Author Archives: Phil

About Phil

With 40 years of experience in comic reading, collecting and reviewing, English Professor Phil Mateer has an encyclopedic mind for comics. Feel free to ask Phil about storylines, characters, artists or for that matter, any comic book trivia. He will post your questions and answers on the AABC blog. His knowledge is unparalleled! He is also our warehouse manager, so if you are looking for that hard to find comic book, ask Phil!

Ask the Professor #25 — Wolverine's Family Tree

Recently, I was made aware that Wolverine has an older brother. Can you provide any details? Sure: The Professor’s willing to take a crack at it, although Logan’s origins have become so convoluted over the years, with all the false memories and take-backs and whatnot, that what’s “real” about Wolvie and his family is kind of hard to know (the Professor remembers back in the Claremont/Byrne era, when Sabertooth was unofficially supposed to be his father, based on their similar healing powers, savagery, and overuse of the nickname “Bub,” but then Marvel apparently decided that was too obvious, and went … Continue reading

Posted in Marvel | Leave a comment

Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Bought #106

Final Crisis #6 (of 7) — Writer: Grant Morrison; Art: JG Jones, Carlos Pacheco, Doug Mahnke, Marco Rudy, Christian Alamy and Jesus Merino Well, you can’t accuse Morrison of scrimping on the action: between Superman and Brainiac-5 accessing the Miracle Machine in the future, the two Atoms scouting out alternate universes, Black Canary and the resistance fighters on the JLA satellite, the Flashes, Checkmate, the Green Lanterns… all those heroes, all working independently, almost make the reader feel sorry for Darkseid even before his final confrontation with Batman (and, by the way, has that Omega-beam thing ever actually taken someone … Continue reading

Posted in New Comics, Reviews | Comments Off on Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Bought #106

Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Read and Put Back #106

Faces of Evil: Prometheus #1 — Writer: Sterling Gates; Art: Federico Dallocchio Green Arrow and Black Canary #16 — Writer: Andrew Kreisberg; Penciller: Mike Norton; Inker: Josef Rubinstein Action Comics #873 — Writer: Geoff Johns; Artists: Pete Woods, Renato Guedes and Wilson Magalhaes All of these titles are part of DC’s “Faces of Evil” month, which means the cover features the villain of the book, with his/her name scrawled over the regular logo, against a jet-black background. Kind of cool in theory — and the whole series would look impressive all mounted on a wall — but in execution it’s… … Continue reading

Posted in New Comics, Reviews | Leave a comment

Phil's Reviews: That Obama-Spidey Comic

Amazing Spiderman #583 — (Main story): Writer: Mark Waid;  Pencils: Barry Kitson;  Inks: Mark Farmer;  (Obama story): Writer: Zeb Wells;  Artist: Todd Nauck First of all, thank God for Mark Waid: his story, a slice-of-life look at Peter Parker told from the point of view of Betty Brant, is sophisticated, charming and deeply human, reminiscent of one of Kurt Busiek’s Astro City stories. Kitson’s and Farmer’s art isn’t flashy, but it’s clear and doesn’t get in the way, and for a quieter story like this that’s just fine. The story’s also self-contained (although a few subplots get thrown in), so … Continue reading

Posted in New Comics, Reviews | Comments Off on Phil's Reviews: That Obama-Spidey Comic

Ask the Professor #24 — Random Library Question

why books in a library are important and why should we use them? The Professor doesn’t quite know how to respond to this question, since (a) it isn’t about comics, and (b) it sounds like a school assignment for, say, a paragraph in an eight grade English class at the beginning of the semester.  Oh, there’s something there about how libraries are for, you know, books and stuff, and how many of the free public libraries in the US were built in the late 1800s and early 1900s by robber barons like Andrew Carnegie trying to improve their pr, and … Continue reading

Posted in News and Events | Comments Off on Ask the Professor #24 — Random Library Question