Ever since Carol Danvers took the Captain Marvel mantle, the Ms. Marvel mantle she left behind has been empty. But no more, as part of Marvel’s “All-New Marvel NOW!” promotional and editorial initiative (more or less a prolonged soft reboot to their main universe) the Ms. Marvel mantle will be filled next shortly into the new year with the debut of a new Ms. Marvel title book. The titular heroine taking up the mantle will be new superhero Kamala Khan, a teenage Muslim Pakistani-American shape-shifter from Jew Jersey.
Coming February 2014 it will be written by G. Willow Wilson, (Air, Mystic, Vixen: Return of The Lion, Alif the Unseen) and illustrated by Adrian Alphona (Runaways, Uncanny X-Force).
Wilson is notable for being of the Muslim faith and is one of if not the most prominent Muslimah writer in monthly comics. She too, hails from New Jersey. The appointment of Wilson to the title is more or less a marriage made in heaven and follows a pattern Marvel seems to be making by appointing writers with the actual experience and know-how that correlate to the characters they are writing. This follows in the steps of appointing writer Charles Soule (Swamp Thing, Thunderbolts, Strongman) a comic writer and attorney (whodathunk) to write Jennifer Walters, the green powerhouse also known as She-Hulk who also is an active lawyer for a new solo title also returning next year.
Ms. Marvel and She-Hulk will be additionally joined by brand new female lead solo books new year for Black Widow, and Elektra. This added with the ongoing success of Brain Wood’s starring all female X-Men flagship title and a “second season” of Captain Marvel seems to reiterate that Marvel is truly making the effort to diversify and push their female heroes as well as taking risks. Their adoption or experiment with “seasons” for titles such as Young Avengers is a curious invention that is something to be watched. It is possibly a great way to keep titles fresh especially in the highly unstable and fickle comic buying market which will no doubt be changing greatly in the next five to ten years anyway. Additionally the appointment of more and more modern and stylized artists (who thankfully know how teenagers dress or just know fashion period) and a more sophisticated mod “house” aesthetic ushered in by the popular Hawkeye title have additionally made many of Marvel’s new offerings and cover art in particular very fresh, hip, and surprisingly experimental.
Marvel’s not perfect, but with their certain choices they seem to be at the least, aware of criticism of the medium and are making strides to rectify it. You’d think DC would notice by now what they’re doing (an Hourman TV show? Really?) is exactly the opposite of what they should be doing.
Now about Marvel’s 10000 Tony Stark and Wolverine books….
Max Eber
max@sub-cultured.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics
Before I begin, let me ask you a couple of questions.
Have you been wanting to dive headfirst into the emotional maelstrom of comics and have zero idea where to start because you think there’s loads of backstory needed?
Are you particularly interested in what Marvel has to offer?
If the answer to both of these is a yes, then this will be the article for you.
Marvel NOW! is a shifting type of relaunch instead of a full reboot, with creative team changes, as well as resetting the issue numbers to #1, following the events of Avengers vs. X-Men. There is still ONE title to be released in the next month, but what should you consider completely avoiding in lieue of other releases? More importantly, which so far have been terrible?
I understand this is just my opinion and based minutely on fact (sales numbers in one case) and we’re not going to agree, but let’s get some healthy discussion going. Lord knows I’m gonna get some flack for putting a fan favorite on this list! These are in no particular order:
Cable and X-Force
Fearless Defenders
Savage Wolverine
X-Men Legacy
FF
What do you guys think are the worst titles in Marvel NOW’s relaunch? (If you say Young Avengers, I’m going to be outside your window with a knife.)
Leia Calderon
Editor
@ladyvader99
leia@ihogeek.com
It’s wrong to steal and lie, so I’m going to be completely honest about cheating my Marvel quest in this post about the comics that I purchased over the last two weeks:
In which Kaitlyn learns that the 5th Wednesday of the month means a pretty Marvel-less week
Last week was a pretty light-week comic wise. I’m not sure why it is that publishers can’t get their collective acts together to put out some quality titles for the handful of months when Wednesday gets some extra airtime. Could it be that the best minds in comics are taken by surprise every time a 5th Wednesday comes around? I’m pretty sure it’s not that amazing a phenomena, especially to the people in charge of dreaming up adventures for time-traveling mutants teenagers and faceless clowns with murderous circus plots. Get it together, comic-book folks.
In which Kaitlyn manages to flat-leave all her Marvel favorites for the first lady of DC
As Death of the Family concludes this month(SQUEE), I will certainly be reevaluating my pull-list. Certainly the titles that I had only been picking up for the tie-in like Nightwing and Teen Titans will not be given a figurative rose from February onward. Also parting ways from my cash will most likely be Detective Comics and certainly Red Hood and the Outlaws. I’m pretty sure that would leave me with just Snyder’s Batman and Batman and Robin. My former DC loyalty would have been all but ground into the dirt with Thor’s big old god-boot as the former fan girl within withered and died BUT THEN THIS HAPPENED
I have discovered the silver lining to the dreaded 5th Wednesday: free time to read some banging trades of titles you’ve been missing out on. If you’ve been slacking on your Wonder Woman, run, don’t walk to your nearest comic cave or Amazon account and pick these volumes up. If you were up in the wee hours with me on Facebook yesterday, you were actually with me on my journey through the glossy baby of beloved scribe Brian Azzarello and balls out talented artist Cliff Chiang as I posted some Diana-love. In case you missed the live stream, here’s the skinny: The New 52 has produced some ups and downs, but Wonder Woman marks a damn high peak and keeps climbing. Over-extended metaphor? You betcha. My twisted tongue just doesn’t have the know-how to properly praise this epic saga that spans from hell to the heavens, yet still manages to be intimate and close to the heart of this battle-hardened warrior Amazon. Shit, the book could be utter nonsense and I might still pick it up just to be delighted by the character designs of the wickedly fun gods and goddesses in the Greek pantheon. Child-Hades with a candle for a head versus giant-fish-blob Poseidon?
Since new love can be fickle love, I supplemented this Amazonian addiction like a crazy person at four in the morning yesterday in the form of the first volume of the Justice League penned by Geoff Johns with art by Jim Lee. While I don’t have any idea what DC is doing with it’s continuity now a days, I do know that reading about the mature and seasoned Diana from her own title while delving in to the adventures of a young Wonder Woman has been a blast. This Diana of five years past is fresh off of Themyscira and adorably clueless. Of course if by adorable you mean full of battle-lust and problems with authority. Of course, while gratingly immature, she is still the loving Diana we know with the seeds of true hero firmly planted in another title I have been wasting my time not reading.
In which Kaitlyn bids you ado to go read All-New X-Men since she failed to find the Batman and Robin Annual
Seriously, this selling-out-of-things-I-want-business needs to stort itself right the fuck out. Any way, until next time friends!
Kaitlyn D
@deadrabbit92
Staff-writer
Before I begin, let me ask you a couple of questions.
Have you been wanting to dive headfirst into the emotional maelstrom of comics and have zero idea where to start?
Are you particularly interested in what Marvel has to offer?
If the answer to both of these is a yes, then this will be the article for you.
Marvel NOW! is a shifting type of relaunch instead of a full reboot, with creative team changes, as well as resetting the issue numbers to #1, following the events of Avengers vs. X-Men. There are still 10 titles to be released in the next couple of months, but what should you consider picking up out of what’s been released? More importantly, will you need past knowledge to enjoy all of the titles?
While a few of the titles require some past knowledge (mostly X-Men and Avengers titles), many are easy to flip open and enjoy. Here are my top five recommendations in no particular order.
All New X-Men
All New X-Men is absolutely one of the titles you need previous history to fully appreciate the story. I’d recommend you read Avengers vs. X-Men, as well as the mini-series immediately following, AvX Consequences, before picking this up. Beast’s mutation has taken a turn for the worse, leaving him dying and refusing to leave the world as it is. He makes the decision to travel back in time in the hopes that the past version of Cyclops will be able to smack sense into the current Cyclops. It is by far the most emotional of the titles so far as this choice of Beast’s has many repercussions, perhaps even some even he hasn’t thought of.
Thor
Instantly engrossing, you need absolutely no background reading and absolutely no foreknowledge of the Norse god of thunder to enjoy this story. Gorgeous art, perfect pacing and a story featuring the Godkiller, an entity killing off every god he can find, is right up your alley if you’re a new reader and a fan of Thor. The viewpoints alternate between a youthful Thor, present time Thor, and an elderly Thor, who bears a striking resemblance to the Allfather. Barely three issues in and I can already tell you it is my favorite of the titles so far.
Deadpool
When it was announced that comedian, Brian Posehn, would be writing the Merc with the Mouth, I considered myself intrigued. A slightly painful pun-filled first issue disappointed me, but luckily the second and third issue had me laughing out loud and enjoying Deadpool as he takes on dead presidents. This title is also a wonderful series to try out the Marvel AR app as pages range from pre-colored sketches to how Posehn comes up with the dialogue. This is another series where you need no background reading or information.
Captain America
American’s hero meets hardcore science fiction in this series, so most of that Captain America trivia can fly out the window. I genuinely don’t want to spoil any bit of this serious side of Cap, but suffice to say that it’s a ride a lot unlike any other. I’ve never been a fan of his solo series but this one is full of intrigue and he faces real dangers, so it will be fun to see where it goes.
Morbius: the Living Vampire
Hold back all that frustration aimed at vampires due to a horrendously written book series turned movie saga. Hold back all the objections to picking up a title about a villain the vast majority of people have never heard of. Morbius was created through science instead of traditional methods, and although he is not the villain to spring to mind when you think Spider-Man, the first issue in his new ongoing series is downright fun and worth a chance.
HONORABLE MENTION: Avengers Arena
Which titles have you picked up?
Leia Calderon
Co-Editor
@ladyvader
A few weeks ago I invited all of you lovely readers to join me on my journey through Marvel Now as a newcomer to monthly Marvel titles. Since then, I’ve added Thor: God of Thunder to my pull list while deciding to stick around with Deadpool and Iron Man. Unfortunately, I’m still not caught up enough with Marvel to read much recommended All New X-Men, but I’ll get there (If I ever get to reading Schism, that is). Anyway, the Thor review will be at the bottom, but before that you can enjoy my newest little nugget of knowledge that I’ve gained from delving farther into comics:
1)In which deadrabbit realizes that skipping a week at the comic shop is basically the end of the world:
And not because I’m desperate to follow the whacky shenanigans of the Merc With the Mouth every issue. Turns out that missing a week of the new Marvel titles plus my usual Batman fair now means that in just seven days, I’m hopelessly behind on my reading. My casual trips to the comic store that usually happened on Thursdays have just become a little more extreme. Last week because of stupid tryptophan-based holidays, I didn’t make it to Midtown Comics and missed out on three titles. Not really a big deal, but what if this had happened on a heavy Bat-week plus Marvel titles? Chaos, that’s what. My small pile of to-reads would rapidly grow in to a mountain of un-scalable height that would most likely end up crushing me in my sleep. Oh hyperbole, the horrible horrible hyperbole.
2)In which deadrabbit reviews Thor: God of Thunder #1
I believe I have discovered the best of Marvel Now, and I say this while only feeling interested enough to pick up 3 titles. This was my first Thor comic ever and what a fantastic introduction to the character it proved to be. Thor, being a God of relative omnipotence, finds himself called in prayer to a far away world, a world which mysteriously has no pantheon of gods or supreme being of its own in known memory. Looks like someone’s been murdering gods, and Thor is none too pleased about it. The art in this issue is amazing, particularly the splash of a dozen massacred giant deities Esad Ribic and Ive Svorcina have produced a beautiful book of color and painterly style that suits a Norse god of old better than any Thor depiction I’ve seen before. I’m thankful for the intro to the character, which didn’t require the reader to know much about Thor to enjoy the book. New Readers Welcome!
3)In which deadrabbit reviews Iron Man #2, Deadpool #2, and Thor :God of Thunder #2.
No she doesn’t because she hasn’t gotten the chance to read them yet. Chaos, I told you.
Kaitlyn D
@deadrabbit92
Staff-writer
Today, on this most auspicious afternoon, I popped my Marvel-floppies-cherry and picked up two titles of Marvel Now. I mentioned that I was complete novice back in my write-up about sucking at getting in to comics for the first time, but have since done some catching up…which is to say I read some events with wiki opened and scratched my head (The High Evolutionary? WHAT?). Still, despite not being entirely (or at all) caught up in the Marvel Universe(any of them, I’m still not entirely clear how their multi-verse works) I decided to give it a whirl. A few hours in and there have been a few hurdles in the path straying from the comforts of the Bat-family. Such as:
1) In which deadrabbit learns the difference between a relaunch and reboot
So when I decided I would begin this Marvel quest, I think I had thought Marvel Now would be a reboot, but not so. Now, I understand these are aggravating, I do. When you have more knowledge about a comic universe than history in a text book, the potential of erasing all of that is a punch to the gullet. I figured that out quickly after the New 52 “revealed” an absent Cass Cain and Stephanie Brown and caused subsequent hooplah and outrage. However, and I say this quietly and with the spirit of not wanting to get my head bit off, it is a way to get people in to comics and cut the intimidation factor considerably. There’s just so much material and to move past trades is a big leap for the un-inducted that a reboot provides some sort of starting point, for good or bad. Not that any of this matters because apparently Marvel Now is not a reboot, it’s a relaunch, which as I now understand it basically means some titles are being published as number ones with new creative teams and that’s it. Intimidation factor reinstated plus 2.
2) In which deadrabbit realizes how much more money she’ll be spending on comics a week.
I feel like one of those PSA or health channel films that warn you that there’s no such thing as “experimenting” with a drug, and I certainly think I’ve just committed myself to an expensive habit. When you’re pull list just consists of Batman and Saga(which has been on hiatus for the past two months), comic books are a minor indulgence really. If I end up giving only 10 titles a chance, that’s almost double what I read now, never mind having to go back and read Avengers vs Xmen at some point, and I’m incapable of even thinking about storage because I’m physically and mentally incapable of thinking about how much more room I may need in the future. That’s some genetically altered super-monkey to up and decide to have on your back.
3) In which deadrabbit quickly reviews the two titles she’s read so far.
This week I picked up Iron Man and Deadpool. I liked them both well enough, especially Iron Man because I’m not so familiar with the character besides having read him being a dick in Civil War. Come to think of it, I don’t believe I even read his own Civil War tie-in, so I extra don’t have any idea what I’m talking about in concerns to Mr. Stark. I didn’t care too much for the coloring, which made most of the characters look like they had plastic barbie doll skin. Tony’s new portable goo-suit was cool, although a little unrealistic(which feels like a ridiculous opinion considering the subject matter), though obviously I’m not entirely sure how “new” it actually is since I’ve think I’ve read more about Norman Osborn as Iron Patriot than anything with Tony. The number 1 started off the relaunch well, from a n00b’s perspective. There was some good insight into Tony’s thoughts and feelings as well as some references to how he’s become Iron Man, plus a nod to past struggles with alcoholism. They managed to cram a lot of history and information into the issue, which I imagine was nice for the true newbies (not me, happily) who are really just starting with the character. Although it’s not a reboot, there is definitely enough foundation for the issue to be a jumping off point for new readers.
Deadpool had a few laughs and I appreciated the cover immensely (the cover featuring Deadpool vs. monster vs. kitties- I didn’t get the variants of either book). I may have found the story a little…well, dumb, but not too dumb and there were a few laughs, although some fell a little flat. The art was okay and I thought it fit the lightness of the title. Unlike Iron Man, Deadpool was less “friendly” to new readers, but I don’t think anyone will have a problem picking it up unless they’re totally unfamiliar with the character. I read a few books where he popped up and a few volumes of Uncanny X-Force, so I can proudly put a check next to “somewhat familiar with.”
Have any advice for me as I begin what will probably turn in to a horrible addiction? Leave it in the comments below. This is only the beginning of my n00b journey, so I’ll post an update in a few weeks to let everyone know if I’m a convert or not (because obviously the whole world lies in wait)