A very engaging
space western that manages the difficult task of both setting up the situation
and cast and nailing the genre requirements with flair. Clara Bronson is the incoming sheriff in the
miles-from-nowhere mining town of Copperhead. The deputy sheriff is a non-human
who is both resentful at being passed over for the job and from a species on
the losing side of an earlier conflict with humanity while the local mining
tycoon is used to being listened to by the sheriff. With an incident at a
hillbilly residence out of town and Clara’s son behaving like a boy the story
gathers momentum and moves steadily down to the closing hook for the next arc.
The action is great, it is cleverly used to introduce and reveal the
personalities of the cast and fill in the context for the story.
The story
bones of a Western are easily transplanted to other contexts, the problem is to
make sure that the balance between both is maintained without losing something
essential for either. Jay Faerber makes it look easy in Copperhead, the details
fit so closely that it just look completely natural, from Clara’s arrival in
town which nicely establishes her credentials as someone not to be messed with,
to the Natives, the hostile original inhabitants of the planet that Copperhead
is located on. Add non-human hillbillies, a drunken town doctor, an overbearing
mining tycoon and war veterans who are also artificial life forms and the mix
of genres is set. Jay Faerber makes the fantastically difficult task of
ensuring that none of the cast are clichés but are recognisable with deceptive
ease, they emerge with individual voices and demand the reader’s attention in
their own right. Add the difficulty of getting everyone and everything in place
without boring or baffling the reader and the strength of the writing can be
grasped. All the tasks are completed in a compelling fashion, with a nicely
snarky humour that gives the story an extra edge.
Scott
Godlewski’s art matches the cast with the dusty landscape, they fit into the
context just like they live there. The human cast are very expressive; in
particular Clara Benson is given an interesting look. She is allowed to look
tense and irritable without ever being undercut for being so. Clearly she has
had some problems and she wears them as anyone might, it gives her manner an
edge that changes when she is talking to her son. The styles non-human cast are
restrained, their body language is very clear and they are different enough to
be alien without being so different that they are a jarring in the context.
Ron Riley’s
colours capture the sun beaten atmosphere of Copperhead, it is an industrial
town in a hot dusty spot, the colours are somewhat faded, they give the town a
lived in look. The colours also nicely play the Western card, it is a frontier
town and the colours echo quietly and effectively the colours of Western
frontier towns from films. Thomas Mauer’s letters are unobtrusive, they blend
in with the art while always being distinct. A hard balance and another that is
made to look easy and natural. Copperhead is a great genre mash up that
delivers the pleasures of both without having to compromise either.
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