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!

Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Read and Put Back #84

Mercy Sparx #0 — Writer: Josh Blaylock; Art: Matt Merhoff Lord help us, we’re seeing the return of the early-’90s Bad Girl craze, with cute Gothy demon chicks who are bad because, you know, they have red skin and horns and, like, smoke cigarettes and have tattoos. Such characters stir the loins of your average comic book geek, who figures he could never get their real-life equivalents to look at him, and so he’s ready to forgive the cookie-cutter plots and pedestrian art (for a time, anyway) in favor of the mild fantasy jolt they provide. Points here for making … Continue reading

Posted in New Comics, Reviews | Comments Off on Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Read and Put Back #84

Ask the Professor #16 — What's My Comic Worth?

I have a copy of Lots ‘O’ Fun Comics that grades around VG-. It features “Crime Does Not Pay”. I have no idea how much it’s worth. It isn’t listed in the Guide or on comicspriceguide.com Any help would be great. Thank you. Well, when a comic’s not in Overstreet, one possibility is that it might be a foreign edition (like Canadian or British).  Check the bottom of the inside front cover or first page for the indicia, which should have the “official” title of the book, the issue number, date, and information about the publisher. If the listed publisher’s … Continue reading

Posted in Comics History | Comments Off on Ask the Professor #16 — What's My Comic Worth?

Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Bought #83

Crossed #0 — Writer: Garth Ennis; Art: Jacen Burrows Avatar’s an interesting publisher — they get a lot of series from writers like Ennis and Warren Ellis, often quick-moving, B-movie-type tales, not as polished as the stuff they write for the mainstream publishers, but guilty pleasures nonetheless. This one’s no different; it’s a zombie riff, with a plague turning people into psychopaths and a small group of survivors that we follow as they struggle to fight off the murderous hordes, etc. Burrows is good at delivering the violence (a typical requirement for Ennis artists), and his gleeful, infected bad guys … Continue reading

Posted in New Comics, Reviews | Comments Off on Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Bought #83

Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Read and Put Back #83

Wolverine: Killing Made Simple #1 (of 1) — (First story):  Writer: Christopher Yost;  Penciler: Koi Turnbull;  Inker: Sal Regla   (Second story):  Writer: Todd Dezago;  Pencils: Steve Kurth;  Inks: Serge LaPointe One of those inexplicable, occasional one-shots Marvel does with this character; here, it seems to be a couple of inventory stories they had lying around, the first involving Trance (formerly of the New X-Men) and Nanny, certainly one of the most annoying X-Family villains in the repertoire. The second story is a Wolvy-against-an-alien-virus deal, involving an Antarctic research station. None of it’s horrible, but it’s all mediocre and predictable enough … Continue reading

Posted in New Comics, Reviews | Comments Off on Phil's Reviews — Stuff I Read and Put Back #83

Ask the Professor #15 — Current Marvel and DC Continuity

I’ve been out of comics since 2003 and want to get back in.  What major storylines do I need to catch up on in the Marvel/DC universes? nathan  Whooo… OK, Nathan, but be warned: It’s not one long story, but two, since both companies have been pushing company-wide crossovers for the last few years. Let’s start with DC; in the early 00’s, they realized that the 20th anniversary of their second-most-successful Big Event ever, Crisis on Infinite Earths, was approaching, and wanted to do something special to commemorate it. In 2004, the JLA mini-series Identity Crisis kicked things off with … Continue reading

Posted in DC, Marvel | Comments Off on Ask the Professor #15 — Current Marvel and DC Continuity