[Read as single issues]
Look what happens, Matt. You go to China for a few days to defeat the Hand and save your protegé from The Beast, and Wilson Fisk manages to become mayor of New York City. This is why superheroes aren’t allowed vacations – Spider-Man went to the Negative Zone and we ended up with Jonah Jameson as mayor, did no one learn? But wait, who’s his deputy mayor? Matt Murdock? Oh boy.
I’m not sure how Charles Soule manages to make legal drama so engaging, but after the Supreme arc and his She-Hulk run, I really shouldn’t be surprised any more. This arc is a battle of wits as Kingp- sorry, Mayor Fisk, tries to outmaneuver Matt so that he’s as ineffective as possible in his office as deputy mayor. Their verbal sparring is almost as much fun as a proper superhero bust-up, and when Matt finally outmaneuvers him, it’s just as sweet.
Of course, there’s still some Daredevil stuff going on too. Muse returns, as does Blindspot, as Mayor Fisk’s new superhero initiative tries to imprison most of the street level vigilantes in Manhattan. This arc really gets the feel of the New York streets that Soule hasn’t gotten before by roping in all of the characters you’d expect to be affected by this in a very natural way. If we ever get another Defenders book, I want Soule to write it after this arc.
This all culminates in the big issue 600, which feels both super important to Daredevil as a whole and to Soule’s run – he doesn’t let this anniversary issue derail his story in the slightest, instead rolling with the punches to give you a cliffhanger ending that reshapes Matt’s work, maybe not to the extent that #500 did before it, but it’s pretty damn close.
Stefano Gandini takes the reins on art for the first three issues; his style’s a bit more simplistic than the previous artists for the book, and his faces can be a bit plain, but his superhero choreography is great. Meanwhile Ron Garney returns for issues 598-600 with his usual flair. I’m surprised, I would have thought Garney would have jumped ship by now, since he doesn’t tend to stick around this long on books, and yet here he is.
Mayor Fisk is a big turning point in Matt’s life, not just for him but for Daredevil as well. It’s a well thought out story that capitalizes on Soule’s legal strengths to give you a story on par with Supreme – it’s one part office drama and one part superheroes, but it’s all great.