Cowboy/Ninja/Viking versus Gladiator/Pirate/Oceanographer
I don't exactly know where this novel came from, but it is the funniest, smartest, and most entertaining graphic novel I've read this year, (and I don't mean calendar year, seeing as how it's only early January; I mean full year).
The setup is great. Rogue neuro-behavioral psychiatrists tried to create super warrior assassins by using regression therapies and pharmacological enhancements, (and experimental anti-anxiety shampoo), on people with multiple personality disorder. The idea was to draw out the latent skills represented by the various personalities. It was "an utter failure", except for Duncan, the cowboy-ninja-viking. Now, Dr. Ghislain, the guy behind the experiment, needs Duncan to track down the other "triplets", all of whom have become violent loonies and have been collected by an insane villain for a nefarious purpose. That's just the tip of the iceberg, but you get the basic idea.
The plot is manic and complicated. There are multiple subplots. There are frequent shifts in time sequence and location. It's all very deep state and conspiratorial. It is also consistently and thoroughly deadpan funny. Ghislain is dry as dust funny. Duncan is unpredictably and shape-shiftingly funny. Every character is a wiseguy and over the top is the norm. All of the women characters are smart and no-nonsense, and get some of the best lines. Humor is broad, or edgy, or consists of clever wordplay and unexpected throwaway lines. Ultimately, you get both a straight-faced insider parody and an upfront but also slightly tongue in cheek adventure. How cool is that?
The visuals also really work. It's mostly line drawings and ink with broad block color washes, but it's always clear who's doing what and the overall effect is kinetic and edgy, which serves the story and the storytelling well. Since lots of characters have three personalities that talk to each other, the characters are drawn with speech balloons that have little icons signaling which personality is speaking, (for our hero that's a revolver, a katana, and a broadaxe). That's both amusing and helpful.
This deluxe edition collects all 10 issues of the comic, the bonus stuff from other collections, and some new material. It purports to include everything ever produced or written in the series, ever. I have no idea if that's true, but there's certainly quite enough.
I have to admit that I almost skipped this because the whole cowboy-ninja-viking thing seemed a little precious and felt like maybe a one-note joke. (I sort of felt that way about "Buckaroo Banzai", even though I love it.) I am very glad I paused and reconsidered because this was fresh, funny, unpredictable and just remarkably well conceived and well executed. I didn't just enjoy this book, I'm now a fan.
(Please note that I received a free advance will-self-destruct-in-x-days Adobe Digital copy of this book without a review requirement, or any influence regarding review content should I choose to post a review. Apart from that I have no connection at all to either the author or the publisher of this book.)