Comics We’re Excited About For 5/13/2015
Every week, Paste takes a look at the most interesting releases due out Wednesday in comics, graphic novels and other goodies. Today offers a load of great content ranging from various genres and nooks. Harrow County may be one of the most exciting horror comics to come out this year, Injection continues Warren Ellis’ legacy of subversive sci-fi while upstarts like Space Riders pay homage to the epic yesteryear excess of cosmic head books. Also: cat-loving hairy ex-wrestlers. Happy reading.
Five Ghosts Special #1
Writers: S.M. Vidaurri, Frank Barbiere
Artists: S.M. Vidaurri
Publisher: Image Comics
Frank Barbiere and Chris Mooneyham’s Kickstarter-turned-Image series Five Ghosts has been running for more than two years now, which might make jumping in as a new reader a bit intimidating. This oversized one-shot straddles the line between first-time accessibility and long-game payoff, with a deeper look at the mythology behind lead character Fabian’s ghostly powers. Even if you’re not particularly invested in Five Ghosts, artist S.M. Vidaurri (Jim Henson Storyteller: Witches, Iron: Or, The War After) provides haunting, skull-littered, fully-painted interiors for the full-length main story. A treat for returning fans, interested newbies and art-lovers alike. Steve Foxe
Harrow County #1
Writer: Cullen Bunn
Artist: Tyler Crook
Publisher: Dark Horse
Last fall, Wytches terrified black magic-fearing readers by uncovering what lies in the woods. But today, we’ll see Cullen Bunn and Tyler Crook winding the witching hour back—like, a hundred years—for a new take on a classic tale. Harrow County follows Emmy, an 18-year-old woman who’s lived on a farm her whole life. Hitting this landmark age leads to a few landmark discoveries and questions, and Emmy’s own curiosity uncovers some dark connections. The book’s first issue is all you could ask for in a horror debut: creepy imagery, an anxiety-inducing storyline and a pace that moves just fast enough to leave that doomy feeling in the pit of your stomach. (Just look at that cover.) Harrow County. Scary. Buy it if that’s your thing. Tyler Kane
Howard the Duck #3
Writer: Chip Zdarsky
Artist: Joe Quinones
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Wednesday is a lighter day if Howard the Duck is on the shelves. Chip Zdarsky’s take on Marvel’s most well-adjusted character isn’t only good, it’s also the funniest title published by the Big Two right now. It’s got training montages—Knocked down againnnn tastin’ that dirt/There’s a battle to winnnn but your body still hurts, Howard’s sweatband theme goes—a Buzzfeed-reading, Taylor Swift-loving She-Hulk and texts to Spider-Man that end with “p.s. [I’m] a duck.” How couldn’t I pick up issue #3?
Howard’s big first case goes off the rails as he’s pulled into investigating a NYC crime spree! But this spree features a Very Special Guest Star! We’ll only give you one hint: they’re a Marvel Comics character who has “died” before!
That really pares down the possibilities!
Injection #1
Writer: Warren Ellis
Artists: Declan Shalvey, Jordie Bellaire
Publisher: Image Comics
Did anyone ever expect “from the team that brought you Moon Knight” to be a massive selling point in 2015? Warren Ellis, Declan Shalvey and Jordie Bellaire accomplished a miracle during their short run on “Marvel’s Batman” last year, making a third-stringer into the publisher’s best book for six issues. Ellis, for the most part, stayed out of Shalvey and Bellaire’s way, allowing the perfectly matched collaborators to carry the bulk of the storytelling visually (especially in the ball-busting Raid homage issue). Injection sounds like comfortable ground for the futurist writer, mingling science horror, techno thrills and mad geniuses. Unless disaster strikes, Injection seems destined to become one of Image’s new blockbuster titles.Steve Foxe
The Mantle #1
Writer: Ed Brisson
Artist: Brian Level
Publisher: Image Comics
Who hasn’t walked home from a punk rock show a little faded? And who ever thought—save getting mugged—it’d have insane consequences? With Mantle, Ed Brisson (Sheltered) and Brian Level (Lazarus) present a funny take on the ages-old reluctant hero story. Our protagonist, Robbie, is struck by lightning after that aforementioned walk from a punk show, and the event turns his body into a vessel for a power called The Mantle, which has been fighting against a dark being called The Plague for decades. To stay alive, our power chord-loving pal will have to avoid the fate of every other Mantle host before him. And if you put a story in front of me that mixes epic battles, Kafka-style scenarios and a Black Flag aesthetic, it’s going to be read sooner rather than later. Tyler Kane
Mythic #1
Writer: Phil Hester
Artist: John McCrea
Publisher: Image Comics