I was reading a collection of of Mike Deodato’s Wonder Woman written by William Messner-Loebs and this is the closest thing I could find to that on Goodreads.
I read "Power Couple" by Charles Soule and Tony S. Daniel along with this and the comparison between the two is a pretty good example of cultural evolution/imaginative decay between the 90's and the teens.
In The Struggle Diana uncovers some creepy mysteries about her family and argues with her mum on Themyscria. Due to family and intra-Amazon drama, Diana has to do a contest thing to keep the mantle of 'Wonder Woman' and loses to another Amazon called Artemis who is the more violent and militaristic kind of amazon, a little more reminiscent of the original myths. So now Artimis is running around being a hyper-violent Wonder Woman with a bow and arrow.
So they both go back to Boston together and get involved in an escalating war between two crime lords who each keep pulling in ever more powerful metahuman badasses to screw each other over which finally ends up with one calling the Joker from Gothan and the other one being succeeded by his magical consigliere who turns into a demon. So far, so comics.
Aaand Power Couple is about Superman and Wonder Woman dating.
Soule and Daniel have few or no new ideas. They use old ideas from previous series and 'callbacks' to old stories presented in a reasonably 'not bad' way. Not bad here not meaning 'good', but simply 'less mistakes'.
Deotato and Messner-Loebs Wonder Woman, which I'm just going to call 'The Challenge' after its main arc, has many many many more mistakes than Soule, but it’s still better.
Deodatos work is like a spastic hieroglyph of mad 90's womanforms. Limbs are huge and long, backs are curved. Hair is so big it becomes the sky. Artemis's hair is like an extra character in the story and wraps around her in endless spiralling curves. His art is at its best when he loses hold on reality and lets it become its own thing. There's not much chance of page control or panel control, we get a common situation when the hyper-stylised heroine bursts out of her panel and effectively forms the backdrop and meta-structure to a whole page.
Men are mad and nuggety, throbbing and almost like ripe bursting fruits of muscle, tense under the rippling waves of their own gristle, bursting and spitting and straining and twitching, bound like bombs that won't explode.
Deodato's Wonder Woman ends up dressing in some kind of insane 90's getup, I think it’s some kind of pleather bondage bra with a cool blue domino jacket over it and what looks like lycra bike shorts with stars on them. She looks fucking mental but everything in here looks fucking mental.
I quite like this, it's atavistic and deranged but it has a powerful individual self although it never works perfectly.
And the art in Power Couple is just very good. There are no mistakes. This guy certainly knows how to draw a human. High grade sheen. Nothing really fascinated or interested me about the page or the way he used it.
The characters in Power Couple sound more like real people, that is, they speak in a less operatic and declamatory way. They are still starchy and on the nose compared to real people. It still feels a lot more like modern television writing, or writers room writing or MA writing. Here’s people discussing their own emotions, here’s their neat awareness and resolution of those feelings, here's a complex mishmash of psychosexual stuff neatly bound with a bow on it, Soules story feels more internally focused, less about things, more about the internal world. But it’s the internal world of modern bourgeoisie Americans, so it’s still not that interesting.
Dialogue in The Challenge is more agonistic, emotional, declamatory. Power couple is more collegial. people worry and internalise. In The Challenge people talk and react like they are in a telenovela, in Power Couple it’s like they are in a more bourgeois drama. The Challenge is intermittently funny, which is more than can be said for most comics
Diodato has wonder woman beat the joker after visiting the god pan in a dream state and learning his mad song, and this isn't brilliantly presented and would have been better done by a different or more finely tuned creative team, but it’s still a really cool idea, and a fresher, newer idea than anything that happens in Power Couple.
Power couple has doomsday showing up as a kind of negative zone ghost, but not doing much, Zod showing up from the negative zone, and being beaten, .. that’s it, that's all I can remember. Wait, Superman and Wonder Woman create a nuclear explosion by cutting an atom with a magic sword, that was good. Soule has Superman getting angry with the god Apollo like a bro, then being blasted by Apollo's sun powers, making him super-charged, which is interesting.
And then he deals with being super-charged by flying off to sit on the moon to have a sad conversation with batman about his relationship. He describes having flown around the world a bunch of times just to burn off the extra energy.
And that tells the difference between the rhythm and style of the two stories. If Deodato was telling that story we would have seen superman bombing it around the world, Soule cuts is straight to the conversation after.
There is much more graphic and visual experimentation in The Struggle., though it’s not necessarily that well done or well-integrated with the story, its is still there and it is vivid, the artist will try twenty new things and many will not work, or not work as expected, while the power couple artist will try maybe one new or unexpected thing and the rest of the time will use known techniques with a higher level of presentational skill.
And again, as usual, we have to choose between a 'positive' depiction of women - heroic, stable, knowing, RATIONAL and dull, and an exciting depiction of women, heroic, unstable, janky, irrational, weird, atavistic and original. Between sexy in a boring way and sexy in a possibly creepy, possibly stupid but more fun way.
Obviously I prefer the bonkers 90's brainmess to millennial competence, to the surprise of no-one.