Review Archive – Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #2 by Jim Zub (W) and Jonas Scharf (A)

This review originally appeared at Grimdark Magazine on November 16, 2024.

Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #2

By Jim Zub (Writer) and Jonas Scharf (Artist) – Titan Comics – October 2, 2024

Review by Robin Marx

As Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #2 opens, a spectral vision of the Texas writer James Allison appears to Conan, Solomon Kane, El Borak, Agnes de Chastillon, and the other Heroes of Men across time and space. As his body disintegrates before their eyes, Allison provides some much-needed guidance. The strange dark eye sigil each of the heroes has individually encountered is a mark that signifies that they are hunted by the dark force that inhabits the Black Stone.

Back in The Wanderer’s Club in 1936 Chicago, Allison’s warning (and the comic’s exposition) is cut short by the emergence of the giant four-armed beast encountered by Solomon Kane in The Savage Sword of Conan #4. El Borak and the occult investigators Professor John Kirowan and John Conrad do their best to keep the creature at bay, but it’s immediately clear they are fighting a losing battle until they receive a last-minute assist from an unexpected ally from another era.

The second issue of the Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone miniseries provides deeper insight into the supernatural struggle in which the protagonists have found themselves enmeshed, and it also brings the heroes together for the first time.

Jonas Scharf’s artwork continues to impress. His renditions of the spindly monster first shown by Patch Zircher in The Savage Sword of Conan #4 and of Conan’s Pictish companion Brissa (originally depicted by Roberto De La Torre) are both excellent, proving he can adeptly handle both beauty and the beast. His action scenes also continue to be dynamically portrayed.

Zub’s narration is appropriately portentous as we learn about the stakes the heroes are up against. The Conan vs. Solomon Kane skirmish advertised on the issue’s cover felt a little perfunctory, however, like it was inserted to fulfill comic book readers’ team-up expectations (i.e., first the heroes rough each other up a little, then they join forces) rather than anything demanded by the narrative. I was also disappointed to see that Dark Agnes was given very little to do this issue as well. Perhaps it would have been best had she been omitted from the Battle of the Black Stone miniseries entirely; the miniseries feel crowded enough as it is.

With Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #2 the board has been set up and the pieces are in place. Only two issues remain in the miniseries, so it appears we can expect a rollercoaster ride in the installments to come.

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