieces of eight ye ever be seein’.

We be keelhaulin’ Marvel and DC this week, as our jolly rogers all go to independent comapnies. Avast me hearties!

It be a shame that there be no X-Men books this week as we could have said that X marks the spot!

Covers t’be walkin’ the deck: Absolute Batman #12 (glow in the dark), Fantastic Four #3 (Marvel Studios Wrap-Around Variant), Marvel Zombies: Red Band #1, Marvel Zombies #1: Red Band (cover E), Krypto: The Last Dog of Krypton, Phoenix #15, and Amazing Spider-Man #12 head down to Davy Jones’s Lock-arrrrr.

Bronze Doubloons

They Choose Violence #4

Cover art be done by Rahzzah

Arrr… what a lovely cover this be. The curtains in the background an the masks make a statement. As does the splash of blood across the title. Shiver me timbers.

Silver Doubloons

Exquisite Corpses #5

Cover D Stealth Variant

Cover art be scribbled by Sebastian Fiumara

Avast landlubbers! This be a lovely green and black cover featurin’ an upside down wench. I be seein’ this one on the shelf and I knew I had to be plantin’ me flag with this treasure!

Gold Doubloons

No Man’s Land #1

Cover art be by Szymon Kudranski

Yo Ho! Ye scurvy sea dogs, this be the return of Szymon Kudranski, whose work on Something Epic was just like that title said. He be one of the most amazin’ artist around and this eyeball not be covered by a patch. This truly be top notch swag!

Happy Talk Like a Pirate Day all!

Daily Countdown: TV Shows #88

#88

Quantum Leap

Theorising that one could time travel within his own lifetime, Doctor Sam Beckett stepped into the Quantum Leap accelerator and vanished… He woke to find himself trapped in the past, facing mirror images that were not his own, and driven by an unknown force to change history for the better. His only guide on this journey is Al, an observer from his own time, who appears in the form of a hologram that only Sam can see and hear. And so Doctor Beckett finds himself leaping from life to life, striving to put right what once went wrong, and hoping each time that his next leap will be the leap home…

“Oh boy….”

Quantum Leap is a great sci-fi show that aired on NBC in the late 80’s, early 90’s. It starred Scott Bakula as Dr. Samuel Beckett and Dean Stockwell as Al.

Sam Beckett would jump around time, into the body of someone else, and then have to try to fix the history of this person’s life. Some were smaller, more personal stories while others were big and bombastic, featuring famous people’s stories.

Al was a hologram of a man from Beckett’s actual timeline who was there to aid Sam through his missions. Al could only be seen by Sam.

The show had some really exciting moments, some humor, and plenty of sci-fi goodness. The show did not shy away from the deeper subjects either such as racism, sexism and hatred.

Every episode ended with the tie in to the next episode, as we see Sam arrive in the body of someone new. Sam continued to hope that the next leap would be the leap home.

I did not watch the revival of Quantum Leap that aired on CBS for a couple of years. This is completely the original show that is at #88 on my list.

Dexter: Resurrection S1 E10

Spoilers

“And Justice for All”

The first season of Dexter: Resurrection came to a close on Amazon Prime with an exceptional finale that was filled with tension and anxiousness and finished in an extremely satisfying way.

Dexter was trapped inside the serial killer vault at Prater’s home with the dead body of Batista on the floor. Prater trapped him inside and was going to leave him to die from lack of water. Dexter finds Batista’s phone in one of the episode’s contrivances. There were a few.

One that the episode kind of wrapped up was this. Dexter had seen the gun on the floor that Prater had used to kill Batista and he thought to himself that he must not get his fingerprints on the gun. However, it did not seem as if Dexter minded getting his fingerprints everywhere else in the room as he touched…. everything. At the end, it did show Dexter cleaning up after himself, but to think that he could get rid of every print is stretching it a bit. Still, at least he made the effort.

I like the fact that Charlie gets to leave with her ailing mother after basically making a deal with Dexter and Harrison (sort of).

Peter Dinklage is a superior actor and his performance as Leon Prater was top notch. He probably was the second best villain in Dexter history behind John Lithgow’s Trinity Killer. You could feel the desperation from Prater as he was wrapped up on Dexter’s table.

I think that we have finally put to bed the possibility that Blessing is the New York Ripper. That made me extra pleased. In fact, Dexter implied that Blessing is someone whom Dexter himself needs. Dexter took a turn to be more inclusive and less isolated. It sounded as if this was a new arc for everyone’s favorite serial killer.

I enjoyed every episode of the Dexter: Resurrection season and I hope that there will be another season down the road. I liked the tone and the intensity of the show and the budding relationship with Dexter and Harrison worked well.

Crime/Heist

My creative writing class had to do a 300 word short story in the genre of crime/heist. Here is my story.

What am I doing?

The day was a blur.  How did Reggie talk me into this? I constantly let him talk me into things that I know are stupid ideas?  There was that time we jumped off the cliff together.  We snitched his father’s car and went for a midnight joy ride.  Oh, and that day we messed with that rattlesnake. However, none of those days compared to this.

“Shut up! Do what I say!  Gimme the money!

All Reggie asked me to do was keep watch.  I didn’t know what he meant, but he’s my best friend, and I always do what he asks.  Fool.  I had no idea he intended to rob Friedrickson’s Deli in the middle of the lunch rush.

Worse yet, Reggie was waving around a handgun.  

I should’ve seen this coming.  Reggie has been more defiant since his father ran off.  I knew it was just a matter of time before he exploded.

WHAM

The resounding pistol-whip blow to the head of Friedrickson sent him spiraling toward the ground.  Reggie stood above him displaying a testosterone-fueled rage I have never seen.  I was never more scared of Reggie.

Distantly, the sound of sirens could be heard; the flash of the red and blue filled my eyes.  Reggie knew the situation before I could even get the words out of my mouth.

“The cops!” he shouted, kicking Friedrickson’s ribs.  “What did you do?’

His tone smacked of a strange blend of desperation and acceptance.  

“They’re not taking us alive!”

 Us? Reggie screamed with a sense of unity that I didn’t share.  Reggie shoved me toward the door, brandishing his handgun like a wildman.  Everything seemed to be moving in slow motion; the explosion of Reggie’s bullets rang through the sky.  Oh….no…the police.

BANG BANG BANG!

The Thursday Murder Club

Based on a book series of the same name, The Thursday Murder Club arrived on Netflix recently with a cast of some of the great older British actors around.

I have not read the book and, from what I have seen online, there have been some complaints that the film had to remove more than what it should have. That does not go toward my review. I am only concerned with the film that I saw and not my own expectations over what the film should have been.

According to IMDB, “Four irrepressible retirees spend their time solving cold case murders for fun, but their casual sleuthing takes a thrilling turn when they find themselves with a real whodunit on their hands.

The cast was tremendous with Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kinsley and Celia Imrie leading the ensemble as the four lead characters of the Thursday Murder Club: Elizabeth, Ron, Ibrahim and Joyce respectfully. These four actors created a wonderful tone and feeling of friendship and comradery that helps stand out in the story.

Other cast members included Naomi Ackie, Daniel Mays, Jonathan Pryce, David Tennant, Tom Ellis, Richard E. Grant, Henry Lloyd-Hughes and Paul Freeman.

Directed by Chris Columbus, this movie was breezy, quick to watch and entertaining with these eccentric characters interacting together. I would definitely state that the story was not remarkably deep, but I did not solve it early either, which is a bonus considering I am pretty good at seeing answers to movie mysteries.

The film did have something to say about the elderly and the places that we send them when they require more than we can give them. The Thursday Murder Club did not go into great depth on this theme, but it is definitely there.

This was a fun movie that should do well on Netflix, whereas it would have struggled in the theater. This is a perfect film for streaming.

3.5 stars

EYG Comic Cavalcade #168

August 31

August is coming to an end and we finished off the load of books from this week. So here we go.

Books this week:

The Knives: A Criminal Book graphic novel. Written by Ed Brubaker and art is done by Sean Phillips. Brubaker and Phillips have done some excellent graphic novels together and this new one has a fantastic story, weaving together three separate stories into one overall narratives. It was very compelling and wraps everything up beautifully.

Pulp graphic novel: Written by Ed Brubaker with art by Sean Phillips. I got another graphic novel from these two on eBay this week. Pulp was a cool story about a writer/artist of a comic strip, telling stories of the Old West with a character based on his own life. This was another excellent book from Brubaker-Phillips.

Universal Monsters: The Invisible Man #1. Written by James Tynion IV and art by Dani. Cover art was done by Dani & Brad Simpson. Yet another mini-series featuring the Universal Monsters kicks off with The Invisible Man. James Tynion IV has done a great job with these monster books and the Invisible Man starts off with some cool stuff.

Miles Morales: Spider-Man #37. “Thick as Thieves Part One” Written by Cody Ziglar and art by Luigi Zagaria. Cover art was done by Federico Vicentini & Neeraj Menon. Miles has to face off with White Cat and Inari, both making their first appearances. Also, how is Miles Morales: Spider-Man made it all the way to #37 without rebooting?

The Mortal Thor #1. “No Gods, No Monsters.” Written by Al Ewing with art by Pasqual Ferry. Cover art was done by Alex Ross. I got a foil variant of the issue by Patrick Gleason (Gold Medalist). The new arc of Thor starts with this issue as the recently dead Thor is here in a different form and a human frame. Where will this go? I am interested in the story.

Ultimate Spider-Man #20. Written by Jonathan Hickman and art by David Messina. Cover art was done by Marco Checchetto & Matthew Wilson. This issue was very much of a dialogue driven issue between Peter, MJ, Harry and Gwen as they go through everything that has happened lately.

The Thing #4. “King of Yancy Street Part Four” Written by Tony Fleecs and art by Justin Mason. Cover art was done by Nick Bradshaw & Rachelle Rosenberg. Aunt Petunia’s baby boy Ben Grimm has to deal with a list of supervillains to try and protect the little girl. Thing showing off why he is one of the toughest heroes in the world.

News from the Fallout #3. Written by Chris Condon and art by Jeffrey Alan Love. This continues to be the most original looking book on the market every month. The mysterious creatures wandering around are frightening and in pursuit of anyone they can find. I loved the design of the book.

Blue Palo Verde #3. Written by Ray Fawkes with art and cover art by Rimanti. Kris and her father are in a lot of trouble in the small town. Some wild things are going on with the sheriff in pursuit of them. I do love a mysterious small town story and this one scratches that itch.

Avengers #29. “The Missing Moment.” Written by Jed MacKay and art by Farid Karami. Cover art was done by Cafu and David Curiel. Reed Richards guest starred in this as the Avengers continue to try and find what exactly the Missing Moment, that Kang was searching for, was. How is the missing moment get caused by Reed?

Benjamin #3. Written by Ben H. Winters and art by Leomacs. Cover art by Christian Ward (Bronze Medalist). This highly entertaining three issue series ended with this issue. Honestly, I never saw the ending of this coming. This is a wild and creative sci-fi story.

Masterminds #1. Written by Zack Kaplan and illustrated and cover art by Stephen Thompson. New sci-fi book from Dark Horse featuring a video game designer trying to join up with the biggest group of the video game world… the Masterminds.

West Coast Avengers #10. Written by Gerry Duggan and art by Danny Kim. Cover art was done by Josemaria Casanovas. This is the final issue of this volume of WCA. I really loved this version with these characters and I wish it would have continued past this issue. The Avenger Ultron storyline ends up in a dramatic fashion.

Red Vector #1. Written by David “DB” Andy & Tim Daniel with art and cover art by Chris Evenhuis. Another new sci-fi series from Mad Cave. It actually felt similar to Void Rivals from Image. It felt very clean and new and I will be interested seeing how it moves forward.

X-Men #21. “Upstarts II” Written by Jed MacKay and penciled by Netho Diaz. Cover art was done by Ryan Stegman & Marte Gracia. Fitzroy and his Upstarts take on some of the X-Men and… Juggernaut does some violence.

Sleep #4. Written, drawn and cover art by Zander Cannon. We are still moving towards this mystery of what is happening when Jonathan goes to sleep. We have an idea of what is happening, as does Jonathan. Why is it happening? What causes it? Can it be stopped? Sleep has been excellent so far.

Speed Racer #2. Written by David Pepose and art by Davide Tinto. Cover art was done by Alessio Zonno. Speed Racer’s father has a heart attack and is hanging on by a thread. An expensive surgery requires Speed Racer to go try and win money racing. What does Racer X have to do with it?

Vanishing Point #4. Written by Mark Russell and art was done by Jok. Cover art is done by Chris Weston. This sci-fi anthology asks the question about “what is a living thing?” It is a sentient question in sci-fi and this is one more thought on the topic.

The Voice Said Kill #2. Written by Si Spurrier and art and cover art by Vanesa Del Rey. More back woods drama going on as Marie, the pregnant park ranger tries to navigate her way through the chaos.

Immortal Legend Batman #1. Written by Kyle Higgins & Mat Groom and art by Erica D’urso & Dan Mora. Dan Mora did the cover art. An Elseworlds Batman story set on another planet with characters we recognize. Immortal Legend Batman becomes the Dread Pirate Roberts on another planet.

You’ll Do Bad Things #6. Written by Tyler Boss and art by Adriano Turtulici. Cover art by Tyler Boss. I have to say that this issue was a really confusing read. I am not sure exactly what I read in it. It seemed as if it had a happy ending, but I am not 100% sure.

Runaways #3. “Think of the Children Part Three. Written by Rainbow Rowell and art by Roberta Ingranata. Stephanie Hans is the cover artist. I have missed the Runaways and their dysfunction. The group has the drama cornered even when they are trying to prevent the Doombots from taking their Doombot. The interpersonal aspect of the Runaways is definitely the strength of the book.

The Last Boy #5. Written by Dan Panosian and illustrated by Alessio Avallone. Cover art was done by Dan Panosian. Peter Pan has his final showdown with the Phantom King, whose true identity is a clever use of Pan lore. This issue wraps up this Boom! Studios book’s adaptation of Peter Pan and Wendy.

Incredible Hulk #28. “The Requiem Plain Part One. Written by Phillip Kennedy Johnson and art by Adam Gorham. Nic Klein did the cover art. The Pinkerton Detective Agency teams up with Hulk to search for Brother Voodoo. Things are starting to happen with Hulk and Banner that may foreshadow some terrible events.

Robin & Batman: Jason Todd #3. Written by Jeff Lemire and art and cover art by Dustin Nguyen. Awesome short series featuring Jason Todd and his choices to leave Batman. Did he make the right choice? I enjoyed the writing on this series as it now ends.

Geiger #17. Written by Geoff Johns and art by Eduardo Pansica & Gary Frank. Gary Frank and Brad Anderson did the cover art. A new arc kicked off as Geiger ends up in a prison. Geiger has been one of the more consistent books each month.

Minor Arcana #10. Written, illustrated and cover art by Jeff Lemire. Budd St. Pierre and his journey in prison, starting in 1977, is followed.

Dust to Dust #6. Written by JG Jones & Phil Bram with art by JG Jones. Cover art also done by JG Jones (Silver Medalist). It has been a long time since we received an issue of Dust to Dust. It makes it tough to maintain momentum of a series when it has been almost four months since the last issue was released. The art design is always beautiful in this book, no matter how many months between release dates.

Phoenix #14. Written by Stephanie Phillips and art by Roi Mercado. Lucas Werneck did the cover art. Jean Grey stands her ground against the In-Betweener and a few other galactic powers insisting that she will protect her sister Sara under any circumstances.

Justice League Unlimited #10. Written by Mark Waid and art and cover art by Dan Mora. Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman disagree about the next steps with Airwave. The League also has to try and save Doomsday!

Death of the Silver Surfer #3. “Fantastic” Written by Greg Pak and art by Sumit Kumar. Dike Ruan & Rachelle Rosenberg did the cover art. The Fantastic Four join in the events of this issue. I am now not sure if this is supposed to be a future event or present day. Johnny Storm had his mustache and I have not seen that anywhere outside of the main FF title. Otherwise, they are trying to prevent Galactus’s blood from damaging earth.

Hornsby & Halo #9. Written by Peter J. Tomasi and art by Ramon Bachs. Peter Snejbjerg & John Kalisz did the cover art. Zach and Rose try to take some time off by heading to the carnival. Sadly, things won’t leave them alone.

Other Comics This Week: Spider-Verse vs. Venomverse #4, Mr. Terrific Year One #4, X-Men: Tooth and Claw #1, Imperial War: Black Panther #1, Imperial War: Planet She-Hulk #1, Green Lantern Dark #6, and Be Not Afraid #3.

Quick Hits: Fantastic Four Fanfare #4 has three separate stories, with a cool one between Sue and Mole Man. Two books had Red Sonja featured. First was the final issue of Dynamite’s Red Sonja vs. the Army of Darkness #5 and the new Sonja Reborn #1. The penultimate issue is here for We’re Taking Everyone Down With Us #5. Lots of things need to be wrapped up in that book to finish it off. Two absolute books out this week, Absolute Wonder Woman #11 and Absolute Martian Manhunter #6. Deadpool/Wolverine #8 sees Logan and Wade team-up again. The reprint of the 2005 classic Marvel Zombies #1 came out in 3D, including a pair of 3D glasses. It is a cool book, but the reprint is not currently in the CLZ app which bothers me. I grabbed the Doomed 2099#1 foil issue which has one of the most beautiful covers of the week. I also picked up Dynamite’s Stitch #1. I thought maybe it would be a book that I would like even though I did not expect to. Nope. That one was nice for the collection. Predator: Black, White & Blood #2 is a fun book with interesting stories. Predator has been solid in the Marvel books. Bad Guys have been brought on twice this week as the storyline of “Bring on the Bad Guys” concluded with Bring on the Bad Guys: Dormammu #1 and Bring on the Bad Guys: Mephisto #1 coming out. More bad guy fun with old school Emma Frost: White Queen #3 is out this week. Monsters abound in The Oddly Pedestrian Life of Christopher Chaos: Children of the Night #3 featuring Adam Frankenstein and Henry Jekyll. Oh, and it sure looks bad for Dracula Boy. Void Rivals #22 continues the Energon Universe. Finally, Lost Fantasy #4 saw a huge sword fight.

Sunday Morning Sidewalk #32

Spoilers

“Strange Case”

I’m not sure how I am feeling about Lovecraft Country after the first five episodes. We are half way through and I am not sure what this show’s overarching story is about.

This episode focused more on Ruby and Montrose than it did on anything else. I have to say that Ruby’s story was gross as it seemed to embrace some body horror (of which I am not a fan) as she gruesomely transforms between her natural self and that of a white woman. Blood and floppy skin everywhere.

Meanwhile, we learn that the hidden issue with Montrose is that he is gay and it is the 1950s where you simply cannot be out of the closet.

I started out confused as Atticus beat the crap out of Montrose at the beginning, because, fact is, I had not remembered the ending to episode four. I had to go back and re-read what I had written about it last week.

Another revelation fell into Ruby’s story this week as we discover William, who had taken Ruby last week for sex on the staircase, is actually Christiana, transformed into William just as Ruby had transformed into a white woman. Bizarre.

How does all this work together to further our story? Unclear at this point. Atticus, between sexual encounters with Leti, was working on a translation for some of the pages, and he deciphered one word at the end of the episode… “DIE.” This caused him to call his former flame, Ji-ah, and ask her how she knew. What does any of that mean?

The show continued to have scenes that were extremely uncomfortable to watch… and I am not just talking about the scenes of body horror or creatures. The scenes with the white people treating the blacks the way they did were just as difficult to watch as anything on the show. I do wish there was at least one white character that was not a total racist piece of garbage.

There are ten total episodes and we are currently half way through the one and only season. I hope things start to come together in the narrative soon. It does feel very disjointed.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #167

August 24

We are back on Sundays with the EYG Comic Cavalcade. Started back at school last week, which limits the amount of reading time I have. There is also a bunch of books seemingly every week.

I received my pack of number ones from the special sale that went on at Midtown Comics. I picked up a huge pile of books, mostly independents, that were fun to own. These include Sherlock Holmes The Dark Detective: Knights of Frankenstein #1, Spider-Man: 101 Ways to End the Clone Saga #1, The Future is ****** #1, Murder Kingdom #1, Stuff of Nightmares #1, NXT Takeover: Redemption #1, Voices in my Head #1, Long Cold Winter #1, Spectrum #1, Zenescope: Myths & Monsters Spring Edition 2025 #1, The Donald Who Laughs vs. Dark Brandon #1, Revolution #1, Doctor Who: The Fifteenth Doctor #1 (SDCC Special), Union Jack #1, Sentinel Vol. 1 #1, Seven Years in Darkness: Year Three #1, Snaps #1, Holmes & Houdini: The Curse of Moriarty #1, The Airship #1, Archie is Mr. Justice #1, The Purpose Project #1, Snow Owl #1, Slingers #1, Night of the Slashers #1, and Teddy Scares #1.

Books this week:

Where the Body Was graphic novel. Written by Ed Brubaker with art by Sean Phillips. Brubaker and Phillips have teamed up for several excellent graphic novels over the years and this is another brilliant one. It is a story about a murder in a small area of a town and the cast of characters that lived there. The GN is told via several different characters giving their POV. It made it feel like it was a mystery documentary with older versions of these characters sharing their remembrances of the events. I grabbed this off Amazon Prime and I loved it.

Spider-Girl #3. Written by Torunn Grønbekk and art by Andre Risso. Cover art was done by David Nakayama. Spider-Girl gains a new villain called Paper Doll and she is sufficiently creepy. I have liked the new Spider-Girl so far and hopefully it will continue to provide her with her own group of villains and not just play off of Spider-Man’s group.

Justice League Red #1. Written by Saladin Ahmed and art by Clayton Henry. Clayton Henry and Matt Herms did the cover art. Red Tornado organizes a crew of Justice League Members for a clandestine group to handle events that the normal JL could not. So far we get Power Girl and a Green Lantern. The cover indicates that Deadman, and Cyborg will be joining them.

The New Avengers #3. Written by Sam Humphries and art by Ton Lima. Cover art was done by Stephen Segovia & Rain Beredo. Bucky, Natasha, Clea, Namor and Wolverine try to recruit someone else into their team… Bruce Banner. Problem is… they have to go through the Incredible Hulk.

Drawing Blood #8. Written by David Avallone and art by Ben Bishop. Kevin Eastman did the cover art. After quite a long intermission, Drawing Blood has returned only to find Books in real terrible shape. Bad enough shape that he is considering ending it all.

Detective Comics #1100. 1100? Why hasn’t this been rebooted back to issue one? Such a huge number…. it has several Batman stories and my favorite one is the one written by Tom Taylor (go figure…). This story features all silence as Batman helps a kid who is deaf and who uses sign language.

Wolverine #12. “Mother and Master.” Written by Saladin Ahmed and art by Martin Coccolo. Martin Coccolo & Bryan Valenza did the cover art. Wolverine faces off with Mastermind who has been pretending to be Logan’s long dead mother. It is a very emotional and difficult time for Logan.

Exceptional X-Men #12. Written by Eve L. Ewing and art by Federica Mancin. Cover art was done by Carmen Carnero & Nolan Woodard. The search for the missing Kitty Pryde starts here after she fell into a portal opened by Reggie.

Escape #1. “Only One Way Out.” Written by Rick Remender with art and cover art by Daniel Acuna. Intriguing book from Rick Remender. It has a Maus feel to it. We have a story about a war and the violence that we commit. However, it is told with anthropomorphic animals in a very gritty and brutal manner. I am curious to see where this goes.

All-New Spider-Gwen: Ghost Spider #1. Written by Stephanie Phillips and art by Paolo Villanelli. Cover art was done by David Marquez & Marte Gracia. I also picked up variant cover D with cover art by Nogi San. I love the new Spider-Gwen book as she returned to her pre-symbiote and cosmic powers trip back to the days of having to deal with things on her own. Plus, she gets back on the drums. Very good start for this new volume of Spider-Gwen.

Nightwing #129. “Other” Finale. Written by Dan Watters and art by Dexter Soy. Cover art was done by Dexter Soy and Adriano Lucas. I also picked up a variant cover B with art by Jorge Fornes (Gold Medalist). The imp that has taken over Titans Tower storyline comes to a close here as one of the kids from one of the gangs plays a big role as a new “hero?”

Wild Animals #2. Written by Ed Brisson and art and cover art by Andy Kuhn. I loved issue one of this book, but I was wondering if issue two could keep up the excellence. I am happy to say that I loved issue two as much as I did number one. It is full of tense action and character development and I just enjoy it so much. Mad Cave has been one of the best publishers this year.

Absolute Batman #11. “Abomination Part Three” Written by Scott Snyder and art by Clay Martin. Cover art was done by Nick Dragotta & Frank Martin. We get an entire issue dedicated to the story of the Absolute Bane. He is very brutal and rough in this world.

The Vision & the Scarlet Witch #4. Written by Steve Orlando and art by Jacopo Camagni. Russell Dauterman did the cover art. Vision and Wanda square off with the Grim Reaper. Vision is finding this more difficult than usual.

Amazing Spider-Man #10. Written by Joe Kelly and guest artist Michael Dowling. Cover art was done by John Romita Jr., Scott Hanna and Marcio Menyz (Bronze Medalist). Spider-Man is acting way different than usual. Peter Parker has a new attitude. Something weird is going on… especially when we see Spider-Man and Peter face off with each other. Wha?

Black Cat #1. Written by G. Willow Wilson and art by Gleb Melnikov. Cover art was done by Adam Hughes. Black Cat has to step in as a local superhero because of Spider-Man’s weird behavior. New Black Cat series with Felicia narrating the story… seemingly breaking the fourth wall. I do love the character of Black Cat so I hope this continues to be good. G. Willow Wilson is an exceptional writer so I am sure Felicia is in good hands.

Marvel All-On-One: The Thing vs. the Marvel Universe #1. Written by Ryan North and penciled by Ed McGuinness. Cover art was done by Ed McGuinness, Mark Farmer and Marcio Menyz. It seems everybody these days are either vs. or killing the Marvel Universe. Deadpool, Godzilla, The Predator and now Ben Grimm aka The Thing. This is an interesting book as every page of the issue is a splash page making this one of the more original books of the week.

Event Horizon: Dark Descent #1. Written by Christian Ward and art by Tristan Jones. Cover art was by Jeffrey Alan Love. Inspired by the Paramount Pictures film, this was not a book that I intended on picking up, but it turned out to be a curiosity pick-up. It is a sci-fi/horror book with a pretty decent start.

Los Monstruos #4. Written by James Robinson and art by Jesus Merino. Cover art was done by Jesus Merino with R.J. Diaz. This monster noir featuring Perry Cutter, a werewolf private detective ended with this issue as everything played out, revealing the truth behind the mystery. I did enjoy this series from Dark Horse. It was an original idea and it was fun.

Space Quest #4. Written by Joe Casey and art by Sebastian Piriz. Cover art was done by Mark Spears (Silver Medalist). The long delayed team up between Space Ghost and Jonny Quest came to its finale this week as Jonny was able to get back to his own timeline. This book suffered from the long issues Dynamite had with Diamond, but it is nice that it was able to finally wrap up.

G.I. Joe #10. Written by Joshua Williamson with art by Andrea Milana. Cover art was done by Tom Reilly. Hey Cobra… look behind you! There is an awesome final page of this issue that solidifies what the book has been building to. Oh and Cover Girl gets murdered by the Baroness… psyke!

Exquisite Corpses #4. Written by Che Grayson with James Tynion IV and art by Adam Gorham with Michael Walsh. Cover art by Michael Walsh. The contest of killers continues in the pages of Exquisite Corpses. This is one of the most entertaining books every month, though I still have some issues with knowing who is who. Large cast books with all new characters can be tough at times.

Eat Your Young #1. Written by Brian Buccellato with art and cover art by Mattia Monaco. Another new Mad Cave book that sets up a wild new premise. Edmond Irons, the Alpha, has decided that, after 2000 years as the Alpha, he was ready to pass the mantel along to one of his children. Edmond decided to choose his successor, who needs to drink Edmond’s heart-blood. An amazingly creative premise and enjoyable read.

This Ends Tonight #2. Written by Gerry Duggan, Kelvin Mao and Robert Windom with art by Jae Lee. Cover art was done by Jae Lee & Tula Lotay. Bachelorette party !!! Of course, things are not going to turn out well.

The Department of Truth #33. Written by James Tynion IV with art by Letizia Cadonici. Cover art was done by Martin Simmonds. This Hatman is a terrifying creature and I think it is one of the best new characters from this book.

They Choose Violence #3. Written by Sheldon Allen and illustrated by Mauricio Campetella. Cover art was done by Rahzzah. Laneka, Deidre and Karen head out west to track down another racist… only they find out that there are some troubles waiting.

Tales of the Shadowman #1. “Stones in a Glass House.” Written by AJ Ampadu and art by Sergio Monjes. Cover art done by Damian Connelly. Here was another new book that I saw on the stand and decided to grab for the heck of it. I think Shadowman was a character from Valiant Comics already, but I have never seen him. I really liked him.

Absolute Flash #6. “Absolute Flash Interlude: The Rogues.” Written by Jeff Lemire and art and cover art was done by Nick Robles. This must be the Absolutes villain week, because we had Bane story in Absolute Batman and in Absolute Flash we focus in on the Rogues Gallery.

Other books this week: Superman Unlimited #4, Toxie Team-Up #3, The Chamberlains #3, Dark Honor #4, Ultimate Black Panther #19, New Gods #9, The Seasons #7, and Endless Night #3.

Quick Hits: So I thought that Grim #24 was going to be the final issue of this series, but it looks like it has one more to go. It is the final issue of The Terminator with The Terminator #10. We get to meet John Connor at the end of the issue. Godzilla Destroys the Marvel Universe #2 sees Dr. Strange help send Godzilla into the Negative Zone. I don’t think that is a good choice. There is stunning artwork in Hyde Street #8. Ivan Reis does a sensational job creating images that pop in the horror book. A little girl is saved in Krypto: The Last Dog of Krypton #3. I liked this little story from Krypto’s past. It was fun because when I was at Bettendorf getting my books, I had several dark and scary books and then I got Darkwing Duck #5. One of these things doesn’t go with the others. Luke, Han and Leia all come together in Star Wars #4. I am excited to see them together once again. It has been awhile since I had one of these books and Falling in Love on the Path to Hell #9 came out. The space epic of Imperial #3 is picking up. I am still not a fan of possible future stories, but Imperial feels different. Another beautifully illustrated book is Venom: Red, Black and Blood #1. Then Ghost Pepper #2 is full of action and has been a lot of fun. Psylocke #10 brings that series to a conclusion. The last few issues have not been great for me, but I did like the first half of this series.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #165

August 7

Hey there. Welcome back to the EYG Comic Cavalcade. Lots of stuff to discuss this week.

last Friday, I had been invited to a special sale at the comic shop that I go to in Bettendorf. They had received a big collection of back issues, many silver age, and they made it a special night for those of us who are on their pull list. We received invitations and had first crack at the books. It was such a cool idea and it was fun. Lots of others there, shoulder to shoulder, going through these boxes.

I picked up some fun stuff, such as some Marvel Team-Up early issues, a four issue mini-series featuring Shazam written by Jeff Smith (of Bone fame), Daredevil #45, almost the entire run of American Vampire 1976, a six-issue series called Powerless, Amazing Spider-Man #130, and number 1, 2, & 3 of a 1970s Marvel series called Spoof.

It was cool to be involved in this special night. One of the other customers came dressed as Dr. Doom. They had on the wall where they usually had the new books, the big ticket items that I knew I wasn’t getting. The standout there for me was Amazing Spider-Man #129 in the CGC slab, rated 9.4. It was up for $2300. When I was there today getting new books, the guy there working said it had sold yesterday.

This week I also picked up a bunch of Incredible Hulk books from Todd at Comic World. I had some excess space in my Hulk box so I rummaged through those to pick up some older Hulks.

Books this week:

Amazing Spider-Man #9. Written by Joe Kelly and with art by guest artist Michael Dowling. Cover art was done by John Romita Jr., Scott Hanna and Marcio Menyz. After Spidey got his butt handed him by Hellgate last issue, Peter is gun shy and not ready to come back as Spidey. Again, I have problems with this characterization because this feels very much opposite to who Peter Parker is as a character. I hope that by the end, that has straightened itself out.

One World Under Doom #6. “The Conscience of the King.” Written by Ryan North with art by R.B. Silva. Cover art was done by Ben Harvey. It is a worldwide debate between Doctor Doom and Reed Richards. I have to say, about half way through the book, I was feeling like I was on Team Doom. Thankfully, Reed had an ace up his stretchy sleeve from the other Avengers. This was a cool issue and showed the other side of the argument quite well.

Captain America #2. “Our Secret Wars Part 2” Written by Chip Zdarsky with art by Valerio Schiti. Cover art was done by Ben Harvey. I also picked up the negative space variant by John Tyler Christopher. The story of Steve Rogers initial return from the ice continues. We did not know that there had been a replacement Captain America at the time, and they went to Latveria on a mission to face off with Doom. Zdarsky is an excellent writer and this seems to fall right into a strength for him.

Red Hulk #7. “Lab Rat.” Written by Benjamin Percy and art by Jethro Morales. Geoff Shaw & Marte Gracia did the cover art. Thunderbolt Ross is being tortured in one of the most horrendous ways possible. This book could be considered ‘body horror’ and it fits right in with some of the other Hulk books of recent times.

Something is Killing the Children #43. “All Her Monsters Part Three” Written by James Tynion IV and illustrated by Werther Dell’edera. Dell’edera also did the virgin variant cover art. I picked up the foil variant cover too by Suspiria Vilchez (Gold Medalist). The flashback storyline with younger Erica continued as monsters are ravaging another small town with another young girl who saw it happen. I have really enjoyed this storyline with Erica as a younger person.

Moon Knight: Fist of Khonshu #11. “Birthday.” Written by Jed MacKay and art by Domenico Carbone. Davide Paratore did the cover art. Happy birthday to Marc Specter!!! And it is a party! I liked this issue because it goes around with several of the side characters and they are speaking to someone who is with them. It feels like they are speaking to us (though it turned out to be Mon Knight’s daughter). Creative use of POV.

Blink and You’ll Miss It #1. Written by Ethan S. Parker & Griffin Sheridan and illustrated by Keith Browning. Cover art was done by Keith Browning with Brad Simpson. This was one of my favorite books this week. Certainly the best of the new books this week. It is from Boom! Studios and it has a very mysterious and creepy vibe to it. I was thoroughly engaged with it.

Project Chimera: The Hero Trade #1. Written by Matt Kindt and art by David Lapham. Cover art was done by David Lapham and Bill Crabtree. Another really good new book, this one from Bad Idea. There are twins who have some kind of super powers and they are being kept prisoners (unbeknownst to them) because of the dangers. We follow the story through the eyes of two of the people responsible for keeping them. It is presented in black and white, which helps create a definite tone for this book.

Uncanny X-Men #19. “Skin Condition.” Written by Gail Simone and art by David Marquez. Cover art was done by David Marquez & Matthew Wilson. Deadpool and Outlaw make guest appearances in this book. I really have loved Gail Simone’s work on Uncanny. I love the characters she has, I love her new characters that she has introduced and I find the stories extremely fun, emotional and intelligent. I included a pic of this cover because Todd said he hated it. *Smiley face*

Hello Darkness #13. This has a several stories in this issue, all featuring a form of zombies. The cover I have is a variant done by Jenny Frison. My favorite of the stories this issue was entitled “Zag-Aftra.”

Cheetah & Cheshire Rob the Justice League #1. “Chapter 1” Written by Greg Rucka and art by Nicola Scott. Cover art was done by Nicola Scott & Annette Kwok. I do love me a heist film and this comic is setting up a huge heist. Cheetah & Cheshire stealing from the Watchtower. This started with some great character work and setting up what we are going to get. Very good new DC book.

Don’t Forget Yor Briefcase #2. Written by Eliot Rahal and art and cover art by Phillip Sevy. This is a ton of fun, but I have to say, there was a section in the book that was a flashback to Kabul, Afghanistan that seemed to have the characters featured as puppets. It was a weird little tangent inside the story about the missing nuclear ‘football.’ Who wouldn’t check in the dryer? Hm.

Daredevil: Cold Day in Hell #3. Written by Charles Soule and art and cover art by Steve McNiven. One of the best comics of the week was Cold Day in Hell, the finale of the three-issue mini series featuring an old version of Daredevil battling older Bullseye. Frank Castle is here too (though he is in poor shape, to be fair). What a great story with a fantastic ending. Charles Soule outdid himself on this book. I am not a big fan of future stories, but this one is right at the top of the list.

Whatever Happened to the Crimson Justice #3. Written by Frank Tieri and art and cover art by Inaki Miranda. John continues to try and keep his past behind him, despite a hallucination that he was having of a young super hero (an old sidekick perhaps) and Dr. Mayhem unleashing deadly viruses on a subway train. Has John finally reached the point of return?

Tama #1. Written by Adam Schlagman & Doug Pasko with art by Daniel HDR. Dustin Nguyen did the cover art. New independent book by Panick Comics. What happens when a grieving teen named Kit discovers a virtual pet named Tama that turns out to be more than what he expects? Lots of mayhem and chaos. This was an interesting first issue and a creative idea.

Return to Skull Island #2. Written by Simon Furman and art by Christopher Jones. Cover art by The Knott. Kong is in bad shape, but Monster Island has created a new alpha! Can Kong survive another fight?

Orla! #1. “Chapter One: The Ick.” Written by John Lees and art and cover art by Sally Cantirino. Orla is looking for love… or is she? Or is she just looking for loser guys to feed to her monster side? This was a fun book that kind of reminded me of a cross between Love Everlasting and Something is Killing the Children. Although it is more like Something is Eating the Adult Male Jerks. Another winner from Mad Cave.

Godzilla: Escape the Deadzone #1. Written by Ethan S. Parker and art by Griffin Sheridan. Another new Godzilla series. There seems to be a new one every week. However, this one does not have much panel time for Godzilla. We are in the Deadzone, which was a devastated Seattle, Washington by Kaiju. We are following a human monster with a tail.

Other books this week: Napalm Lullaby #10, Resurrection Man: Quantum Karma #5, Marvel Rivals: Hellfire Gala #1, Secret Six #6, Thundercats #17 (Silver Medalist), w0rldtr33 #16, Superior Avengers #5, and Wolverine by Chris Claremont #1.

Quick Hits: Two Ultimate books this week as they continue to build to the return of the Maker. Ultimate Wolverine #8 featured the Ultimate Angel, who kicked ass, and the Ultimate X-Men #18. I missed Vision & Scarlet Witch #2 last month. Not sure how that happened, but issue two helped make more sense about issue #3 which I got last week. This week’s bronze medalist in the favorite covers of the week went to Red Sonja vs. The Army of Darkness #4. Who would guess that Sonja and Ash would work together this well? Obviously Dynamite Comics would. More Dynamite was here with Silverhawks #6. Absolute Superman #10 and Absolute Green Lantern #5 were out this week too. I liked the GL book pretty well. Wolverines & Deadpools #2 shakes off the odor of too much Wolverine and Deadpool together to have a strong book. I think it is truly helped by Ellie and Laura’s presence. Justice League vs. Godzilla vs. Kong 2 #3 is setting up a big rematch between Superman and Godzilla. Todd got me The War #1 virgin variant cover that I debated about last week. I don’t know how a number one issue, reprinted from Hello Darkness, can have so many epic covers. The Thunder War continues in Storm #11. Mary Jane seems to have made a major decision in her life in All-New Venom #9. More ghost pirate action in Ghostbusters: Dead Man’s Chest #3. I grabbed AWA’s book Charlamagne Tha God Presents ILLuminati #1. It was surprisingly compelling. Finally Sisterhood: A Hyde Street Story #2 is setting up some sinister trouble at the sorority house.

Dexter: Resurrection E4, E5

Spoilers

“Call Me Red”

“Murder Horny”

I was able to catch up with the new season/series of Dexter: Resurrection this morning. New episodes come out on Fridays on Showtime, so I can follow it along as the season progresses for however long it will last.

I was very excited to see episode four as I knew it had some kind of serial killer dinner party at the center of it. I did not know that the guest list would be as sparkling as it was. The party was thrown by Peter Dinklage was something that I knew. He played serial killer fan Leon Prater. He was the employer of problem-solver Charley, who is played by Uma Thurman. We had seen her before.

Having Prater show Dexter (whom he believed was the Dark Passenger) around his trophy room of serial killers was creepy. Especially when he showed Dexter the hammer of the Trinity Killer and the slides of the Bay Harbor Butcher.

Then, shocks kept coming as the rest of the guests arrived. This list included Krysten Ritter as Mia, Lady Vengeance, Eric Stonestreet as family man Al, David Dastmalchian as Gareth and Neil Patrick Harris as slimy Lowell, the tattoo killer. I did not expect such a Who’s Who of actors taking these roles, and it was even more amazing when NPH wound up on Dexter’s table at the end of the episode.

The show also teased a relationship between Dexter (still pretending to be Red, the Dark Passenger) and Mia. Dexter entertained the idea of working with her until he discovered that she was not exclusively killing sexual predators as the press had assumed. He framed her for the murder of the man that Harrison had killed in the hotel. That had a lot of holes to it (including Mia telling her intended victim that he would be her first kill in New York) but the media seemed to grab the idea quickly.

Batista was not as happy about the results. He had gone to see Detective Wallace with a plan to share ideas on the case that, he said, sounded similar to the bay Harbor Butcher.

The fifth episode ended with a promising connection between Dexter and Harrison, after Harrison learned that his father had taken care of the problem with his own murder. Harrison showed Dexter signs that he was not like him, which made Dexter happy.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #164

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.