PARAGON #14 is out, roaming the streets like a lunatic, and
telling wild and improbable tales of action-packed goodness! There are many
great things therein, chief amongst which is the jumbo-sized conclusion to Dirk
Van Dom and Stephen Prestwood’s wonderful ‘Icarus Dangerous’, which for my
money has been the comic’s biggest draw since #7. (Appropriately, its run is
bookended by remarkable covers, both courtesy of Matt Soffe.) We also have the
start of Tom Proudfoot and George Coleman’s ‘The Major’, which looks gorgeous
(in a deeply evil sort of way) and which gets a big thumbs up from me for its
Edinburgh setting – as a patriotic Scotsman, I love anything that delves into
the myths and legends and indeed entrails of our blood-soaked nation. We also have
a dose of laser-whip-fuelled crocodilian lunacy in ‘Jikan’, courtesy of Mr. Van
Dom and editor/artist/mastermind Davey Candlish, whose chameleonic art-skills
have rendered this one in a Mignola-esque stylee.
For my part, I have contributed two tales, both of which,
bizarrely enough, centre around our feathered friends. There’s a Spencer Nero
short, ‘Spencer Nero and the Hour of the Heron’, in which our smug hero finds
himself dealing with Dartmoor druids and their pagan Heron god, the
eyeball-eating Old Nog. Davey Candlish draws this one in a style inspired by ‘Chew’
artist Rob Guillory. The main feature, however, is ‘Spencer Nero and the Locked
Door’, in which Spencer’s curator chum William Kitt takes centre stage. Kitt
has to deal with a rampaging threat connected with the appearance of a
caladrius, the healing bird of ancient Rome. But where is Spencer while all
this is going on? Art here is by James Corcoran, and 'tis a dark treat indeed.
At the time of writing, #14 is FREE for download here, so
grab a copy – the early bird catches the worm, after all. It is a comic with
many feathers in its cap, and we’re as proud as peacocks of it.
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