Friday, 26 September 2025
Death in Trieste by Jason Review
Norwegian cartoonist Jason has made so many great comics I’ve enjoyed over the years that it’s an automatic must-read when I see a new book from him. Although, given the quality of his last couple of books and now this one, I’m starting to feel like his best work is behind him, unfortunately.
Sunday, 21 September 2025
Assembly by Natasha Brown Review
I know almost nothing about Natasha Brown but her debut novel Assembly feels like a cliched autobiographical first novel: she’s a black Oxbridge graduate who got a City job working in the finance sector - exactly like the nameless main character in this novel. Assembly isn’t a great debut though and reads like an author who’s still learning how to tell a story and didn’t quite know what she was shooting for.
Friday, 19 September 2025
Universality by Natasha Brown Review
Two Extinction Rebellion oiks squatting in a banker’s country house have a barney during a COVID rave with one lamping the other with a gold bar and then going on the run. But all is not as it seems at first and this self-righteous and neatly-packaged story of class disparity during late-stage capitalism turns out to be something more complex and disturbing…
Monday, 15 September 2025
Absolute Wonder Woman, Volume 1: The Last Amazon Review (Kelly Thompson, Hayden Sherman)
The Absolute books are simply Elseworlds books - familiar characters with a twist set in an alternate universe but still essentially recognisable. Except for Absolute Wonder Woman. This series has so many changes to Wonder Woman that here she is basically an entirely new character - and a worse one at that.
Sunday, 14 September 2025
Batman #1 Review (Matt Fraction, Jorge Jimenez)
The main Batman title has been in a creative funk ever since the end of Tom King’s run. James Tynion IV and Chip Zdarsky have both had runs on the series that were terrible and forgettable, so I’m glad DC have hired Matt Fraction, a writer who’s actually written some great comics, to attempt bringing this title back to its former glory.
Saturday, 13 September 2025
Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky Review
Fyodor Dostoyevsky has been enjoying a strange renaissance on social media these past few years with people recommending his books, even though I’m quite certain these people aren’t reading them and nor are their largely consumer audiences. Because if they actually read his books, I sincerely doubt even half of them would be recommending them - his books are utterly terrible!
Saturday, 6 September 2025
Absolute Superman, Volume 1: Last Dust of Krypton Review (Jason Aaron, Rafa Sandoval)
It’s a brand new imagining of Superman - get this: an alien boy sent via spaceship from his doomed home planet Krypton to Earth where he’s raised by the kind Kents and discovers he has superpowers. Superman grows up to be a paragon of truth and justice, using his superpowers for good against evil. Wait - “new”? Absolutely not.
Monday, 1 September 2025
Pop. 1280 by Jim Thompson Review
Sheriff Nick Corey is in a bit of a pickle. He’s trying to get re-elected, only it’s clear to everyone he’s an incompetent sheriff who doesn’t do his job. His wife hates him and is probably cheating on him. Not that he cares because he’s cheating on her with other women around town. But it does bother him how the pimps at the local brothel don’t show him the respect his office deserves. What’s an honest god-fearing man to do? Simple: kill everyone.
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