Friday, December 25, 2015

2015 Top Ten Comics

The top 10 has seen a lot of change for one year. No Brian Bendis. No Avengers. No Batman. In fact, the only conventional superheroes on the list are Jason Aaron’s Thor (maybe a stretch) and a new, old version of the man who is the best at what he does. Marvel’s Secret Wars schedule delays and revamping have altered the status quo and, well, it’s not all good news. The problem isn’t so much the characters, but major changes in the writing teams on key books have shaken up the quality of some of the most powerful products in the industry.

10. Thor: Thor is a better book than its rank, but this year the main title was disrupted for the Secret Wars mini Thors, which was, in my opinion, the weakest entry into Jason Aaron’s character defining run on the title. This book should be in the top five, but that disruption and its far inferior quality bumped it way down. Dauterman is illustrating this book beautifully, Aaron writes it with love and attention to detail, and Loki is now back to form. I expect great things going forward. Keep up.

9. Unbeatable Squirrel-Girl: I missed out on the beginning of this series and regretted it as soon as I read the first of the new series. All caught up now, it’s one of my favorites of the year. I’m not going to try and explain it, but it’s a girl with squirrel powers, and a squirrel friend, and a cast of ne’er-do-wells engaged in zany adventures. It’s not high concept. It’s not really a superhero book. It’s just a lot of fun. One of the things I love about this book is the sub-panel editorializing which is often better than the featured dialogue. And the Deadpool cards are a nice piece of comic relief from the comic content. In fact, this book is Deadpool for people that are actually funny.

8. Old Man Logan: Two word: Andrea Sorrentino. Two more words: Rising star. I enjoyed this Italian artist on Green Arrow, one of the only readable books DC published in the new 52. Naturally, they stopped that. He’s since moved on to Marvel to great effect. His X-annuals last year are instant classics. This book is classic Bendis: brilliant, brooding character examination. A lot of Secret Wars doesn’t work. It feels like a vehicle for unnecessary change. As an effort to move Logan forward, however, this story really both works and has a solid impact. I look forward to seeing a more limited, less-Snikty version of the Canuck interact with the X-world in the next year. Jeff Lemire takes over when the on-going book launches next month.  

7. Ms. Marvel: If you haven’t already picked this book up, please exit your cave, head to the comic book store, and buy all of them. It’s not every day that Marvel invents a truly new character that anyone cares about at all. It’s definitely not every day that a new teen superhero comes along and makes sense, has heart, and is surrounded by an interesting and vibrant world. Ms. Marvel has it all. G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alfonso are both creating at an extraordinarily high level and they continue to produce a book that has great superhero beats and wonderful heartfelt personal moments at the same time. This book isn’t getting worse; it’s improving. We’re not far from being able to wonder out loud if this book is the best of its type since the early days of Spider-Man. There, I said it.

6. Mind MGMT: This is so bittersweet. Mind MGMT is a title that would not have been published just 15 years ago. It’s a testament to how enormously diverse the comic book market is today that not only was it created, but by a large publisher, with deep support, and for a 50 issue run. Matt Kindt has never written something you shouldn’t read. This is something everyone can appreciate. From the painted art, to the boundary shattering use of the entire layout, to the touching, inspiring, mind-bending story, Mind MGMT has been a treat. Now that it’s over, I can’t wait to see what Kindt does next.

5. East of West: #22 is the single best issue of the year and one of the best comics I’ve ever read. I won’t say much more about this series except that Nick Dragotta is getting better with every issue he pencils. Not Hickman’s best year – Secret Wars has really sidelined his best work – but he still managed to do something incredibly special with this title.

4. Descender: Jeff Lemire is an elite writer. Dustin Nguyen is a veteran artistic talent, perfectly suited for a galaxy-spanning space opera. In a universe over-run with tech, where once-human roles have been filled by robots, and those robots eventually turn on not just humans, but all intergalactic life, robots are targeted for elimination. This story follows a companion robot, designed to be an effective friend replacement (sort of like a person that’s also a pet), through political intrigue, social crises, and a human/artificial life caste system that defines the post-war era. Lemire writes touching books with such a fine hand that you don’t feel overwhelmed by the softer moments in a spanning sci-fi conflict. It’s hard to overstate his aficionado handling of huge stories with a soul. This is the book Saga wishes it was.

3. Star Wars: Darth Vader: The biggest surprise of the year, hands down. The main Star Wars book is good; don’t get me wrong. Jason Aaron and John Cassady, though, feels a little bit like an all-star team: they’re talented but it doesn’t seem like they love playing together. Vader, on the other hand, is two creators that I think are relatively medium level talents getting more out of one another than they would otherwise. Gillen, now well-known due to the massive popularity of the Wicked + Divine, and Sal Larocca, most recently on Iron Man, are Marvel journeymen tasked with writing the most evil man in a galaxy far, far away. They pointed at the fence and knocked it out of the park. Forming an anti-party of a lovable rogue, a murder protocol droid, and a shoot first, burn second astromech droid, gives Vader a supporting cast that provides for comic relief, a bit of sense of fragility, and a real treat for the readers. Both arcs are well-designed and feel like Star Wars: action, anticipation, and a lot of fun. I loved this series. Honestly, the Star Wars properties have supplanted the Avengers titles as Marvel’s premier material today.

2. Velvet: Brubaker and Epting are a dream team. Either of them alone on a book would likely be in my top ten; together, they are second to one. Bru really knows how to plot a twisty book and is the best storyteller in comics today. He loves to put his characters through the ringer and the protagonist here is no exception. Pulp has been his focus for a decade now and Velvet is his version of the pulpy British post-war spy novel. It reminds me of Tinker Tailor, decidedly “in genre” while also pressing the weakness or failure of the conventions as well. Velvet is the answer to the portrayal of female characters in those well-known yarns, the logical culmination of what a badass any woman long-suffering enough to deal with the insipid man-children of the fictional spy-world would be. Epting has the most precise penciling of anyone in the business. Everything is in its right place and therefore the reader is also. One of my favorite books of the decade, not just the year. I wish it came out more often.

1. Lazarus: How does it keep getting better? Rucka has crafted a world, taken us through its social and political intrigue, and, now, taken us to war. Lazarus is my favorite piece of sci-fi in thirty years. If this book was a traditional novel, it would be on the NYT best-seller list. I’ve shouted from the rooftops about this book for long enough that I suspect most of my readers and friends have already picked it up, so I won’t repeat the hook, but suffice it to say that this book has it all. The world is compelling and full. The characters are wide-ranging, complete, and gripping. The action is tasteful but hard-hitting. I love that Rucka doesn’t make his universe an unknowable mystery, but also goes to no great lengths to hold our hands in making sense of it either. It’s such a balanced handling by an enormously patient story-teller. I love the current arc, following on the heels of the masterpiece Conclave storyline by taking even more risks and showing that this book doesn’t just have gas left in the tank, but is intending to dominate the industry for as long as it’s being published. Long live Lazarus!

Honorable mention:
It’s a weird year where so many great series premiered super late in the annual cycle and therefore don’t quite have enough material to consider, but have shown signs of really great material. Image, in particular, cranked out four titles that could be among the very best books out there. My favorite of this bunch is I Hate Fairyland!, which I’ll bet now will make this list next year.

Star Wars: Lando: I know it strains credulity to imagine that there are two different Star Wars books I’d consider to be among the top comics being published, but the wealth of talent that Marvel/Disney has dedicated to the publishing side of Star Wars really makes you wonder what Dark Horse, a company not known for bad publishing decisions, was doing with these properties for the last 20 years. At any rate, Lando is Charles Soule, one of the bright spots of Marvel’s rough year, writing over Alex Maleev’s genius level art. That’s a team that would turn heads on any title. It’s an interesting story about the dirty underground of the Star Wars universe and includes some Jedi lore for the deeper fans. If this wasn’t a mini-series, I’d have included it. Comic fans and Star Wars geeks alike should really like this book.

I Hate Fairyland!: Could be my favorite book being published right now. Skottie Young is brilliant. I buy everything Skottie Young does. This is his best book ever. The story concept is brilliant: Gert stumbles into Fairyland as a child, fails at her quest to escape, and lives there for 20 years without aging physically, but is driven to become an maladjusted psychopath. It’s gorgeous and hilarious. I can’t think of anyone that wouldn’t be entertained by this book. If it was farther along, I’d have included it as one of the top 5 at least.
Paper Girls: Looks like it could be my favorite Brian K. Vaughn book since Runaways. Only three issues in, this book is something really special and there’s nothing else on the shelves like it. I can see Saga fans coming after me with pitchforks, but this book has everything Saga does without the sort of pandering sense of over-the-top graphicness that I think weighs Saga down. Basically a Spielberg tribute, Papergirls follows a group of girls who find themselves in the heart of a mystery while on their delivery routes in the 1980’s. Fans of 80’s movies like Stand By Me and anyone looking for a fantasy book without capes and cowls should really love this one.

The Goddamned: Jason Aaron and R.M. Guera. I don’t know that I should have to say much more than that the team behind Scalped is producing new work. The Goddamned is an ultra-violent take on early biblical history. Taking place sometime shortly after the fall from Eden, the book follows Cain through the brutally violent world new to sin. It’s Conan with the gloves off and it’s gory, gross, and glorious. Only two issues in, I already enjoy this book more than Southern Bastards, a critical tour de force. I think the Goddamned is set to be something special.


Black Magick: Truthfully, I am waiting to read Black Magick, Rucka’s new creator owned book for Image, but I expect it to be, well, magical. Rucka is for sure one of the top talents in comics right now, publishing the very best comic book on the Shelves for two consecutive years. That alone has my attention and probably should yours. Try to find the magazine sized version of issue number one (he also released a magazine-sized one-shot of Criminal this year that’s one of the year’s best single issues.