Posted in: Comics | Tagged: Comics, entertainment, High Priestess, indie Comics, The Gee Bees
Mac's Books Reviewed: High Priestess #1, The Gee Bees Present: The Grand Tour TPB
By Olly MacNamee.
A monthly review spotlighting the best titles the UK indie press has to offer.
High Priestess No.1 (Damn Dirty Comics) and The Gee Bees Present: The Grand Tour Issues 1-6/tpb (UK Comics)
High Priestess
Writer: Rees Finlay
Artist: Mitchell Doig and Shunaid Sawyers (Epilogue)
Cover: Emiliano Gorrea

High Priestess is a macabre mix of both the super heroic and the supernatural in a tale that may have a street-level panorama, but clearly has larger ramifications in the age-old war against the powers of evil and The Lord of the Flies. Children have gone missing and violence seems to be the order of the day as the little old city of Coventry in the UK is overrun by crime on a scale that would even make the Costa Nostra blush.
Rees Finlay, the writer and creator, introduces us to a strong, super powered female protagonist in the shape of foul-mouthed Holly Peters, The titular High Priestess, who acts nothing like her namesake would suggest as she tackles her first of many missions. Her language is picked up on by her cigarette-smoking sidekick, the angel Gabrielle, sent to keep tabs on her and instruct her in the ways of the Lord's master plan, one assumes. Reminiscent of the angels in Kevin Smith's film, Dogma, Gabe is a laid back kinda guy who isn't afraid to get his hands dirty when push comes to shove, while still maintaining an all too human vulnerability. He is not the omnipotent, omnipresent supernatural force one would imagine and, as a result, he seems to know as much as Holly, thus keeping the element of mystery necessary. There are no easy answers to be had and like any good crime-fighter, both need to follow the clues to smoke out the main antagonists.

Look out for High Priestess at your local comic book shop or on the Damn Dirty Comics website. Failing that, if you're in Birmingham on September 5th, get your copy from the man himself at ICE.
The Gee Bees Present: The Grand Tour
Writer: Stephen Quirke
Artist: Kel Winser

Even they are unsure at times. For instance, they arrive in Paris in the third installment, but it is not revealed until the very end that we are witnessing the 1968 Paris Riots, used by their age-old arch-enemy as 'The perfect cover for the crime of the century'. It's a good idea, albeit much mined before now, to make use of historical events that are revealed to be more than they seem upon first glance. But then, this is a story of time travelling and so using such tropes is to be expected. It's what one does with this narrative convention that counts in this post-modernist age we find ourselves living in. And, when it works, it works well and to the strengths of the story being told.
I found myself knowingly smiling during Black's decent on America at seemingly different times throughout the 20th century, wherein he knowingly communicates with the likes of Lovecraft – where he is about to scare the Providence based writer with a crude Hallowe'en outfit, insinuating that it was none other than our 'too cool for school' hero, Black, who inspired Lovecraft on the path to creating a particular kind of horror – as well as the likes of Stephen King and even Ernest Hemmingway. Scenes like these, as well as the inclusion of an additional prose section at the end of the book that reveals the history of The Foundation and Maximilian's links to its past as a series of journal entries, work the best and give the comic series breadth and heart.
Quirke creates a universe that has huge potential for future stories, and further mysteries to be revealed yet. I wanted to know more about The Foundation, their history and particularly the road travelled by Maximilian that sees him transformed from lowly servant in the 1500's to would-be alchemical conqueror of the world. But, it is to the writer's credit that he only gives us a peek behind the curtain. Why reveal too much at once when there is the little matter of stopping a diabolical despot in the making to attend to?

The Gee Bees is a small comic with grand designs and succeeds in creating an expansive history of the shadowy time-travelling organization, The Foundation, which is ripe for further exploration further down the line, should the writer, Steven D Quirke wish. A decent introductory story that fleshes out some characters more than others, but as an interesting hybrid of both the spy genre and the sci-fi world of time travelling, this is an oft-times intelligent comic that does well to convincingly mix the two genres and create in Gideon Black a smart-talking spy more in the vein of Austin Powers than 007.
The Gee Bees Present: The Grand Tour can still be read as a web comic here, or as a trade paperback at conventions such as the forthcoming ICE convention in Birmingham where both Quirke and Finlay (High Priestess) will be attending. Say hi from me.
That's my recommendations for this month.
Be seeing you.
Olly MacNamee teaches English and Media, for his sins, in a school somewhere in Birmingham. Some days, even he doesn't know where it is. Follow him on twitter @ollymacnamee or read about his exploits at olly.macnamee@blogspot.co.uk. Or don't. You can also read his articles fairly frequently at www.bleedingcool.com too.













