Jack of Fables #37

Jack of Fables #37

$2.99
VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
Written by Bill Willingham & Matthew Sturges Art by Russ Braun & Andrew Pepoy Cover by Brian Bolland
Jack’s back out on his own, but after his grave insult to the artist who's drawing this story, what will become of Jack? Will the artist seek vengeance and have Jack go bald? Get fat? Grow a tail? Will he be covered in scabs and lesions? Or will the artist simply ignore the script and have Jack brutally murdered on the first page and bring in a replacement? Who knows? Anything is possible...
Date Available: 08/19/2009
BONUS REVIEW by GARY OWENS

Pack up your bags, and head for Fable Town. No, I don’t read this title regularly. In fact, I’ve tried to jump in a couple times before, only to get slowly, inextricably lost. But this time I hit the jackpot. A new story arc starts; Jack has learned facts about his mother and father, and he yearns to start a new chapter in his life. But what? Maybe questing hero? Who knows, but much of the recent past is explained, and his start of a search for meaning becomes ours. Bill Willinghman injects clever witticism throughout (especially in the first 4 side-bar pages), and Sturges’s art depicts admirably the fantastic horizons framed by cruel reality of Jack’s world. Great issue for new readers. Jump on board!
I give it 9 out of 10 Grahams
VERY FINE/NEAR MINT
Written by Bill Willingham & Matthew Sturges Art by Russ Braun & Andrew Pepoy Cover by Brian Bolland
Jack’s back out on his own, but after his grave insult to the artist who's drawing this story, what will become of Jack? Will the artist seek vengeance and have Jack go bald? Get fat? Grow a tail? Will he be covered in scabs and lesions? Or will the artist simply ignore the script and have Jack brutally murdered on the first page and bring in a replacement? Who knows? Anything is possible...
Date Available: 08/19/2009
BONUS REVIEW by GARY OWENS

Pack up your bags, and head for Fable Town. No, I don’t read this title regularly. In fact, I’ve tried to jump in a couple times before, only to get slowly, inextricably lost. But this time I hit the jackpot. A new story arc starts; Jack has learned facts about his mother and father, and he yearns to start a new chapter in his life. But what? Maybe questing hero? Who knows, but much of the recent past is explained, and his start of a search for meaning becomes ours. Bill Willinghman injects clever witticism throughout (especially in the first 4 side-bar pages), and Sturges’s art depicts admirably the fantastic horizons framed by cruel reality of Jack’s world. Great issue for new readers. Jump on board!
I give it 9 out of 10 Grahams
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