Robin Marx's Writing Repository

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This review originally appeared at Grimdark Magazine on December 13, 2024.

Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #3

By Jim Zub (Writer) and Jonas Scharf (Artist) – Titan Comics – November 6, 2024

Review by Robin Marx

Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #3 begins with the Heroes of Man reeling from the loss of two of their own. The giant, many-armed creature now known as the Beast of the Black Stone has demonstrated that it’s capable of pursuing and killing its victims across time and space, and that there is no safe refuge for Conan and the other gathered champions.

The Pictish scout Brissa guides them through the wilderness using a fragment of the Black Stone that harbors a remnant of the immolated Texan author James Allison’s soul. Thrown together by circumstance, the six survivors react differently to their task and their companions. Conan and Brissa relish their unexpected reunion. Dour Puritan adventurer Solomon Kane and hot-tempered swordswoman Dark Agnes de Chastillon—both displaced from the 16th century—are skeptical of their companions but face the struggle against the Beast with grim resolve. Conrad and Kirowan remain fascinated by the occult implications of their plight. A disastrous encounter with another shard of the Black Stone leads to an unplanned confrontation with the Beast, however.

From a narrative and characterization standpoint, Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #3 is a mixed bag. The interactions and dialogue between Conan and Brissa are well done. Years have passed since Brissa’s presumed death at the climax of Conan the Barbarian #4 (with her supernatural escape revealed in The Savage Sword of Conan #4); the two were intimate when they traveled together, but Conan is older now, battle-scarred and experienced. This story takes place after Conan has loved and lost his pirate queen Bêlit, perhaps the most impactful relationship in his life, but thrown together with Brissa again he rediscovers his attraction for the Pict. While apparently little time has passed for Brissa, for her part she finds the more mature Conan to still be “burning bright,” subtly echoing Atali’s appraisal of the barbarian’s vitality in the Frozen Faith story arc (Conan the Barbarian #16). Their scene together is a nice bit of character work in a largely rushed-feeling miniseries.

Unfortunately, the other characters in the story continue to be mishandled or neglected. While the bonding scene between Solomon Kane and Dark Agnes is entertaining, both characters’ subsequent individual portrayals either feel inauthentic or fail to communicate their appeal as original author Robert E. Howard created them. Last issue Solomon Kane attacked Conan without any real justification (apart from to provide an eye-catching cover illustration), and this issue he randomly and inexplicably accuses Brissa of responsibility for a companion’s death. Dark Agnes fares even more poorly. After being mostly sidelined for two issues she finally gets some screentime, only to make a bizarrely rash decision that has catastrophic consequences for her and her companions.

Jim Zub began the Battle of the Black Stone miniseries with eight characters and issue #3 concludes with—to the best of the reader’s knowledge—three surviving heroes. The intent seems to be to create a high-stakes atmosphere where any character can die, but so little time has been spent with the non-Conan characters that their deaths fail to have much narrative impact. Even worse, those who are killed have, thus far, not experienced the most dignified or heroic deaths. Multiple characters have been isolated in time and space from their companions and slaughtered by the Beast, and one of the miniseries’ two heroines loses her life in a situation that feels less like a desperate last stand than it does a pointless, ill-considered and avoidable fight. Put bluntly, watching classic Howard characters go out like punks hasn’t been a great time. From the beginning, this miniseries felt like a blatantly commercial attempt to launch a Robert E. Howard comic universe for Titan Comics (a solo Solomon Kane miniseries has been announced), so the likelihood of these characters’ deaths being hastily reversed in the final issue means their demises have even less weight than an X-Men hero dying in a Marvel title.

Throughout Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #3, the spirit of James Allison mutters portentously about “heroes and fools,” but it feels like there are more fools than heroes in this issue. There’s still time for the final issue to stick the landing, but my optimism is waning.

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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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This review originally appeared at Grimdark Magazine on October 8, 2024.

Conan the Barbarian: Battle of the Black Stone #1

By Jim Zub (Writer) and Jonas Scharf (Artist) – Titan Comics – September 4, 2024

Review by Robin Marx

After being teased in the 2024 Free Comic Book Day issue and The Savage Sword of Conan #4, the first issue in the Conan the Barbarian miniseries Battle of the Black Stone has arrived. Throughout the first dozen issues of the Titan Comics run of Conan the Barbarian, the title hero has had frequent run-ins with a mysterious black stone not of this world, a substance with a malign, corrosive effect on the people who encounter it. While the ageless sorcerer Thulsa Doom was revealed to have a connection with the black stone (in Conan the Barbarian #12), it was also demonstrated that he was merely someone who harnessed the magical mineral, rather than its progenitor.

In addition to the stone itself, a crudely carved eye sigil has become a recurring motif. The 2024 Free Comic Book Day issue showed Conan working as a frontier ranger for the kingdom of Aquilonia, years after his initial contact with the stone. After defeating a particularly formidable Pictish tribesman in combat, he finds himself preoccupied with the pendant the Pict wore, bearing this ominous eye-shaped sigil.

The first issue of the Battle of the Black Stone miniseries picks up immediately after the 2024 Free Comic Book Day issue. After sensing himself become unusually prone to violent rage, Conan ventures into the Pictish wilderness in search of the sigil’s source. Meanwhile, in 1936 Chicago, occult researcher Professor John Kirowan and his adventurous compatriot John Conrad visit the Wanderer’s Club, an association of world travelers, on their own quest for information about the very same dark eye sigil. They meet with Francis Xavier Gordon, also known as El Borak (“The Swift” in Arabic), but receive a cold reception. Gordon’s own encounter with the glyph in the desert Forbidden Temple (as shown in The Savage Sword of Conan #4) appears to have left him with lingering trauma that he is reluctant to revisit. Inevitably all hell breaks loose at the Wanderer’s Club, however, giving El Borak no choice but to confront his fears.

Jonas Scharf’s artwork manages to distinguish itself from the excellent work we’ve already seen from Roberto De La Torre and Doug Braithwaite while simultaneously feeling completely appropriate for the setting and characters. His scruffy, stubbly Conan appeals, delivering the impression of a man at home in the wilderness.

The dialogue and narration has the same fittingly propulsive feel Jim Zub’s work on Titan Comics’ Conan the Barbarian and The Savage Sword of Conan. As mentioned in my review of the Free Comic Book Day prelude, story-wise, Battle of the Black Stone still feels quite close in execution to the 2019 Conan: Serpent War crossover miniseries Zub wrote for Marvel Comics. Hopefully it will diverge significantly in the issues to follow.

All-in-all, the Battle of the Black Stone event is off to an intriguing start. While not mandatory, reading The Savage Sword of Conan #4 beforehand will enhance the experience with extra character background and the full story of El Borak’s encounter with the dark eye. Even if The Savage Sword of Conan #4 is skipped, readers are encouraged to read the 2024 Free Comic Book Day issue, which is available from the publisher in digital format at no charge.

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This review originally appeared at Grimdark Magazine on May 18, 2024.

Conan the Barbarian – Free Comic Book Day 2024: Battle of the Black Stone

By Jim Zub (Writer) and Jonas Scharf (Artist) – Titan Comics – May 4, 2024

Review by Robin Marx

Set some years after the events of the current Conan the Barbarian story arc, Conan is shown working out of Fort Tuscelan, defending the frontier outpost from incessant attacks by the Picts (making this story a prequel to the 1935 Robert E. Howard story “Beyond the Black River”). Raids have been a constant threat since the kingdom of Aquilonia carved out the province of Conajohara from the Pictish wilderness, but Conan is troubled by their growing frequency and intensity. After defeating a particularly formidable foe, he discovers evidence of dark forces at work: a medallion carved with a strange “searing eye” symbol. Laying eyes on the sigil causes a flood of memories to rush over to Conan: recollections of his deadly encounters with the malignant Black Stone and its undead minions. Simultaneously, in other lands and eras distant from Conan’s Hyborian Age, other heroes have their own encounters with the mysterious searing eye…

Subtitled “Battle of the Black Stone,” this year’s Free Comic Book Day issue of Conan the Barbarian is intended to serve as the prelude for a large-scale event that will get underway this autumn in The Savage Sword of Conan issue #4 and the Conan: Battle of the Black Stone miniseries. While the monthly Conan the Barbarian title has featured other non-Conan characters created by Robert E. Howard in the past—most notably King Kull—the Free Comic Book Day 2024 issue lays the groundwork for what may be the biggest crossover event the so-called “Howardverse” has seen to date.

While I’m excited to see the direction in which Jim Zub takes the story, while reading this issue I had a distinct sense of déjà vu. Back in 2019, when Marvel Comics still had the license for the character, Zub penned a title called Conan: Serpent War. The four-issue miniseries involved snake-worshipping cultists attempting to summon a malign god, an interdimensional and epoch-spanning threat that compelled Conan to join forces with some of Howard’s other characters, Solomon Kane and Dark Agnes de Chastillon, with James Allison appearing as part of the framing device. While there are some new additions, the Battle of the Black Stone prelude also includes those same three characters grappling with a supernatural menace that affects their own disparate eras in parallel. The apparent similarity between Conan: Serpent War and what we’ve seen thus far of Battle of the Black Stone makes me wonder if Zub is attempting to realize a creative vision that was either thwarted or otherwise left unfulfilled during his tenure on the Marvel Comics Conan the Barbarian. Either that, or Heroic Signatures (the rightsholder for Robert E. Howard’s various literary creations) is planning to launch new comic titles for non-Conan characters and is hoping to raise their profiles in advance.

The Jonas Scharf artwork in this issue appeals. His Conan is a bit hairier than many depictions, certain to please the subset of fans who prefer to see the barbarian with chest hair and furry forearms. Scharf’s expressive faces are another highlight of the issue.

For those who were unable to acquire Conan the Barbarian Free Comic Book Day 2024: Battle of the Black Stone from their local comic store, a digital edition is available directly from Titan Comics. Foreshadowing an exciting event, this issue is engaging for existing fans while simultaneously providing a gentle introduction to newcomers to Conan the Barbarian.

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