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freixas | 5 other reviews | Mar 31, 2023 |
When you read a book about The Shadow, you're expecting certain things. This book gives you them in spades. You've got the occult, Nazis, old enemies, young love, and The Shadow playing Gotterdammerung as he infiltrates and attacks a German base. You really could not ask for more.

(Provided by publisher)
 
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tldegray | Sep 21, 2018 |
Great use of an old standard character in new ways. Matt Wagner's stories, as always, shine with sharp details and interesting plots. This is a book that slipped under the radar for me, and now I'll have to track down the first collection as well.
 
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SESchend | 5 other reviews | Sep 6, 2017 |
I have a lot of time for Matt Wagner -- I especially enjoyed his later Grendel books. However in spite of his best efforts -- including a cameo from the original gas-mask wearing Wesley Dodds in this volume, Madame Xanadu just doesn't seem a very interesting character. In the 1940s, Madame Xanadu gets a slightly supernatural brief from a customer and she ploddingly solves the case with the help of her magical tricks. At almost no time is she really in danger. There are flashbacks to the Spanish Inquisition in 1493, which time is relevant to both Xanadu and her case (but without much more crossover than that). She seems to identify the problem and solution early; her biggest problem is convincing her client's associates that there is a problem. Madame Xanadu has lived for thousands of years but doesn't seem to have gained great insights in that time. It's all a bit pedestrian.
 
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questbird | 5 other reviews | Jul 18, 2016 |
The magical adventures of Nimue, aka Madame Xanadu. This time, she is reminded of her own encounters with the Spanish Inquisition when men in the 1920s start dying of a curse that began generations ago. On the one hand, this is also the story of Nimue being a grand ol lesbian, which I appreciate. On the other hand, the art is terrible and the dialog and underlying plot as hackneyed as ever.
 
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wealhtheowwylfing | 5 other reviews | Feb 29, 2016 |
I really enjoyed the first collection of Matt Wagner's Madame Xanadu. This one didn't do it for me though. The story follows Madame Xanadu as she does some old-fashioned detective work in 1940, following a series of mysterious deaths and reliving memories of her life in Spain during the Spanish Inquisition.

I thought the plot dragged on, with occasional highlights, such as cameos from Dian Belmont and Wesley Dodds. The storyline following her time in Spain was fairly predictable - no big revelations when Nimue's nature causes problems with the Inquisition! The dialogue is also pretty bad - particularly the scene with the showgirl and Richard Miller.

Most of all, I didn't like the artwork. It felt very messy and busy, particularly compared to Amy Reeder Hadley's gorgeous work in the previous volume. Some of the characters' expressions were hilarious given the context of the scenes. For example, when Nimue's lover has been taken by the Inquisition and a neighbor confronts her with this news, her expression reads as... sleepy.



This mysterious killer releasing his demon dog to kill a man... cross-eyed? Detecting a bad smell?



And good old Tomas de Torquemada... Indiana Jones-style face melt? Look at those teeth, they're horrifying!



With a subpar story, dialogue, and artwork, I'd say this one is skipable. I'm hoping the next collection is better than this one. I like the Madame Xanadu character, but it felt like she didn't have to make much effort here to solve the mystery and defeat the villain... because who doesn't have mummified shards from the brain of a kraken lying around? Seriously. I feel that Wesley Dodd's and Dian Belmont's perspectives would've been much more intriguing than what we get here.
1 vote
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tiamatq | 5 other reviews | May 11, 2011 |
My stepdad introduced me to Starstruck back in the mid-1980s, and I was impressed at the depth of creativity involved in the stories of a far-future galaxy. The storytelling is nonlinear, and the entanglements between the characters tricky to follow, but the richness of the universe makes it worth the effort. As Tym Stevens puts it, “You didn’t read STARSTRUCK...you held on like a rollercoaster and tried to keep up.” So when I found out that the whole thing was being collected and republished, I put in a preorder.

The good news: the deluxe edition fills in more of the back story that was hinted at in the original comics, giving more perspective on the multilayered intrigue going on. It also comes with a lot of extra fun details, tales of Brucilla’s past among the Galactic Girl Guides, writings and postcards from inside the universe, and bonus art.

The bad news: there’s still a big honking To Be Continued hovering there. According to an interview with Elaine Lee, this is about ⅓ of what she has planned. So if you’ve been waiting for a quarter of a century to find out what happens next, you have to wait some more— but you should pick up this volume now to encourage the next one to come out.½
1 vote
Flagged
slothman | Apr 11, 2011 |
Although an interesting storyline, it did not have the punch of the first volume.
1 vote
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savageknight | 5 other reviews | Mar 14, 2010 |
Regular trade edition.
 
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illustrationfan | Aug 7, 2009 |
Limited print of 1000 copies. 44 black and white illustrations. Other illustrators include
Charles Vess, Steve Hickman, and Michael Cody... and of course a lot of Kaluta.
 
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illustrationfan | Aug 7, 2009 |
Contains 8 beautiful full color plates. limited to 2000 signed copies
 
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illustrationfan | Aug 7, 2009 |
Limited signed edition of 1000 copies. illustrations by Kaluta.
 
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illustrationfan | Aug 7, 2009 |
It's never to late to make the movie!
 
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mkjones | 1 other review | Jun 3, 2009 |
Mike Kaluta's art, Elaine Lee's story... both perfect! Too bad they never made the movie.
1 vote
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Atrox | 1 other review | Jun 4, 2007 |
Showing 14 of 14