| Boston Blackie | ||||||||
| Stefan Petrucha, Artwork by Kirk Van Wormer | ||||||||
| Moonstone Noir, 48 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Stefan Petrucha and Kirk Van Wormer's Boston Blackie
returns to the roots Jack Boyle started, bringing Blackie back to the other side of the line, often
teetering on the jagged edge of legal. In parts crook, opium-eater, crusader, and always with a code of ethics that makes him a criminal
you can root for. It seems the darker half of Blackie is doing battle with the moral half in this very noir tale. Is he responsible for a
horrifying homicide committed years before? Could the influence of drugs make him go against everything he believes? Finding the truth
may free him -- or it could tear him apart.
Blackie's not the only one interested in getting to the bottom of this; the cops and robbers have their own theories. Neither bodes well
for the remorseful Blackie.
Pulp fans will delight in the return to crime stories of the past. Petrucha's terse and hard-boiled prose harkens back to the tough guys
of the golden age of radio. "Broadway Is My Beat," "The Shadow," and "Gangbusters" would be perfectly in-synch with this reincarnation of
Blackie. This is a time when dames are dames, coppers are coppers, and no one ever really wins completely. The story is perfectly matched
by the black-and-white inking of Van Wormer, who captures the flavour of the genre in two dashing dimensions.
Keep your peepers peeled while you follow Boston Blackie's struggle to find the truth at the heart of this latest mystery. Told in cryptic
and tight-lipped style, the graphic novel doesn't just lay the answers out in front of you. True, part of this is due to some minor inking mistakes
that attribute dialogue incorrectly, but primarily it's because you, the reader, have to do some work of your own to unravel the tangle
of lies and half-truths. Not to mention the background story that weaves through the artwork, adding depth to the spoken narrative.
If I can't have Detective Danny Clover out pounding the streets of Manhattan, then Boston Blackie is a ray of hope for getting that
atmosphere back into crime fiction. Maybe Moonstone Noir came bring back that special breed of questionable hero and tense drama that
should never have been abandoned. Do that and they'll have loyal readers for life.
In between reviews, articles, and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction, horror, dark realism, and humour. DARKERS, her first novel, was published in August 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She is a contributing editor at SF Site and for BLACK GATE magazine. Lisa has also written for BOOKPAGE, PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, Science Fiction Weekly, and SCIENCE FICTION CHRONICLE. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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