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Search tags: Pretty-Deadly
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review 2016-08-28 17:22
A collection about death and those who serve Death
Pretty Deadly Volume 2: The Bear - Kelly Sue De Connick

 

 

Out west in the US, an old woman is dying while her son is fighting in the battlefields of the First World War. Both are visited by Reapers working for Death with different aims in mind. The reapers end up in conflict against each other with some not surviving.

 

This colourful and nicely-illustrated collection is a treat for the eyes even if there is not a lot of plot. As I said when I reviewed Volume 1, it is reminiscent of the Sandman stories in many ways. Highly recommended to those who enjoy good detailed illustrations.

 

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review 2016-06-30 14:41
Pretty Deadly
Pretty Deadly, Vol. 1 - Kelly Sue DeConnick,Emma Ríos,Jordie Bellaire

The art work is nice, but the story is pretty deadly boring.

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review 2016-06-29 00:00
Pretty Deadly, Vol. 1
Pretty Deadly, Vol. 1 - Kelly Sue DeConnick,Emma Ríos,Jordie Bellaire Attend the song of Deathface Ginny,
And how she came to be
A wrath of rage for men who'd cage
And harm what should be free


Part spaghetti western, part mythical fantasy, Pretty Deadly's first volume flies by in a blur of backstory as it attempts to lay the foundation for the laws that govern the world(s) in which it inhabits. I actually really enjoyed this, but then I'm a proper sucker for alternative takes on the western revenge conventon. I would say, however, that the storytelling is perhaps economical to a fault, and this arc may well have benefitted from being spread over two volumes to give the characters a bit more room to grow.

Still, I'm loving the style and first impressions are good enough to ensure I'll be back for more.
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text 2016-01-08 18:53
Fabulous Five Friday: Feminist Comic Books (1/8/2016)
Lumberjanes Vol. 1 - Brooke Allen,Grace Ellis, Noelle Stevenson
Bitch Planet Volume 1 - Kelly Sue DeConnick,Robert Wilson IV,Valentine De Landro
Ms. Marvel Volume 1: No Normal - G. Willow Wilson,Adrian Alphona
Rat Queens, Vol. 1: Sass & Sorcery - Kurtis J. Wiebe,Roc Upchurch
Nimona - Noelle Stevenson
Batgirl, Vol. 1: The Darkest Reflection - Gail Simone,Vicente Cifuentes,Ardian Syaf
Pretty Deadly, Vol. 1 - Kelly Sue DeConnick,Emma Ríos,Jordie Bellaire

Fabulous Five Friday: Feminist Comic Books

 

Lumberjanes by Noelle Stevenson, Grace Ellis, and Brooke A. Allen

 

Lumberjanes is an all-ages adventure comic series that celebrates female friendship, an array of body types, unspecified ethnicities, and non-binary gender roles with zero soapbox preachiness. At heart the series is comedic, but the friendship bonds are very real and the characters endearing.

 

Bitch Planet by Kelly Sue DeConnick, Valentine De Landro, and Taki Soma

 

Female exploitation stories are about the male gaze, and not generally feminist- hence the name. But DeConnick takes the tropes of the genre and turns them on their head to tell a story of strong women dealing with a fucked up world in brutal and necessary ways. Intersectional, compassionate, DGAF.

 

Ms. Marvel by G. Willow Wilson and Adrian Alphona (with guest artists)

 

One of the primary concerns of feminism is a woman’s ability to make her own choices, and Kamala Khan is forever having to make difficult decisions. Her race and age, as well as her religious, cultural, and familial background adds an intersectional element to her story that a lot of super hero stories about women lack, while also not being preachy about being “different.” She shows how so many different facets of a woman’s life combine to make us who we are- not just whether we identify/are identified as female.

 

Rat Queens by Kurtis J. Wiebe and Roc Upchurch (now Stjepan Sejic)

 

This is the rare comic written by a dude that gets it almost 100% right on the feminism angle. The four titular Queens are badass but complicated, they regularly pass the Bechdel test, they represent different fantasy types without being walking stereotypes, their sexuality doesn’t get used for titillation but it is also not swept under the rug, and I could go on. Is it perfect? Maybe not, but I love it and I think it deserves recognition as a feminist title.

 

Nimona by Noelle Stevenson

 

Lumberjanes, Stevenson’s other project, has already been mentioned, but Nimona deserves a slot for different reasons. The key here is that Lumberjanes is a female-centric comic, while Nimona stars a female character while the other main characters are male. Nimona rings my feminist bells not simply for the portrayal of the main character as a strong, difficult heroine, but for shaking up the portrayal of the men around her. The “hero” is portrayed not as a big, burly swordsman; rather his appearance is coded as very feminine—delicate, slender, pretty. The “villain,” Nimona’s boss, is not hard-hearted and single-minded, but sensitive, intelligent, and understanding (and also slight of build). In the traditional sense, Nimona is actually coded as more masculine than either of them, physically and emotionally, and the jumble is fascinating.

 

Honorable mentions:

 

Pretty Deadly by Kelly Sue DeConnick and Emma Rios

 

Batgirl by Gail Simone and various artists

 

These don’t make the list because I haven’t read enough of them (yet) to talk about them with full confidence, but I AM confident enough to say I’m pretty sure they also deserve a mention.

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review 2015-12-16 14:14
The real problem is the setup...
Pretty Deadly #1 - Emma Ríos,Kelly Sue DeConnick

I'd read more, but there is a lot of slow setup - and not enough of a payoff, even in the twenty-something pages here to make me really eager about, or wiling to pay to immediately have, the next issue. 

 

I'm also a fan of this author, and that gives her some wiggle room.   To be honest, nothing is poorly written, it's just after the exciting chase scene, it kind of tapers off, and I found myself a bit bored.   I wanted more from this.    Much more, to be honest.   I'd been hoping for more.  

 

Will I buy this series?  At this point, I'd wait for a sale, or order it from the local library before I invested money or time or too much of myself in this series.   It's a weird western, which I know I like because of East of West.   It just didn't really do it for me here.   

 

Hopefully onto better things. 

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