Hitting up the annual big used book sale for the county libraries today! Which means there'll probably be a lot of vaguely disappointed reviews of novels in the coming months! Hopefully I'll find at least a couple of interesting non-fiction books. In the meantime, here's the two first issues.
Bronze Faces #1, by Shobo and Shof (writers), Alexandre Tefenkgi (artist), Lee Loughridge (colorist), Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou (letterer) - Very good, looking professional and stylish.
We've got Timi, Sango, and Gbonka (also called "Rose" in a couple of scenes.) Timi's father was an artist, sculptor of bronzes especially, who took in Sango and Gbonka under circumstances not entirely revealed yet, although it sounds like Sango's father is dead, and Gbonka's parents might not have been well off.
When Timi's father dies, all his works are sold to a British museum to pay off his debts. The three kids, now young adults, run into each other at an exhibition, catch up a little (and argue a little, as was apparently common.) Then Sango argues they should steal the art back. Timi's in, Gbonka's not initially, but saves their butts from a guard. Timi happened to grab a box that contains a list of every Benin Bronze taken from Nigeria, and their current locations, and the trio agree they're going to take them all back.
Shobo and Shof lay a lot out in this issue. The basic concept behind the story, these three deciding to retrieve cultural treasures, many taken under, shall we say, questionable circumstances. But also what each of them are doing currently, their financial situations, greater aspirations, and especially the dynamics between them. Timi's younger, and each of the girls seems to look after him in their own way, but Sango and Gbonka don't get along at all.
Sango seems to act on impulses and holds little back, while Gbonka is more cautious and thinking about consequences. Around each other they seem to bring out the knives in different ways. Sango mocks Gbonka's desire to become a senator or dismisses her from a discussion she calls a 'family matter.' Gbonka needles Sango about turning her back on her country, and questions her motives on everything. Tefenkgi often draws them talking without looking at each other. Backs turned or looking opposite directions, or we can only see the person speaking, so we don't see the reaction of the other. They both seem comfortable being close to Timi, supporting him or hanging off him, but they don't interact with each other that way.

And Timi clearly feels how he's caught in the middle and gets frustrated with it, but doesn't seem able to really stop it. I get a real sense he's kind of passive, especially as one of his first scenes as an adult is him surrounded by white guys making various sales pitches while he stands there looking, pleasantly neutral? Not saying anything, not leaning towards anyone, but not away from anyone, either.
We can see how their different skills could mesh beautifully for something like this, but also how easily they could self-destruct.
Mine is a Long, Lonesome Grave #1, by Justin Jordan (writer), Chris Shehan (artist), Alessandro Santoro (colorist), Micah Myers (letterer) - Looking completely deranged, fairly concerning.
Harley's out of prison and returning home. Not for long; just to dig up some money (and guns) he buried and to give the cash to his daughter, who wants nothing to do with him. Because he killed her mother, his wife. Although the circumstances are thus far vague, and the way Shehan draws the glimpses we get, mostly the victim on the ground bleeding from a gut wound, trying to tell Harley something, I suspect everything's not as it seems.
Either way, he kept the guns, which might be good, because Harley was in town longer than someone wanted him to be, and he gets cursed. Either he kills the one responsible in seven days, or he dies. He says there's only one person who could do it, but kills the schmoe he thinks laid the item/totem/whatever for the curse as a message. The whole scene leading up to the killing, as Jordan has Harley explain what he's about to do, and Shehan draws several close-ups on Harley's face, Santoro seems to keep coloring the pupils larger and darker, until, combined with how narrowed they are, Harley's eyes are basically voids. Contrasts nicely with the shots of his victim's eyes, which are wide and terrified, the whites clearly visible. At least, until they're obstructed.
There's a lot of ways this could play out. I half-suspect it was Harley's daughter that set the curse, even if her mother's side is the ones that know about that kind of stuff, and they apparently don't believe she's one of them. But I only have Harley's word on how many people could do this, and he's been in prison over a decade. Things change. Granted, it wouldn't be much tension if it was her, because I'm pretty sure Harley would just let himself die then. But if he doesn't figure that out until well into the bloody swath he clearly intends to cut, it may be too late to keep someone from trying for revenge by targeting his daughter.
After one issue, this doesn't interest me nearly as much as
Bronze Faces. Probably because it seems like it's treading such familiar ground, and so far, it hasn't done anything particularly creative. But maybe with the stage set, issue 2 will do a little more to get my attention.