Simon Dark #1: What Simon Does by Steve Niles, Scott Hampton (DC Comics, 2008)
Simon lurks about the ruins of a burned-out church and protects the innocent from criminals when the opportunity arises -- but his good deeds often seem more a factor of chance than intent, and he isn't above caging a few bucks for food from the people he rescues. He makes his home in Gotham, but this isn't the world of the Batman, who -- by his very absence from this book -- seems completely unaware of this new vigilante at work in his city. (That in itself is odd, since one of the criminals Simon faces is a child-killer, and children in danger are never off the Batman's radar.) Simon himself appears to be the product of both science and dark magic, although he himself seems unsure of his past. Stranger still, he seems to have interchangeable heads, since he looks quite different each of the rare times his mask comes off. Perhaps for that very reason, he is naively unaware that severing someone's head from their body is, for most people, a fatal condition. Simon Dark is certainly an unusual book, and it's certainly nice to see Niles branching out from his usual fare of vampires and zombies. Art by Scott Hampton is appealingly unsettling. I'm not ready to declare this book a winner just yet, but I'm curious to see what Niles has in mind next. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET review by Tom Knapp 13 September 2008 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |