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Suspended Animation, March 7, 2003

Victorian Part II: Self Immolation
$19.95 & 187 pages
From Penny-Farthing
Words: Len Wein
Pencills: Jim Baikie or Claude St. Aubin
Available in comics shops or at www.pfpress.com.

The young girl fidgeted by her boyfriend as the television announcer asked "On a scale of one to ten with ten the best, what do you give that song?"

"A six. I liked the beat."

"What about the words?" asked the announcer.

"Words?" said the girl.

Yes, Buffy, songs and comic books have words. And I give Victorian Part II: Self Immolation a six as well. That means it isn't great or terrible; it is one notch above average.

Reprinting issues eight through thirteen of The Victorian comic book series, this volume has little to do with its title character. This enigma who lurks in the shadows of New Orleans, driving criminals into the arms of the Law through "fear and small, serum-dipped darts", is seldom seen.

Counterfeit money, strange symbols and alligators and sharks are the backdrop for this series title with the detail, character development and pace of a novel. But not for a good novel, for its pacing is slow, and no sense of threat or urgency seems to drive anything.

Neither believable dialog or visual pyrotechnics make up for a sluggish plot. Then again, The Victorian doesn't offer visual pyrotechnics. The eleventh collected issue shows a marked improvement over the better-than- serviceable art in the first four "chapters", and all of the artists add visual interest to the sluggish pace of the story by angle, scene changes and other staging tricks of the artform. But not much jumps off pages that were written to saunter.

Fireworks get boring when over-indulged, and jumping constantly is exhausting, so a good read in a comfortable chair is never a bad thing. It is, indeed, very Victorian.

Shudder at Vance's Light's End horror short stories narrated by actor William Windom at www.plan9.org.
Questions? Comment? E-Mail Suspended Animation at vance@digitalwebbing.com

Any statements made, expressed or implied are solely those of columnists or persons interviewed and do not represent the editorial position of the administration, who does not accept responsibility of such statements. All characters and artwork shown are trademark and © of their respective owners.

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