Walter Simonson is one of my favorite comics creators, and it is his seminal work on Thor that I enjoy the most from his varied bibliography.
I have a lot of the individual issues from his Thor run and I have also plan to buy one of the hardcovers released that collect his work on Thor. Though the original hardcover releases of his Marvel Visionaries series have gone out of print, Marvel Comics just released an oversized hardcover omnibus featuring in one cover the entire Simonson’s work on Thor, with new recolored art.
This trade paperback, which is printed on glossier paper than the original newsprint of the individual issues, is still based on the original color guides of Max Scheele. This is hardly the edition I wanted my comics to be in but the bargain price and the stories inside made this a good buy. Reading an arc of Simonson’s Thor would be easier now that I have a paperback I can read to death.
Simonson’s Thor is as good as comics get. He manages to put his mark on a character created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby based on Norse Mythology. Simonson manages to make this character accessible by foregoing the Shakespearean speech but maintaining the formal cadence of the dialogue. I enjoy that there is an earthy feel to his Asgard as Simonson incorporates historical Norse architecture and less of the towering spires of the original Kirby.
This volume, which collects issues 360-369 have two of my favorite stories. The first is issue 362, the last part of a cycle that that has Thor travelling to Hel on a quest. This is the issue were the Executioner, a long time, minor villain, stays behind to guard a bridge to give Thor, Balder and the Einherjar to escape and redeem his lost honor. Rereading that story still gives me goose bumps. It is that good.
The second is a three part tale that has the Thunder God turned into a frog. An interesting take on the frog prince dynamic, this was Simonson channeling Carl Barks and his legendary work on Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge.
I wish comics were still this good. Simonson developed into a truly talented creator in this run of Thor. His art was both dynamic and fantastic, and can switch genres with ease, from high fantasy, fairy tale, to superhero. There was a never a dull moment in any of his issues of Thor. This should be essential comic reading.