“You ain’t got that Texas blood.” Different country, different rules.
“The American Dream’s bastard brother: Texas."
“Well”--the most common response of Sheriff Joe Bob Coates to anything.
Sheriff Joe Bob just turned 70; he lives in Ambrose County, Texas; he’s likable, aw shucks, tryin’ to quit smokin,’ has a good relationship with his wife. He don’t say much. Just tryin’ t’ do his job.
Randy Terrill used to live there but he got out, started his life over again in California, here I come. But he goes back when he finds out his brother Travis is dead.
Then Randy finds out from the Sheriff that Travis was actually killed. So the Sheriff has a murder case on his hands, and Randy would seem to suddenly be spiraling right back to become the guy he was when he lived there. Bad Randy. It’s in the blood, I guess. Then, there’s a lot of other Texas blood that gets spilled.
This is the first volume of what promises to be a terrific crime comics series in the tradition of Ed Brubaker and Sean Phillips, such as their Pulp (also western) comic. And there’s good reason for mentioning them, the top of the line crime comics team in history, since Jacob did color work on some recent volumes of their most recent Criminal volumes, and Jacob is Sean’s son. And he is really good, having learned at Daddy’s knee. The resemblances are evident and admirable.
Chris Condon, the writer and apparent mentee of Brubaker, is also good in this first volume. The story is called by some western noir, and I guess that fits. Condon’s story isn’t as layered or filled with as many pop culture references or is quite as clever as Brubaker’s work, but that is the highest standard. Condon has a nice ear for dialogue and a sense of humor echoing Brubaker: A casserole dish is featured as punchline for a macabre joke.
There’s homespun, down-home humor you might see as cliched, but I think even Texans might enjoy it as fun. Joe Bob kills a rattlesnake with a shovel--hey, why dint he jus’ shoot it?! Joe Bob is every older tightlipped western sheriff you ever saw or read about, but he’s real and really likable. Little touches, too: We see a woman in a t-shirt that reads “Everything's Bigger in Texas.” Someone says, “Better to seem a fool than to open up your mouth and remove all doubt.”
“Fate can be fatal.”
“This place. It’s a magnet. A trap. Like an incubator for all the bad stuff in life.”
“I want to destroy it all.”
Brubaker would nod in approval at one of his chapter titles, such as from Act Two, Scene One of Hamlet: “More grief to hide than hate to utter love.”
Thanks to Sam Q, as he put it on his best of the year comics list, without which I would have passed this by. Now it’s likely on my 2022 list.