Welcome to the Energon Universe—Wave 2 trailer from Skybound! - Ash Avenue Comics

Welcome to the Energon Universe—Wave 2 trailer from Skybound!

The people have spoken—Skybound’s Energon Universe featuring the Transformers, G.I Joe, and brand-new characters like the Void Rivals (they don’t call themselves that but it’s such a cool name) is a huge success! Now, with all the players established, Skybound has released this teaser video for Wave 2 of the Energon Universe… and you might say that it teases the return of someone guaranteed to send “Shockwaves” through every single title! In fact, you might even say that Shockwave, the popular Transformers character, appears prominently in the video!

Weekly Shout-Out: October 5, 2023

by Paul

Cht-ch-ch-cht-cht. That’s how I spell out the noise they make when they transform. I share that with you because I trust you.

SPOTLIGHT TITLES

Transformers #1 (Image Comics)

Art and story by Daniel Warren Johnson

Weekly Shout-Out: October 5, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

If, like me, you’re someone who has looked your spouse or partner dead in the eye and said, “No, these are not identical Optimus Prime figures. This one is painted like he was in the original cartoon, and this one has 25% darker colors to look like his 1990s ‘Generation 2’ toy” as if that explained everything or anything, you’ve probably already bought this comic. If you’re someone who finds the Transformers and their world to be a head-scratcher (fair enough), you should buy this comic, because Daniel Warren Johnson draws it with love, and finds some cool new twists on the visual language of classic Transformers that really sing. As someone who has read a lot of comics about Transformers (IDW’s More Than Meets the Eye/Lost Light run by Alex Milne and James Roberts is possibly my favorite comic of the last 10-15 years), I’ve seen them drawn by people who are good at drawing Transformers but dicey at drawing people and vice versa, but Johnson manages both here. He also writes and draws a great Starscream, the Daffy Duck of Transformers, giving him a page near the end of the issue to prove why he’s the universal favorite as he bitches about his lot in life while trashing public infrastucture. Even if you don’t like Transformers, I think you’ll like Daniel Warren Johnson’s Transformers. Check it out.

G.O.D.S. #1 (Marvel Comics)

Art by Valerio Schiti/Story by Jonathan Hickman

Weekly Shout-Out: October 5, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

After wrapping up Ultimate Invasion last week, Jonathan Hickman teams up with Valerio Schiti to bring us G.O.D.S., a new series led by a character who looks so much like a fashionably made-over Dr. Strange that I spent a good chunk of this book thinking, “Is this guy not Dr. Strange?” Schiti and Hickman, evidently aware that this might be an issue for readers like me, make sure to establish that our raffish new hero is not Dr. Strange by showing him talking to Dr. Strange on page one of the story, and even then I spent about thirty pages thinking, “That’s Dr. Strange though.” But he is not Dr. Strange. He’s a new guy named Wyn who reads floating books, gestures theatrically to do magic things, has a streak of distinguished white in his hair, and wears a red coat that swirls animatedly about him as though it were a sort of red cape. We’ve never seen anything like him before. At least he’s good company through this extra-sized first issue, and he has good banter with his on-the-spectrum sidekick. This one is like one of those early Vertigo comics where marginalized misfits would do magick-with-a-k and talk to old, bored gods and quote Arthur Rimbaud, except this one has the Collector and Dr. Voodoo in it. One weird thing about this book is that even though it’s a 64-page Jonathan Hickman story, there is not a single graph. Where are the graphs? There’s a lot of jargon here and a good graph would help keep the players straight and they could also throw in the reason this book is called G.O.D.S. Well, I’m sure they’ll get around to it.

Abbott: 1979 #1 (Boom! Studios)

Art by Sami Kivelä/Story by Saladin Ahmed

Weekly Shout-Out: October 5, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

It’s been a couple of years for us since we last saw hard-boiled, chain-smoking, magic-using investigative reporter Elena Abbott, but for her, it’s been six years, and things are not going great. It’s the end of the 70s and it’s tough all over—there’s a gas crisis, no one knows what to do about this hostage thing, Carter is blowing it right and left, and Japanese auto manufacturers are introducing economical, reliable cars to Americans, which is bad news for Abbott’s hometown of Detroit. Of course, society always has some extra curveballs for a Black woman, especially when she’s responsible for thwarting an occult conspiracy bent on taking over her city and then the world. This is the conclusion to the Abbott trilogy. If you’ve read the last two, you’ll know you’re in good hands, and if you haven’t, you should catch up at Ash Avenue Comics because we have both of the trades in stock.

AT A GLANCE

Weekly Shout-Out: October 5, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

Clementine, Book Two (Image Comics)

Art and story by Tillie Walden

Plucky apocalypse survivor Clementine’s YA adventures continue as she adjusts to life after being rescued by an island community. But things are not what they seem. Things are about to get coco-nuts! Note: Don’t write to me if they don’t live on a tropical island. I haven’t read it yet. It just came out! I’m the guy who thought that guy was Dr. Strange!

Weekly Shout-Out: October 5, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

Alice Cooper #1 (of 5) (Dynamite Entertainment)

Art by Edu Menna/Story by Rodney Barnes

Living legend of rock and Phoenix-area local treasure Alice Cooper returns to comics to take on the Devil himself, who is threatening to take his own band on tour to do I don’t know what. But the archangel Gabriel wants Alice to stop him. That’s right. What they condemn today they’ll embrace in 40 years. Is this in continuity with Marvel’s The Last Temptation of Alice comic from the 90s that Neil Gaiman wrote? If not, does that open the door to some kind of Crisis of Infinite Alices? I look forward to it.

Weekly Shout-Out: September 27, 2023

by Paul

New comics day is no place for loafers. Join me or die. Can you do any less?

SPOTLIGHT TITLES

Weekly Shout-Out: September 27, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

The Flash #1 by Mike Deodato Jr. and Si Spurrier (DC): After proving that not even the Fastest Man Alive can outrun box office failure, Barry Allen heads to Character Timeout and discovers that Tank Girl left behind a hell of a mess. Meanwhile, even though everything seems to be going great with his family and his do-gooding, Wally West can’t shake a sense of lingering, creeping dread. It’s called middle age, Wally. Plus, now there’s high-contrast Mike Deodato blacks everywhere you look. How’s a guy supposed to relax with all this dramatic lighting going on? Oh, for those carefree Mike Wieringo days!

Weekly Shout-Out: September 27, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

Ultimate Invasion #4 (Of 4) by Bryan Hitch and Jonathan Hickman (Marvel): Hitch and Hickman wrap up their re-introduction of the Ultimate Marvel Universe with a big ba-da-boom, and you’ll want to read it so you can be ready for the new Ultimate Spider-Man #1 coming up in January, about which we currently know little except that some kid will probably get bit by a spider and you can pre-order it here. Do it now! Galactus commands you!

Weekly Shout-Out: September 27, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

Power Girl #1 by Eduardo Pansica and Leah Williams (DC): This first issue sees Power Girl bomb a yacht IRA-style and then casually stroll away with a pleased look on her face, satisfied knowing that she was able to get the life rafts, too. At least, that would be my takeaway based on Gary Frank’s cover, which is mind-boggling. Maybe that’s as far as he was able to get before DC called and said “PENCILS DOWN.” Weird, weird cover. Happily, the story inside the issue offers the context that the yacht is hosting a fundraiser targeted by terrorists who are foiled by PG’s intervention, and at no point does it depict her blowing up the yacht and then leaving all of the passengers to burn to death as she walks away with her jacket slung nonchalantly over her shoulder, ready to resume her quest to protect a world that doesn’t even pretend to make eye contact most of the time. Good issue. Crazy cover.

AT A GLANCE

Stuff of Nightmares: Red Murder #1 sees R.L. Stine return to comics with a chilling tale of terror for the Young Adult and the Young Adult at heart. This one’s about a comic book artist who gets menaced by an axe murderer on the 20th anniversary of his last hit title. I don’t know what R.L.’s experience was like working on the first Stuff of Nightmares comic, but he’s working with a different artist this time. If you’re the guy who drew the first one and you’re out there reading this, I advise you to sleep with one eye open.

Weekly Shout-Out: September 27, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

If you’re excited for Transformers #1 next week, you’ll get a kick out of this week’s guest star in Void Rivals #4. Also, it’s not too late to pre-order your 1:10, 1:25, and 1:50 Transformers variants. Just saying.

Weekly Shout-Out: September 27, 2023 - Ash Avenue Comics

Weekly Shout-Out: June 14, 2023

by Paul

Last week we said Drew would be back. He’s not. But while the cat’s away, the mice will play, eh? Eh? Let’s you and I throw off the shackles of the humdrum roles society has cast us in and bloom to our fullest potential amidst the landscape of this week’s comics. What do you say? Take my hand, and together we’ll drive right off this week’s new release cliff, Thelma & Louise-style.

SPOTLIGHT TITLES

Santos Sisters #4 by Greg & Fake and Marc Koprinarov (Floating World): Your Pick of the Week is Santos Sisters today, Santos Sisters tomorrow, Santos Sisters forever. This loving send-up of classic Archie comics never disappoints, and is genuinely witty and funny in an era when the humor in comics usually makes me kind of squirm and wish I was elsewhere. My favorite series in a long time. Santos Sisters, long may you run.

By now you’ve probably heard that the brand-new characters debuting in Lorenzo de Felici and Robert Kirkman’s Void Rivals #1 (Image) rub elbows with the Autobot Jetfire about halfway through the issue (and if I hadn’t spoiled that for you, the giant Void-Rivals-meeting-Jetfire poster stuck to the glass on our front door would have), establishing them as part of Skybound’s new Energon Universe alongside the Transformers and G.I. Joe. Putting that to one side, Void Rivals is still worth a look on its own merits, starting off as a Moebius type of lonely-spaceman-on-an alien-world story before becoming what looks to me like a romantic comedy crossed with the plot of the 80s movie Enemy Mine. But don’t take my word for it; see what Robert Kirkman himself has to say about it in this video he made just for us!

AT A GLANCE

If, like me, you’ve anxiously awaited Joe Madureira’s triumphant return to monthly (-ish) comic art, get ready to keep on waiting because he’s only credited as the writer on Battle Chasers #10 (Image). Instead, Ludo Lullabi, Slumberland’s hottest artist, takes the storytelling reins on this long-anticipated return to the world of Battle Chasers that will leave readers asking, “How much do I really care about Red Monika?”

Anansi, the fan-favorite Ghanaian superhero from the Static Shock cartoon, makes his DC Universe debut this week in Static Team-Up: Anansi #1 by Charles Stewart III and Evan Narcisse (DC). Based on our web traffic, I think this one will be a sleeper hit, so don’t dawdle if you’re thinking about buying it because it’s going to sell out before you know it.

Writer Kelly Thompson, who somehow got top creative billing over artists Gurihiru on comic-of-the-year contender It’s Jeff! #1 despite it being an entirely wordless book, wraps up her long and well-regarded run on Captain Marvel with this week’s Captain Marvel #50 (Marvel), drawn by Javier Pina Marvel. If you stopped reading at issue #49, I bet you must be feeling pret-ty silly right now.