The Fuse, Volume 1: The Russia Shift. Antony Johnston and Justin Greenwood. 2014. Image Comics. 160 pages.
Rating: 4/5
I liked this a bit more than Codename Baboushka, which is the other book by Antony Johnston I've read. The Fuse has sci-fi elements, it takes place on a space station orbiting Earth, and combines those with a police drama, the protagonist, Dietrich, is a homicide detective.
It kicks off with a bang when a woman is found dead outside a dock on the station shortly after his shuttle arrives. The nice thing about this book is that the reader and the protagonist get to experience the space station for the first time together. So the implications of her death and people's reactions to it come about naturally within the story. This lets the creators explore the setting in a way that I found engrossing.
Yet, the story does unfold slowly at times. I felt like the pacing was good, but there were things that could have been tightened up a little bit. The way it is written actually works well for foreshadowing events and developing the characters. And the art sucked me in. It may not be the prettiest, but it has a grittiness that complements the story perfectly. Part of what made the characters work so well for me is the illustrations.
Fans of police procedurals will definitely want to check this out. I say bring on more.
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