Re-read this in memory of Bernie Mireault. God rest his soul.
I certainly do appreciate this book a lot more now than I did as a teenager. I got a copy of this right after I had finished reading Grendel: Devil's Legacy and didn't quite settle into the tonal shift of 80s cyberpunk to a more late 70s aesthetic; reminiscent of Taxi Driver (1976) as Brain Lee Sung falls into Paul Schrader's archetype of God's Lonely Man (or in this case, the Devil's).
And now that I've read this again, a little older and a little wiser, I can properly appreciate the direction this story took. And the amazing, subtle art direction Mireault take this book into.
This book can still be a bit tricky to read however, with its three methods of narration: Brian's notes, Brain & Grendel's inner thoughts, and the comic itself. It pays to re-read groups of pages here and there, focusing on one of the narratives. Other times, its best to follow all three to get into the flow of the story.
Apart from the tricky narrative, again I have to say the art in this book is great. Mireault was a very good artist, and deserves so much better than fading into obscurity and falling into poverty. I will certainly be trying to look into his other works in the near future, now that I've finished revisiting this book.