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Badlands

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Connie Bremen’s got a problem. Actually, he’s got plenty of ‘ an oil baron he’s on the wrong side of; the boss’ daughter who wants to be under him; the FBI and the CIA who want to talk to him; and how to get out of having President Kennedy in his rifle scope’s sights. Steven Grant and Vince Giarrano’ BADLANDS returns, sporting an all-new introduction by Jonathan Vankin (CONSPIRACIES, COVER-UPS AND CRIMES [Dell Books]), a new afterword, produced especially for this edition by the author, and a new cover by award-winning graphic designer Brian Wood.

144 pages, Paperback

First published May 11, 1993

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About the author

Steven Grant

794 books23 followers
Steven Grant is an American comic book writer best known for his 1985–1986 Marvel Comics mini-series The Punisher with artist Mike Zeck and for his creator-owned character Whisper.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_...

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5 stars
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23 (28%)
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30 (36%)
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17 (20%)
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Jesse Baggs.
710 reviews
October 7, 2025
Disgusting but provided some entertainment. I thought this was a newer graphic novel but it’s actually from the early 90s and thus a little gonzo. I mean, there are a lot of wild and crazy comics these days, but that’s de rigueur. Creating a perverted historical fiction at the dawn of Image Comics-dominance takes an impressive amount of dedication, like a vow of poverty—of for these comic creators, a vow of chastity. This revisionist take on the JFK assassination was still created for the superhero crowd, so there’s plenty of sex and ultraviolence. There’s also a seventeen-year-old nympho and a dollop of homophobia, so it’s morally depraved. But is it more engaging than a superhero book from the 90s? Well …
Profile Image for Henry.
174 reviews7 followers
February 1, 2015
A fictional account of events for some of the imagined fringe players of the JFK assassination, leading up to and following from November 1963.

Maybe I take such things too seriously, but let us face that this still remains an event where no satisfactory conclusion has been brought to the shameful assassination. I hope most people accept there was more than one shooter, and as such so many unacceptable questions unresolved. But let us accept that such things still allow for fictional imaginations to revolve around the events.

I found no depth to characters, the idea that such weasels would have any role in this co-ordinated assassination sustaining too much disbelief, the repeated pointless nudity of teenage nymphomaniacs repugnant, and nothing to enjoy, even if one accepts the bad taste and the implausibility.
412 reviews7 followers
February 28, 2009

I like the surprise ending..as Jonathan Vankin points out, there is
very little fiction written about the JFK assassination. This graphic novel tells a plausible version (it is around the edges of the main story).

Like Don Delillo's 'Libra' and James Ellroy's 'American Tabloid,' it
raises questions about what kind of a country we really are. (I started
reading Ellroy's later novel about the JFK assassination a few years
ago and put it down because it was so violent and sexually yucky..
not that I am against kinkiness...being a comic, 'Badlands' is slightly
kinky...but Ellroy's second novel on the JFK murder was sexually ugly)
Profile Image for Adam.
Author 46 books51 followers
August 16, 2007
This is one of my all-time favorite comics. Written by Steven Grant and drawn by Vince Giarrano, Badlands imagines a possible scenario leading up to the assassination of President Kennedy. In the grand tradition of crime fiction, it features a main character who can't seem to make a good decision, along with corrupt oil men, a nymphomaniac daughter, and a scary, scary hired killer. The really scary part, of course, is just how plausible it all seems.
261 reviews2 followers
March 29, 2018
Bit of a sucker for anything relating to JFK Assassination but found this disappointing. Illustrations were only ordinary and the story was just a bit too far fetched (yeah, I know, a graphic novel). At least it's a primer for 'Reclaiming History' - Vincent Bugliosi's 1600 page door stopper - which arrived the other day.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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