Wednesday, June 22, 2016
53.
Title: [Amazing X-Men: The Quest for Nightcrawler]
Author: Jason Aaron
Genre: Comic
Medium: paperback
Acquisition: Comic shop suggestion
Date Completed: June 17, 2016
Rating: ***
Like the last X-Men book on my list, The Quest for Nightcrawler is a shop-employee suggestion. In this first volume of Amazing X-Men, strange creatures begin appearing around the school, leading to a portal which suddenly transports a number of X-Men to heaven and hell, where they meet Azazel and a band of demonic pirates on a quest to collect souls and overthrow the afterlife. Nightcrawler, himself deceased and pining for adventure despite his secure place in heaven, leads his former comrades in the fray against his father, literally captaining a hell-ship and defeating the empowered souls of notorious sinners such as Jack the Ripper. At first, the entire plot device smacked of barely-palatable shark jumping, but as the book developed Nightcrawler as a conflicted and nuanced character, and brought the X-Men back from the afterlife to the present reality, it became far more compelling, and holds a promise of something interesting to come. Though a bit clumsy as a whole, the narrative reigns itself in successfully, and delivers appealing artwork to help fans through the rough patches.
54.
Title: [Batman: The Court of Owls]
Author: Scott Snyder
Genre: Comic
Medium: paperback
Acquisition:
Date Completed: June , 2016
Rating: ****
Batman: The Court of Owls is a dark and thrilling ride through a Gotham both familiar and not, taking well-known characters and complicating them in ways the series has failed to do in the past. A Gotham-known nursery rhyme speaks of a "Court of Owls," a shadowy cabal which controls the city. Having unsuccessfully searched for the court as a child, Batman dismisses the possibility of their existence, even after Bruce Wayne receives threats, and a subsequent assassination attempt, from the death-dealer of the Owls. As the plot unfolds, Batman realizes that he may not know the city quite as well as he thought, and his assertion that the city is "his" is soundly challenged.
One of the great appeals of Batman over supernatural superheroes is his fallibility - the very real possibility that he can fail, physically and intellectually, because he is human - and this first New 52 volume takes full advantage of his undeniable humanity. His struggles with the Court of Owls push him to the very brink psychologically, challenging the hero in ways far more poignant and compelling than brute and brawn. The book is well-paced and carefully developed, and much of the artwork is breathtaking, textured, and dark. This book is a real winner.
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