Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #223: The Space of the End

A few months ago I had taken a look at the first issue of Mark Russel, Michael Allred, Laura Allred, and Dave Sharpe’s Superman: Space Age and remarked on the incredibly hopeful tone it established in how it approached this version of Superman and their world. Does that continue into the rest of the series? Well, to an extent.… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #222: Baked-In Murder

I’ve talked about it previously: John Allison remains one of the most consistently great comic creators in the industry. And with his frequent collaborator in Max Sarin providing the art and Sammy Borras and Jim Campbell giving us colors and letters respectively, we have the set-up for, The Great British Bump-Off. As another series spinning off the… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #221: What To Say
How do you speak when you don’t have the words? How do you tell someone something about yourself when you don’t know the right words? Throughout Trung Le Nguyen’s The Magic Fish, this struggle plays out and out. Tiến wants to come out to his mother, but he doesn’t know the right words in Vietnamese to… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #220: Variable Changes

We remember 2019, right? The pre-plague era where I was only a few months into this series of articles? It was then I pointed out my reasoning behind not covering much of Marvel’s recent output, opting instead for the occasional older series. This was due to Ike Perlmutter, his connections to the Trump administration, and his… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #219: A Neighborly Spirit

There’s a terror in changing, even more so when it involves the home. We think of our homes as the safest places we can be—it’s where, for the most part, we’re allowed to let ourselves simply be without the outside world creeping in. But then we have to move. The world has already seeped into… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #218: Sitting at the Center of the Panel

How do you write about wanting to die? Is it through writing down everything happening in your life to act as a demonstration for the need? Or is it talking about it frankly? Or is it showing those feelings as various forms of the self shadowed by something giant, dark, and dreadful just at the… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #217: We Used to Call it Elseworlds

With the multiverse becoming a major staple in superhero fiction over the past decade—from the various films to crossovers to Rebirths to Multiversity Guidebooks—it’s hard not to want to delve into the stranger aspects of what these archetypal characters can do. We used to see it fairly regularly from DC in the form of the… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #216: The Road to Suplex City is Paved with Bodies
Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #216 by Drew Barth The Road to Suplex City is Paved with Bodies There’s an inherent allure to wrestling. Outside of big meaty men slapping meat, there’s long-running storylines that can span decades and the kind of iconography that’s only rivaled in its cultural ubiquity by superheros. But… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #215: Turning Against
Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #215 by Drew Barth Turning Against I’ve written in the past about how comics can help to illuminate some more obscure moments (to a western audience’s understanding) in history. Much of the time, these accounts can help to draw readers in with compelling visuals that create immediate connections to the people being… Continue reading
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Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #214: It’s the Meatiest
Comics Are Trying to Break Your Heart #214 by Drew Barth It’s the Meatiest Months ago, I took a look at the first issue of Juni Ba’s Monkey Meat and praised the meta-advertisement narrative it took. I had been, at the time, excited for a series that would explore that kind of narrative further and if it could get… Continue reading
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The Drunken Odyssey is a forum to discuss all aspects of the writing process, in a variety of genres, in order to foster a greater community among writers.
