Grant Morrison is a great writer. Even though, on occasion, the scope of his creativity leads to muddled or confusing tales this tale does not suffer from that. Is this for everyone? No I don't think so. The story is indeed out there but this IS a Doom Patrol story.
The Doom Patrol is called into action. Mr. Nobody has stolen a magic painting that "eats" the viewer and uses it to "eat" the city of Paris. What follows is a bizarre, twisted and funny metaphysical adventure against the Brotherhood of Dada. The Doom Patrol goes inside the painting to fight them. But the Brotherhood of Dada has inadvertently awakened the Fifth Horseman :
"And his name that sat on him was Extinction. And Oblivion. He bringeth the end of all time, all space, all life. The end of all gods." This twisted Horseman is the Anti-God, created as the shadow when God created light. In a brilliant turn, the 5th Horseman makes things disappear..like words and so on. Also fascinating is GM's concept of the 5th Horseman drawing power from the different styles of Art. The use of Dada as anti-form art is brilliant and the entire story is a very metaphysical and completely original. I truly enjoyed the mind-bending take.
The remainder of the book is no shrinking violet either. The madness continues in "Going Underground" an excellent tale about multiple personalities, schizophrenia and child abuse. It is a grim and dark tale but still has some weighty metaphysical concepts. The child abuse undercurrent and how it has scarred Jane is something I appreciated. GM doesn't shy away from uncomfortable issues and I admire that. Thus the following story is truly a powerful piece of work. Well Done GM!
We end with a great supernatural story where a bad John Constantine rip-off named Willoughby Kipling helps the Doom Patrol fight against the Cult of the Unwritten Book. I'm not saying W. Kipling is a bad character-he is NOT. In fact in terms of attitude, drinking and smoking habits, cursing, his cavalier snarky attitude-he IS John Constantine. That is rather annoying, but the story makes up for it. It is a truly dark and twisted look at a Cult who is trying to bring back the Anti-God and hunting for a boy with the word of God tattooed onto his flesh. Again, a great metaphysical story will astral projection, imagery, the power of words all stuck inside a comic story. It is an amazing imagination at its best.
The final story has to do with whether it is the mind or the body that rules. Strange characters, both heroes and villains, deep metaphysical concepts, odd stories and a great overall prose style make this Doom Patrol volume one of the weirdest, strangest, brilliantly original comics I've read in awhile. This volume was Neil Gaiman worthy. That is high praise.
Again the utter weirdness of the story, concepts like art styles, metaphysical concepts and a VERY twisted story about child abuse means this is not for a casual reader or fan. But if you like your stories original and out there- Doom Patrol is for you. This is Grant Morrison at his weirdest best. I am impressed. If you like deep concepts, even in your comics, then I highly recommend this volume. I am glad I took the time to explore the Doom Patrol.