Categories
Books & Novels General Non-Fiction History & Biographies (Books) Westerns

BANDIT HEAVEN: THE HOLE-IN-THE-WALL GANGS AND THE FINAL CHAPTER OF THE WILD WEST

Written by Tom Clavin

SUMMARY:

Released by St. Martin’s Press in 2024, this 288-page hardcover explores the nefarious exploits of the Old West’s last desperadoes and the lawmen chasing after them.  The prologue relates a middle-of-the-night train robbery in proximity to Wilcox, Wyoming, on June 2, 1899.  Not only was it another successful raid for Butch Cassidy’s Wild Bunch, but its notoriety nationwide signaled the end was coming for the Old West’s most elusive desperadoes. 

As an unintended consequence of Western expansion, Clavin elaborates on how the vast frontier spanning from Canada to Mexico supplied three prominent outlaw hideouts: Brown’s Hole, the Hole-In-The-Wall, and Robbers’ Roost along the so-called ‘Outlaw Trail.’  For years before the 19th Century’s close, rival bandits could share these remote locales gloating over why savvy posses wouldn’t dare breach these sparse strongholds.  The likelihood of hidden ambush, exhausted horses, and a scarcity of food and water (if you didn’t know where to find it) frankly provided no incentives to further these pursuits.

Aside from introducing comparatively obscure bandits meeting foul ends (i.e. George Parrott; the Blackjack Ketchum gang; etc.), Wyoming’s infamous Johnson County War and Arizona’s Pleasant Valley War are discussed.  With virtually exclusive control of livestock (i.e. cattle) and, therefore, grazing lands at stake, both range wars would accumulate scores of wanton casualties.  Local police, U.S. Marshals, and even the private-sector Pinkertons already had their hands full with smaller-scale crooks to contend with essentially organized crime, including range assassins. 

Dogged efforts of undercover operatives, such as the Pinkertons’ Charlie Siringo, at least ensured valuable surveillance over time on fugitives would be shared in a growing law enforcement network.  Roving outlaws, in that sense, became hard-pressed to outrace the practicality of telegraphs.    

Among the ‘Wild Bunch,’ Butch Cassidy, “The Sundance Kid” Harry Longabaugh, and their incorrigible cronies (including the psychotic “Kid Curry”) usually managed to evade capture.  Yet, the brazen Wilcox heist signaled that their profitable fun-and-games would soon end. With Cassidy and Longabaugh absconding to South America (along with Longabaugh’s wife, Etta Place), the region’s remaining bandits would be hunted down, one by one, as necessary, into the early 20th Century.  Of the Wild Bunch’s known membership, only ex-convicts Elza Lay and Laura Bullion would live to see past middle age.  

Upon their discreet escape to South America, the final fates of Cassidy, Longabaugh, and Etta Place still remain murky.  As Clavin acknowledges, the trio shares a lingering Old West enigma that present-day forensics has no certain answers for.  

Note: This title is available digitally and as an audiobook.  Presumably, Bandit Heaven will be re-released in paperback form at some later date.

REVIEW:

As an author, Tom Clavin’s narrative style for Bandit Heaven is admirably consistent with his prior Old West works.  Concocting briskly conversational yet still historically accurate text, Clavin delivers all the necessary goods, including welcome sprinkles of humor.  His propensity for extended side stories shouldn’t, otherwise, impact a solid read revisiting The Wild Bunch’s capers and long-befuddled posses in pursuit. 

With the infamous Johnson County War as a prelude, Clavin focuses on the era’s most notorious bandits, their cronies, and really, by extension, more cronies of cronies.  The same applies to his detailed takes on the Pinkertons and local law enforcement, as their successes often proved hard-earned.  Along with his excellent mini-biography of Charlie Siringo, Clavin examines manhunters Tom Horn, Frank Canton, and lesser competition like Joe Lefors, with precision. 

Hence, Clavin would make a stellar professor in the classroom engaging students on his subject matter’s less-than-glamorous realities.  He also knows better than to pitch unprovable theories and sticks to grounded history.  For instance, Clavin doesn’t speculate much on Ethel “Etta” Place’s tantalizingly unknown fate beyond mentioning some possibilities that historians have considered. 

Among them is a quick footnote indicating that Place and fellow Wild Bunch girlfriend, Ann Bassett, weren’t the same person since their conflicting known whereabouts at certain times makes such an intriguing notion impossible.  Still, given their startling physical resemblance (even evidently sharing the same birth year), let alone Place’s seemingly non-existent past, it does make one wonder about strange coincidences possibly linking Place with Bassett. 

As for the unsolved Butch & Sundance mystery dating back to 1908 in San Vincente, Clavin explores it as much as he can – without going overboard.  Clavin mentions that at least other two fellow American bandits the duo knew were working South America at the same time, so misassumptions on shady aliases were common.  His reporting leave open a remote chance that Butch & Sundance’s inexplicable mistakes in San Vicente weren’t made by them.  No matter how slick this dynamite duo (read Clavin’s text on their train heists for this pun) was in its prime: they were either very much off their game that fateful night – or some luckless copycats pretended to be them one last time. 

Considering members of Cassidy’s family claimed he survived under an alias to old age, again one wonders.  Clavin doesn’t even mention it, but a similar claim has also been made before of Sundance – that is, to a far lesser degree.  Unless reliable forensic evidence is excavated from a San Vicente cemetery, it appears the same ‘what-if Butch & Sundance’ scenarios from over a century ago are still on the table.      

Much of what Clavin reports is often found elsewhere, but there are occasionally obscure gems that one wouldn’t expect.  For instance, the unfulfilled prospect of Butch and his pals enlisting as U.S. soldiers in the Spanish-American War in hopes of securing amnesty is a curious notion.  For that matter, having his boys instead hold off from robbing unguarded trains during the war, shows what a patriotic and generous soul the wily Butch Cassidy was (wink-wink).  Or how about The Sundance Kid’s failed efforts at commanding his own spin-off faction?  Such details and anecdotes are Clavin’s forte, so even if one already knows much of this material, you can appreciate these enlightening revelations.  

The only caveat is a heads-up for the squeamish: specifically, Clavin discusses the macabre use of bandit George Parrott’s remains – though true, it’s wincing to read.  The author, otherwise, doesn’t delve much into grisly details (i.e. the brutal demise of ex-Wild Bunch desperado Ben Kilpatrick is mentioned but not elaborated upon).  Instead, as with his other works, Clavin wisely lets the history speak for itself – along with his knack for well-played sarcasm. 

For armchair historians (older teens and up), Bandit Heaven delivers a contemporary Old West history lesson well worth taking for a ride.    

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

After the table of contents, Clavin supplies some helpful maps: 1. A North-to-South map titled ‘The Outlaw Trail;’ 2. A map of the Wild Bunch’s robberies; and 3. Butch & Sundance’s ‘Final Years’ tour of South America.  Midway through, there is an intriguing sixteen-page black-and-white photo section.  Please note, though not graphic, that a few images depict post-mortem glimpses of lesser-known Wild Bunch members.  A ghoulish picture proving bandit George Parrott’s dubious legacy, however, may be cringe-inducing. 

In addition to his detailed footnotes, Clavin provides the following sections: two pages of acknowledgements, a three-page ‘selected bibliography,’ and a very helpful nine-page index.  The last page offers a brief Clavin biography, which is duplicated on the inside back cover jacket.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                       8 Stars

Note: Also recommended is Clavin’s prior work, The Last Outlaws (his take on The Dalton Gang is really a ‘second-to-last-chapter’ on the Wild West).  Also, from a visual perspective, there is the 2014 PBS ‘American Experience’ episode: Butch Cassiday and the Sundance Kid.  Far grimmer than Clavin’s text, this documentary adds supplemental insights into the real ‘Butch & Sundance’ – further distancing them from their romanticized cinematic counterparts.  

Categories
Digital Movies & TV Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos STAR TREK-Related

STAR TREK: 765874 UNIFICATION (2024)

SUMMARY:                   RUNNING TIME: Approx. 7:48 Min.

Produced by Otoy in conjunction with The Roddenberry Archive, this 4K 2024 short film includes William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy’s widow, Susan Bay Nimoy, as two of its executive producers.  Paramount and Skywalker Sound are among the project’s additional collaborators.    

From Jules Urbach’s virtually dialogue-free story, Carlos Baena directed this film.  Star Trek composer Michael Giacchino supplies a poignant, piano-driven musical score.  Though much of the film is produced through CGI and on sets, some location shooting occurred in San Marino, California.    

As noted in other sources, Shatner’s ‘Captain/Admiral Kirk’ (though CGI and body double Sam Witmer) appears in three familiar incarnations: his Original Series form, the motion picture era (circa Star Trek II), and primarily his Star Trek: Generations look.  Working from Nimoy’s CGI likeness (reminiscent of his elderly appearance in the Kelvin Timeline Trek films), Lawrence Selleck appears as Spock’s body double. 

Other cast members include Robin Curtis reprising her ‘Saavik’ from Star Treks III-IV, and briefly Gary Lockwood (remarkably, without a body double), in his sole reprisal of ‘Gary Mitchell,’ from Star Trek’s second TV pilot, “Where No Man Has Gone Before.” 

Nods/footage consist of: Trek’s first TV pilot (“The Cage”), Star Trek: Discovery, Star Trek: Picard, and the Kelvin Timeline Trek films.  Otoy’s three previous Trek short films, including 2023’s 7658754: Regeneration (which depicts Spock on Veridan III son after Star Trek: Generations), are hinted. 

SPOILER ALERT: The film begins with a single written line recalling Kirk’s insightful advice to Lt. Saavik about peceiving the pendulum between life and death early on in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.  Otoy’s 765874 Regeneration had previously revealed that Spock had claimed the late Captain Kirk’s Starfleet badge from his mountaintop gravesite on Veridan III.  Next, seen exploring a lush garden-like park, Kirk is now without his badge, but otherwise still resembles his look from Star Trek: Generations.  At the park fountain, he quietly encounters a large yet mysterious contingent of observers.

Among them is an now-elderly former protégé, with whom Kirk exchanges grateful glances in this reunion.  She, in turn, introduces her late middle-aged adult son – to Kirk’s amazement.  Approaching an alien ‘gatekeeper’ of sorts, Kirk is evidently given a token.  It transports him into a shadowy mirror-like realm, which reflects Kirk’s past as a starship captain and then a Starfleet admiral.  His earlier counterparts vanish once the present-day Kirk emerges.  Reattaching his badge (the token), Kirk again shifts to another reality. 

The film’s sole dialogue replays Kirk’s wistful thoughts contemplating the Genesis Planet from Star Trek II.  Awaiting Kirk (having entered the Kelvin Timeline’s alternate reality) is a private suite on New Vulcan, where, in his final moments, is his dying best friend.  Spiritual unification across space and time has occurred, as two Starfleet legends witness a final sunrise together.  In essence, the film becomes both an epilogue to 1994’s Star Trek: Generations and a prologue for 2016’s Star Trek: Beyond.      

                                             Cast:

Captain James. T. Kirk: William Shatner & Sam Witmer (Shatner’s body double)

Spock: Leonard Nimoy & Lawrence Selleck (Nimoy’s body double)

Saavik: Robin Curtis

Yor: Gordon Tarpley

Sorak: Mark Chinnery

Gary Mitchell: Gary Lockwood

Yeoman J.M. Colt: Mahé Thaissa (body double for Star Trek: The Cage’s late actress Laurel Goodwin)

Crusher: John Daltorio

Observers By The Fountain: Credited Extras

Stand-Ins: See Film Credits 

Note:  With its credits included, the film’s running time is actually 10:44.  This short film serves as a 30th Anniversary tribute to Star Trek Generations.  For others, it further offers a 40th Anniversary homage of Star Trek III: The Search For Spock

REVIEW:

Though thirty years late, William Shatner’s ‘Captain Kirk’ finally gets a death scene worthy of the pop culture icon.  The same applies to Leonard Nimoy’s ‘Spock’ almost a decade after the actor’s passing.  For that matter, giving Robin Curtis’ underrated ‘Saavik’ a welcome though long-belated thank-you for her own Trek contributions makes good sense.  The fact that her scene at last acknowledges Saavik as Spock’s romantic soulmate does wonders for the character.     

Displaying Star Trek’s thoughtful afterlife, 765874: Unification is a cinematic gem in just under eight minutes.  As a heartfelt tribute to the nearly 60-year legacy Captain Kirk and Spock share, such silent storytelling is undeniably brilliant.  Despite some noticeable limitations of CGI in recreating Shatner’s Kirk (as he appeared thirty years ago), this film’s production values are still top-caliber. 

Casual viewers, however, should be forewarned: the blink-and-you’ll-see-miss-it glimpses of so many franchise incarnations, including Star Trek: Discovery’s Yor or Yeoman J.M. Colt from Captain Pike’s era, may seem bewildering.  While Yor’s inclusion (assuming one researches it), as does as a near-omnipotent Gary Mitchell, visually make sense, so many other quick cuts (i.e. even a glimpse of Star Trek: Picard’s Daystrom Station where Kirk’s remains are evidently now in storage) aren’t necessarily pertinent teases. 

Still, this story’s ethereal substance is obvious to grasp; and, frankly, that’s what matters most.  As a classy mini-reunion depicting the original Kirk and Spock a final time (given their previous appearance together was 1991’s Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country), 765874 Unification makes a welcome gift for any Trekker.     

BONUS FEATURES:

The film includes a dedication to Leonard Nimoy. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:              9 Stars

IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE

Categories
Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics DC's Hardcovers & Trade Paperbacks

GREEN LANTERN (HAL JORDAN): BRIGHTEST DAY (DC Comics)

Written by Geoff Johns.

Art by Doug Mahnke; Christian Alamy; Keith Champagne; Mark Irwin; Tom Nguyen; Shawn Moll; Randy Mayor; Gabe Eltaeb; Carrie Strachan; & Rod Reis.

‘Tales of the Red Lantern Corps: Dex-Starr’ Art by Shawn Davis; Jamie Grant; Nick J. Napolitano; & Steve Wands.

Collection Cover Art by Doug Mahnke & Randy Mayor.

SUMMARY:

First released by DC Comics in 2011, this 288-page hardcover compiles 2010-2011’s Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) # 53-62

In the wake of Blackest Night, Green Lantern’s sequel is the ten-part “New Guardians” from the Brightest Day storyline. Rudely interrupting Carol Ferris & Hal Jordan’s latest wary flirtation on Earth, Sinestro convinces them to a tentative truce investigating the mysterious ‘White Lantern.’  They soon discover that none of them can move it, though their combined effort unleashes an ominous plea.  It’s up to them (along with a reluctant Larfleeze and Atrocitus) to locate six Entities roaming Earth.  Each of these emotional spectrum-based entities are seeking to channel themselves in human form.

Meanwhile, an unknown third party seeks to intercede by manipulating an imprisoned Hector Hammond’s long-standing lust for Carol Ferris.  Also, in a tease towards “War of the Green Lanterns,” An off-planet Guy Gardner evidently picks his side in an upcoming conflict that will include Hal Jordan among his adversaries.  On Oa, the Guardians grow increasingly concerned about Hal’s rebellious nature; specifically, he is hiding his current mission from them.              

Mortal casualties mount, as Hal, Carol, Sinestro, Larfleeze, Sinestro, and Atrocitus seek out these elusive Entities in multiple locales on Earth and in deep space.  Having dispatched the Predator in Las Vegas, Carol finds her potential destiny now resides on planet Zamaron.  Facing off against Atrocitus, Lobo, and even a Parallax-possessed Flash, among others, an exhausted Hal pushes his willpower to the limits.  Yet, the cosmic foe awaiting him may prove unstoppable. 

Defying both the Green Lantern Corps and the Justice League, Hal’s choice of allies: Saint Walker, Larfleeze, Atrocitus, & Iroque (Indigo-1), conveys that he is evidently sparing his closest friends from certain death.  To rescue the Entities and their captive human channels, representatives of at least five different Lantern Corps must invade the bleak ‘Lost Sector.’     

Guest stars include Crispus Allen’s Spectre; Lobo; Barry Allen’s Flash; Renee Montoya’s Question; Lex Luthor; Dex-Starr; Batman; & Superman.  A six-page Tales of the Red Lanterns Corps back-up tale depicts feline Dex-Starr’s tragic origin becoming a Red Lantern.

Notes: This title is also available digitally and in a trade paperback format.  Guy Gardner makes a cameo appearance, but Kyle Rayner doesn’t appear in this volume.

REVIEW:

This seemingly endless arc evokes grim irony given its Brightest Day banner.  Its actual substance seems far more in tone with Blackest Night than anything one might construe as bright and cheery.  While writer Geoff Johns keeps his ongoing story twists percolating in a coherent manner, it’s an ambitious read meant for the franchise’s hardcore fans.  Casual readers, however, may find the plotting too convoluted to keep up with Johns for the long haul. 

Johns’ multiple sub-plots supply ample depth to Larfleeze (note: a little Larfleeze goes a long way), Sinestro, Atrocitus, and especially Carol Ferris/Star Sapphire.  Hal Jordan, at the plot’s center, is in vintage form, particularly in a showdown against a Parallax-infected Flash.  The same applies to Hal’s interactions with Carol Ferris.  Carol’s own insightful heroism is another promising element.  It makes sense why DC would finally elevate her to the Justice League in 2024. 

Amplifying Johns’ storyline with high-quality visuals is this reliable art team.  Led by Doug Mahnke’s solid penciling, this art squad surpasses the challenge of bringing Johns’ vivid imagination to life.  Assuredly, it’s no easy task.      

Still, given its surplus of disturbing inferences (i.e. a child abduction; multiple grisly deaths), the content of Green Lantern: Brightest Day should be restricted to older teens and up.  In spite of neglecting an appropriate parental advisory, DC Comics compensates with a fantastic page count.  Though Green Lantern: Brightest Day isn’t a must-have purchase, curious fans should at least consider seeking out this Geoff Johns epic at the library.  For Hal Jordan’s fans, it’s definitely worth the read.  

Still, for any purchase of this Brightest Day tie-in, it makes practical sense to also acquire Green Lantern’s Blackest Night.  That way, this full twenty-issue saga can be read together. 

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

Each full-page cover precedes its story.  These primary cover artists are:

  • Issue # 53 (artists: Doug Mahnke & Randy Mayor) – Note: It’s the collection cover.
  • Issue # 54 (artist: Shane Davis; Sandra Hope; & Barbara Ciardo) – image: Atrocitus in the New York City subway.
  • Issue # 55 (artists: Mahnke; Christian Alamy; & Mayor) – image: Hal Jordan, Lobo, & Atrocitus.
  • Issue # 56 (artists: Mahnke & Hi-Fi) – image: Hal Jordan & Sinestro.
  • Issue # 57 (artists: Mahnke & Hi-Fi) – image: Carol Ferris’ Star Sapphire vs. Predator.
  • Issue # 58 (artists: Mahnke, Alamy, & Mayor) – image: the lead characters kneel to Adara.
  • Issue # 59 (artists: Mahnke, Alamy & Mayor) – image: Hal Jordan & the Flash in battle.
  • Issue # 60 (artists: Gary Frank & Nathan Eyring) – image: Hal Jordan vs. a Parallax-possessed Flash.
  • Issue # 61 (artists: Frank & Mayor) – image: Hal Jordan vs. Atrocitus & the ‘Red Lantern’ Butcher.
  • Issue # 62 (artists: Ardian Syaf; Vicente Cifuentes; & Mayor) – image: The Justice League (including Hal Jordan), Atrocitus, Sinestro, & Larfleeze.

Full-page variant covers are collected as a gallery.  Specifically, they consist of:

  • Issue # 53 (artist: Ryan Sook) – image: shared possession of the White Lantern.
  • Issue # 54 (artist Alex Garner) – image: Hal Jordan, the Entities, and the White Lantern.
  • Issue # 55 (artists: Mahnke & Mayor) – image: Lobo.
  • Issue # 56 (artist: Art Germ) – image: Blue Walker.
  • Issue # 57 (artists: Ryan Sook; Fernando Pasarin; Joel Gomez; Mayor; & Carrie Strachan) – image: White Lantern Deadman.
  • Issue # 58 (artist: Gene Ha) – image: Hal Jordan.
  • Issue # 59 (artist: Ha) – image: Hal Jordan, Black Hand, & Iroque (Indigo-1).
  • Issue # 60 (artist: Frank Quitely) – image: Hal Jordan vs. Sinestro.
  • Issue # 61 (artist: Garner) – image: Spectre & Hal Jordan team up vs. the Red Lantern ‘Butcher.’
  • Issue # 62 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; Mayor; & Alex Sinclair) – image: Hal Jordan.

A five-page preview teases Hal Jordan’s next arc: “War of the Green Lanterns,” as the Green Lantern Corps seemingly implode into civil war.  The last page presents multi-paragraph Johns and Mahnke biographies, which are then duplicated on the back inside cover.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      7½ Stars

Categories
Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics DC's Hardcovers & Trade Paperbacks

GREEN LANTERN (HAL JORDAN): BLACKEST NIGHT (DC Comics)

Written by Geoff Johns.

Art by Doug Mahnke; Ed Benes; Marcos Marz; Christian Alamy; Tom Nguyen; Rodney Ramos; Mark Irwin; Luciana Del Negro; Rebecca Buchman; Keith Champagne; Randy Mayor; Gabe Eltaeb; Hi-Fi; Carrie Strachan; & Rob Leigh.

Collection Cover Art by Ivan Reis & Rodolfo Migliari.

SUMMARY:

First released in hardcover by DC Comics in 2011, this 256-page trade paperback compiles 2010-2011’s Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) # 43-52

The Green Lantern Corps/Sinestro Corps feud has seemingly ended, as the universe’s emotional spectrum has split into multiple color Corps factions across the universe:  Green (willpower – i.e. Hal Jordan, John Stewart, and the Green Lantern Corps), Violet (love – i.e. Carol Ferris and the Star Sapphires), Orange (avarice – i.e. Larfleeze); Red (rage – i.e. Atrocitus); Yellow (fear – i.e. Sinestro’s Corps); Blue (hope – i.e. Saint Walker); and the enigmatic Indigo (compassion – i.e. The Indigo Tribe). 

As ominously prophesied by Oa’s Guardians of the Universe, this emotional rivalry of seven colors opens the rise of the evil Black Lantern Corps to swarm and destroy life across the universe.  Though its leader isn’t yet revealed, the Black Lanterns is fronted by now-corrupted Guardians.  Subsequently comprised by an army of the vengeful dead, this faction’s first recruit is Hal Jordan’s old nemesis: Black Hand. 

Hal Jordan’s Green Lantern and Barry Allen’s Flash are bewildered to face the Black Lantern Black Hand, along with one of his new soldiers: the Black Lantern J’onn J’onzz – The Martian Manhunter.  Elsewhere, deep-space battles continue on planets Ysmault, Okaara, Zamaron, and, in the offing, a lone John Stewart on Xanshi.

On battle-ravaged planet Zamaron, Carol Ferris faces off against Sinestro before they must unite against common foes.  Hal Jordan and two Indigo Tribe reinforcements join them as reinforcements.   Forced to abandon Zamaron, Hal, Carol, Sinestro, and others shift to Sinestro’s home planet, Korugar. 

Once there, Mongul challenges Sinestro for command of his self-named Corps.  A Black Lantern from Hal and Sinestro’s shared past haunts them.  More so, Sinestro must fend off another Black Lantern, whose was once the love of his life.  On planet Ysmault, under Hal and Sinestro’s joint command, their team recruits Atrocitus, as they build towards uniting all seven Corps against the Black Lanterns.             

John Stewart’s past war experiences haunt him in his solo showdown against Black Lanterns on planet Xanshi. Elsewhere, Hal and Sinestro’s team further recruits Larfleeze and Saint Walker’s Blue Lantern Corps. 

Shifting back to Earth, Hal’s team expands to include Barry Allen’s Blue Lantern Flash; Yellow Lantern Scarecrow; Red Lantern Mera; Star Sapphire Wonder Woman; Orange Lantern Lex Luthor; Ray Palmer’s Indigo Atom; and the Guardian: Ganthet.  Confiding her love, Carol pleads with Hal not to make a brash decision in battle against the Black Lantern Spectre.  Even Sinestro implores Hal not to take such a risk given its worst possible outcome.     

To thwart a Black Lantern-corrupted Spectre, Hal desperately reunites with the Parallax entity in hopes of rescuing Crispus Allen’s Spectre.  Under Nekron’s command, more Black Lanterns are revealed, including Superman; Green Arrow; Firestorm; Aquaman; Hawkgirl; Hawkman; and the Martian Manhunter.  Hal’s temporary gambit works, as a means of thwarting Nekron’s Black Lanterns evidently becomes possible.      

Converging on Earth, the Black Lantern Corps and the force of planet Xanshi seek to destroy the planet.  Emerging from deep space, John Stewart’s recruited allies (among them: Kilowog and Star Sapphire Fatality) coordinate with Hal’s team for their last stand.  With Earth’s fate at stake, the planet’s defenders must look to the being now possessed by the enigmatic White Lantern. 

Readers are then told a definitive finish awaits them at the end of the primary Blackest Night title.             

Notes: This title is also available digitally.  Neither Kyle Rayner nor Guy Gardner appears in this volume.

REVIEW:

This complicated Blackest Night tie-in conveys varying shades of horrific sci-fi/horror to match the saga’s zombie premise.

Beginning with Issue # 43, Black Hand’s macabre origin (including his Black Lantern recruitment) is one of the most reprehensible tales that Geoff Johns and, by extension, DC Comics, has ever concocted.  Squandering high-quality artwork, this issue shouldn’t be accessible to the under-age 16 crowd.  DC Comics ought to be ashamed for not issuing a parental advisory for the issue’s icky content.  Further, it’s a shocking instance where DC evidently allowed Johns carte blanche on Blackest Night.

Moving past this glaring complaint, Johns subsequently constructs a vast Green Lantern saga meant for the franchise’s then-current fanbase.  Johns, in terms of creative expertise, juggles multiple sub-plots at regular intervals with plentiful depth.  To his credit, he makes such a formidable plotting challenge appear easy – with only occasional flaws. 

For instance, despite Hal, Carol, Sinestro, and various deputy Lanterns expending maximum firepower, Johns doesn’t depict anybody ever needing to recharge.  It’s a significant oversight in logic, but Johns’ ongoing plot twists more than make up the difference.  Even more so, the artistic talents supplying this book’s imaginative visuals appear at the top of their game.

While Green Lantern (Hal Jordan): Blackest Night isn’t a kid-friendly read, it makes an worthwhile argument to consider purchase.  If anything, purchasing it along with Hal Jordan’s subsequent Brightest Day tie-in, makes the most practical sense to grasp a Green Lantern epic spanning twenty issues.  Aside from the gross Issue # 43, this Blackest Night tie-in makes an intriguing read for adult Green Lantern fans.         

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

Brief ongoing summaries of the Green Lantern cast’s involvement in the Blackest Night saga are provided between issues.  Each full-page cover precedes its story.  The primary cover artists are:

  • Issue # 43 (artists: Doug Mahnke; Christian Alamy; & Alex Sinclair) – image: Black Hand.
  • Issue # 44 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Sinclair) – image: Hal Jordan & Barry Allen’s Flash vs. Black Lantern Martian Manhunter.
  • Issue # 45 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Hi-Fi) – image: Carol Ferris/Star Sapphire vs. Sinestro.
  • Issue # 46 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Hi-Fi) – image: Carol Ferris/Star Sapphire, Hal Jordan, & Sinestro.
  • Issue # 47 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Hi-Fi) – image: Hal Jordan & Sinestro vs. Black Lantern Abin Sur.
  • Issue # 48 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Hi-Fi) – image: Saint Walker & the Blue Lantern Corps vs. Yellow Lanterns.
  • Issue # 49 (artists: Ed Benes & Hi-Fi) – image: John Stewart escaping a mound of skeletons.
  • Issue # 50 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Pete Pantazis) – image: Hal Jordan’s Parallax.
  • Issue # 51 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Hi-Fi) – image: Seven different Lanterns’ team-up vs. a Black Lantern.
  • Issue # 52 (artists: Mahnke; Alamy; & Randy Mayor) – image: White Lantern Sinestro.

With each variant cover in a full-page, format, the gallery consists of:

  • Issue # 43 (artists: Eddy Barrows & Nei Ruffino) – image: Hal Jordan vs. Black Hand.
  • Issue # 44 (artists: Phillip Tan; Jonathan Glapion; & Ruffino) – image: the Guardians under attack. 
  • Issue # 45 (artists: Francis Manapul & Brian Buccellato) – image: Carol Ferris/Star Sapphire.
  • Issue # 46 (artists: Andy Kubert & Sinclair) – image: Hal Jordan & Sinestro vs. Yellow Lantern Mongul.
  • Issue # 47 (artists: Benes & Ruffino) – image: Iroque (Indigo-1).
  • Issue # 48 (artists: Rags Morales & Ruffino) – image: Saint Walker.
  • Issue # 49 (artists: Rodolfo Migliari) – image: sniper John Stewart vs. Black Lanterns.
  • Issue # 50 (artists: Jim Lee; Scott Williams; & Sinclair) – image: Seven Lanterns recharge.
  • Issue # 51 (artist: Greg Horn) – image: Yellow Lantern Scarecrow.
  • Issue # 52 (artists: Shane Davis; Sandra Hope & Barbara Ciardo) – image: White Lantern Sinestro.

With art by Joe Prado, a gallery of Deputy Lantern profiles consist of:

  • Red Lantern Mera (1/2 page).
  • Orange Lantern Lex Luthor (1/2 page).
  • Sinestro Corps Scarecrow (1/2 page).
  • Barry Allen’s Blue Lantern Flash (1/2 page).
  • Ray Palmer’s Indigo Lantern Flash (1/2 page).
  • Wonder Woman’s Star Saphhire (1/2 page).

Shifting to full-page portraits, the profile gallery also includes

  • Black Lantern Aquaman (artists: Ethan Van Sciver & Sinclair).
  • Black Lantern Batman (artist: Prado).
  • Black Lantern Firestorm (artists: Van Sciver & Sinclair).
  • Black Lantern Hal Jordan (artist: Prado).
  • Black Lantern Martian Manhunter (artists: Van Sciver & Sinclair).
  • Black Lantern Superman (artist: Prado).

The last page presents multi-paragraph biographies for Geoff Johns and Doug Mahnke.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      8 Stars

Categories
Books & Novels Fantasy, Horror, & Science Fiction General Fiction History & Biographies (Books) Mystery & Suspense

THE TERROR

Written by Dan Simmons

SUMMARY:

First published by Little, Brown and Company, in 2007, this 770-page hardcover imagines a horrific ‘what if’ as to a real-life, unsolved nautical mystery.  Specifically, The Terror explores the catastrophic fate of the British Navy’s 1845 Arctic expedition led by Captain Sir John Franklin. 

With two reliable and newly reinforced vessels (the HMS Erebus under Franklin’s command and Captain Francis R.M. Crozier’s HMS Terror), the Franklin Expedition had been ordered to locate and explore a purported Northwest Passage from Canada’s North Pole region to Asia.  Including its seasoned officers, the two vessels’ combined crew would be comprised of nearly 130 men.  Setting sail from England, these vessels would be well-stocked with supplies (including a horde of hastily tinned foods) and resources to seemingly answer all likely contingencies.

According to history, only two Franklin Expedition messages (one being an update of the other) were ever found by a multitude of subsequent search-and-rescue parties.  Hence, the British Navy could never confirm Franklin’s improvised deviations off his expedition’s intended route to finally locate the missing ships. 

In reality, the signed messages revealed that both vessels had been trapped by ice in close proximity to one another some thirty miles from King William Land/King William Island’s coast for eighteen months.  Months after Franklin’s death in 1847, both ships were evidently abandoned to attempt a grueling trudge across hundreds of miles of frozen sea and terrain in hopes of eventual rescue – as of late April 1848.  According to various historical accounts and present-day science/archaeology, there were no survivors from the Franklin Expedition.         

Per Simmons’ novel, after several months of frozen gridlock, Franklin contemplates his officers’ pendulum-like assessments of their dire predicament.  He scoffs at Crozier’s suggestion of abandoning the bigger HMS Erebus, despite its enhanced frame slowly buckling under constant strain.  Instead of immediately consolidating crews aboard the HMS Terror to wait out a possible escape, Franklin chooses a different alternative. 

Under Lt. Graham Gore’s command, a small team is sent afoot to search for leads (open water) and deposit the first of only two messages the Franklin Expedition would ever leave of its whereabouts.  Returning to the ships, Gore’s team is unexpectedly attacked by a raging behemoth resembling a polar bear.  An enigmatic clue to this ghostly creature’s origin may be a young Esquimaux (Inuit) woman dubbed ‘Lady Silence,’ due to her severed tongue.

Franklin’s subsequent strategy to kill the supposed bear (in the crew’s ironic slang, nicknamed ‘The Terror’) ends in a bloody disaster.  Now sharing command, Crozier and Commander/Captain James Fitzjames must keep their crews alive by all humane means necessary. 

Not only is a bloodthirsty leviathan (aka ‘The Tuunbaq’) stalking the stranded vessels, but other lethal factors become inevitable: hypothermia, scurvy, botulism, lead poisoning, and, worst of all, a dwindling food supply.  Left no other viable option, Crozier and Fitzjames desperately lead their crews hiking across King William Land/King William Island’s frozen tundra for hundreds of miles in hopes of an eventual escape or rescue by river.    

In the grueling months to come, the depleted survivors continue falling to tragedy and misfortune.  Crozier and others deduce another vile monster lurking among them is stirring up imminent mutiny, including threats of cannibalism.  Forced to split his remaining crewmen into factions seeking their own fates, Crozier knows that time is fast running out to escape the Arctic Circle’s wrath. For them, hell has already frozen over. 

Yet, an unexpected glimmer of hope may at last disclose the predatory Tuunbaq’s motive for feasting on mortal victims.          

Notes: The novel has been released in multiple formats, including paperback, audiobook, and digitally.  Simmons’ novel was published prior to the real-life discoveries of the HMS Erebus (in 2014) and, subsequently, the HMS Terror (in 2016).  The underwater wrecks were found approximately 100 kilometers (or roughly 62 miles) apart. 

AMC, in 2018, released a ten-episode, same-named mini-series of the novel co-starring Jared Harris and Ciarán Hinds.  This TV adaptation serves as the first season of AMC’s The Terror horror anthology series.

REVIEW:

Let it first be reiterated that, given its bleak and macabre nature, The Terror is a mature audiences read only.  Dan Simmons’s nasty fantasy-horror doubles as a historical fiction masterpiece indulging an excess of grisly details.  With many fully developed supporting characters and individual sub-plots, readers are getting the dense literary equivalent of a director’s cut/extended version – be forewarned.    

Rather than preparing an exhaustive analysis, I’m going to instead discuss some key areas:    

  • No matter their factual inaccuracies, Simmons’ depictions of historical figures (i.e. Franklin, Crozier, John Irving, Dr. Goodsir, Graham Gore, Lady Jane Franklin, and Sophia Cracroft, among others) effectively co-exist with his own fictional creations in this alternate reality. Despite the supernatural presence of an unstoppable Star Wars Wampa-like monster and Crozier’s recurring psychic dreams, this component makes for a considerable creative asset.     
  • The intricately detailed narrative conveyed in sixty-six chapters (through the perspectives of rotating characters) isn’t flawless.  At least one hundred pages could have been omitted without losing a fraction of this epic’s gruesome substance.  Simmons, in retrospect, should have prioritized better pacing over pitching innumerable ghoulish twists.      
  • Readers (especially the more squeamish) will feel as though they’re on-the-scene observers.  It’s a nod to Simmons’ undeniable literary talents.  Case in point: His made-up timeline painstakingly overrides common sense as to why the expedition should have likely perished from harsh natural elements, let alone starvation – long before the novel’s actual climax.  Note: Nearly three hundred pages take place after the real-life expedition’s last known correspondence. 
  • Simmons’ ability to defy common sense doesn’t always work. Even if such details are indeed historically accurate, readers may be bewildered by the two vessels’ vast cargo holds, including room for multiple smaller boats, sleds, and absurdities in excessive personal effects.  Case in point: storage of an aristocratic Franklin’s vast costume collection on an exploration mission just seems an eye-rolling implausibility. 
  • The same applies far worse later when the dwindling crewmen are ‘man-hauling’ enormously heavy yet unnecessary objects (i.e. Crozier’s desk) for months across countless miles of frigid tundra.  Why no one suggests packing lightly at the outset for a far more expedient (and possibly less suicidal) trek across the island isn’t explained.
  • Necessary compensation is supplied by a wealth of character depth Simmons’ depictions of Crozier, Goodsir, Irving, Blanky, Gore, Lady Silence, Franklin, Bridgens, and even the antagonists.  Repulsive details/inferences (including cannibalism, sodomy, disemboweling/mutilation, and some crude refences to female anatomy), however, can’t be ignored.  Instead, they become a nauseating counterbalance to such well-constructed characters.             

What might give one further pause, however, is the author’s creative exploitation – reminiscent of The Perfect Storm (both Sebastian Junger’s 1997 novel and its 2000 movie adaptation).  Specifically, is Simmons profiteering off historical tragedy?  With the Franklin Expedition’s grim fate transformed into a gruesome fantasy, readers inevitably face a coin toss.  One side offers a brilliantly speculative though excessive take on historical fiction.  The flip side implies that Simmons has taken advantage of this expedition’s misfortune by concocting it into mass fantasy-horror. 

In spite of these qualms, The Terror is ultimately a potent read.  It is, however, bogged down by an overload of wince-inducing plot elements.  Additionally, several overextended sequences (i.e. Thomas Blanky’s first and seemingly endless monster escape; the preposterous costume ball, etc.) push credibility much further than necessary.  Before accepting the challenge of reading The Terror, it’s advisable to stock up on fortitude to absorb this novel’s literally blood-chilling narrative.  

If The Terror is the kind of epic nightmare that intrigues you, then Simmons will surpass your money’s worth.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

There’s a double-page of black-and-white maps detailing Simmons’ versions of the Franklin Expedition’s Northwest Passage route and of King William Land/Island.  A Northwest Passage map also appears in a double-page format for the front and black inside covers.  Simmons’s dedication infers his creative inspiration was taken from the 1951 sci-fi/horror film, The Thing From Another World (aka the original cinematic Thing).  A foretelling 1851 Moby Dick quotation by Herman Melville is included.  

Simmons’ three-page acknowledgements section reveals his bibliographical sources.  Among them is an 1845 letter from the Expedition’s real Dr. Harry D.S. Goodsir to a relative.  The last page provides a paragraph-long biography on Simmons. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                         8½ Stars