A gentleman's 3.5
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So I buy a lot of big comic collections. They're my longest collecting vice. I've been reading several here that I held onto for years before reading. This one is new - released on 1/6, amongst the first big batch of new Marvel collections. Moon Knight is a character I've been aware of and read about on occasions for my 20-year comic book journey but never dug into. This 1,200 page volume was pretty tempting: the Omnibus line, my preferred way of reading Marvel books. Its success, and Moon Knight's forthcoming Disney+ Show, means the publisher has finally dug into this B-list hero (at best) to release his first appearances plus the first twenty issues of the definitive Moench / Sienkiewicz series.
Omnibus editions are great for two things: collecting the definitive chronology of a series or character's development (like the Uncanny X-men Omnibus editions I read a few months ago), or binding together the totality of a specific long-running story (like the Age of Apocalypse book).
This is a bit of both. The first half are his Guest spots in Werewolf by Night (an Omnibus I wish I'd gotten when it was cheap, now that I'm falling into 70's Marvel Horror shit), Spectacular Spider-Man, Hulk, etc. These are fine - fun to read, but nothing to really write home about. The pleasure comes from occasional notes by Moench & co., explaining how this or that story changed Moon Knight as an idea.
The back half are the first 20 issues of his first solo ongoing. Like most, the first 5 or 6 issues are the team finding their sea legs. After that it becomes an action-packed, often strange chronicle of a hero whose core concept is a bit too complex, whose villains are just not very cool...but whose adventures are so gorgeous, pulpy, and weird.
If you're unfamiliar, Moon Knight is a former mercenary, Marc Spector. He dies in Egypt and is raised by the Egyptian God Konshu, God of Vengeance or whatever. He comes home to NYC to fight crime, aided by his beautiful girlfriend Marlene, his buddy / pilot Frenchie, and 3 separate civilian identities: marc spector, steven grant, and jack locksley. Grant is a billionaire; Locksley is a working class cabbie; Spector, his true fact, is a mercenary with a lot of guilt. Moon Knight is the most solid identity, the one they each share. While ostensibly disguises, the lines start to blur between them. It's clear Marlene, who loves Grant, puts up with it because she believes him to be the true face.
Later stories featuring Moon Knight have given him multiple personality disorder or eschewed the extra identities; all of them depict him as 'crazy' in some fashion. This run was too early for any of that. The late 70's and early 80's didn't have much time for those stories. But Moench still gets a lot of subtext about living, and loving, someone who is suffering. It's not a perfect product, but it has legs. I was, at times, moved.
But mostly I was entertained. These are some fun action comics and Moon Knight's character is so massive. He has a Helicopter! He's...it's just out of scale with the Marvel Universe itself in so many ways. Moon Knight will probably always be B-stringer character, but I understand his cult following better now and I'm glad I bought this book as a gift to myself