I'm still trying to put the pieces together on this story, but being issue #1 I'm sure that there is so much more to come and this will all make sense. Still, never fear because at the end of the comic is a section that breaks down the characters introduced and their roles in the story with more details on who they are. Phew.
I'm a huge World War II buff, and the plot of this comic is (so far) set in 1945 Europe. There's already a time travel element, it appears based on illustrations that Earth went through an apocalypse, so I'm excited to see how this is going to shape up.
This is William Gibson's first ever comic book. At the end of this issue he talks about the concept of the "Third Man" in writing. This was a term coined by William S. Burroughs. The literary concept of third man is the nameless, faceless 'story teller' that gets formed when 2 authors collaborate on a story. In this case Archangel was created by William Gibson and Michael St John Smith (illustrations by Butch Guice). Neither Michael nor William originally intended for this story to become a comic, but it just happened to get shaped that way, a fact that Gibson discusses in an essay at the end of this issue. I'm glad it did as the supernatural element with a historical fiction twist comes out beautifully in this setting. I've already called Tribe Comics in Austin to put me on the list for more of these issues.