Free of the demon blood that's coursed through his veins for years, free of the baggage of all his past misdeeds since he created a doppelgänger of himself to be touted off to Hell, Constantine is staying on the straight and narrow, doing good deeds whenever he can and growing closer to his friends. In Ennis' run, Constantine had made an effort to have a "normal" life; in Paul Jenkins run, he's making an effort to lead a "good" life. But misfortune has a way of catching up to ole' John.
The art in all but one story in this volume is by Sean Phillips, who just gets stronger and stronger with each issue. Fair warning: there are spoilers ahead...
Multi-parters are fun, but I really enjoy single issue stories too. It harkens back to the earliest days of Hellblazer, and this volume opens with a nice chunk of them.
In "Nature of the Beast", Constantine meets an old man in the woods (possibly God? There's some strong hints) who reads his Tarot cards and tells our man two fables, metaphors for Constantine as he used to be, and as he currently is. Constantine decides not to hear the old man's fable about what he WILL be, and good thing.
In "Walking the Dog", Constantine's downstairs neighbor, a gigantic but dull-witted fellow called Straff, needs help with his doddering mother, and this leads Constantine to an encounter with the ghost of a poor abused dog who had lived in the unit previously.
"Punkin' Up the Great Outdoors" feels like set-up for future stories, as Constantine, on what seems like a ill-thought-out lark, takes his friends to Abaton (the mythological place he gained access to via Jack of the Green in the previous volume). For one old flame, the results are tragic.
"Sins of the Fathers" is the 100th issue of Hellblazer, and... wow, man. Just, wow. Constantine lapses into a mysterious coma, and in a half-dead fugue, he's led by the First of the Fallen into a revelatory conversation with his damned-to-Hell father. Constantine learns some ugly truths about his mother's death, and about his father's own sexual depravities, and it ends with Constantine forgiving his father, but also understanding that Hell is where the old man belongs. It also establishes a different kind of rapport between Constantine and the First, as the Devil doesn't seem to be interested in Constantine's soul anymore as much as he is in just making him miserable. It's a turning point in their long-running animosity. This is just an amazing issue, one of the very best single issues of Hellblazer, and after reading it I actually had to stop for a while to let it linger in my mind.
The next story, "Football: It's a Funny Old Game" is a bit of a let-down after the brilliance of the 100th issue. Featuring rather unappealing fill-in art by Al Davison, Constantine bluffs a havoc demon into not causing a murderous riot at a football match. Eh.
In the 3-part "Difficult Beginnings", Constantine has been feeling disconnected and out of step with reality since sacrificing all his evil bits to save Syder, Astra, and the other unjustly damned children. He's lost his mojo. An I-Ching reading sends him on a path in search of his darkness, first to the Ravenscar mental asylum, then to the doorstep of an evil murderer who'd gotten away with his crimes for years, and finally to Hell. In Hell, Constantine encounters his doppelgänger, Demon Constantine, who is interestingly enough doing quite well for himself albeit looking pretty nasty. The Demon Constantine is wicked enough to know what Good Constantine has to do to regain his wicked mojo...
Did I mention spoilers up above?
Constantine finds Ellie, still hidden from the First of the Fallen due to the sigils Constantine had etched her with all those years ago. Constantine seduces her-- our man seduces a demon, how you like that-- and regains all the aspects of his personality he had lost. But when Ellie realizes she's been duped, he's also made a very serious enemy of a former ally. She can't kill him, because to do so would cause the sigil that protects her to fade away, but there's little doubt it ain't over.
"A Taste of Heaven"-- are you familiar with that story about Samuel Taylor Coleridge writing Kubla Khan while whacked out on opium, only he never finished it because the so-called "person from Porlock" interrupted him and pulled him out of his trance? What if I told you that angels were whispering in Coleridge's ear the whole time, and the interrupting opium dealer was a distant ancestor of our man John Constantine? You'd believe that, wouldn't you? After all, it wouldn't be a bit surprising.
The volume ends with an uncharacteristically sweet two part story; Constantine stumbles across a sort of ghost house no one else can see, inhabited by the spirit of a heartbroken WWII soldier, and helps the bereaved ghost find some semblance of peace. It's a nicely melancholy end to "In the Line of Fire".
At this point in his run, Paul Jenkins is just on fire with great stories and great ideas, and his ranking in my list of favorite Hellblazer writers is skyrocketing.