Blackjack: Blood and Honor, The Graphic Novel (Blackjack)

Blackjack: Blood and Honor, The Graphic Novel (Blackjack)

Blackjack: Blood and Honor, The Graphic Novel (Blackjack)

more information about Blackjack: Blood and Honor, The Graphic Novel (Blackjack)

Editorial Reviews
Joe Doughrity, Don MacPherson, Psylum.com
"One of the wonderful things about this book [Blackjack: Blood and Honor]is that it isn't a black book, per se. While it does feature a strong, positive, black lead, its focus and themes are universal ...

Nothing is what it seems at first glance in the world of Blackjack ...

Explosions, shoot-outs, martial arts and endless chase scenes through the streets of Japan and even on top of a moving train ... If you're a fan of high adventure, you owe it to yourself to check out this book ..."

Edward Lee, Next Planet Over.com, Jan, 2000
I love comics/graphic novels that use genuine history as a playing field, and Blackjack: Blood and Honor is one of the best integrations of comics action and history I've seen in a long while.

The story is set in the mid-1930s, when fascism was gearing up to take over the world. In this comic, we meet one guy who risks his neck to see that it doesn't.

Enter Arron Day, an African-American freelance mercenary who's seen real evil in all its guises so many times, it's simply become part of the everyday scenery. He's faced racial prejudice the world over and has witnessed every conceivable example of man's inhumanity to man -- and worse, to children.

Now Day, a.k.a. Blackjack, gets to take a trip to Tokyo, and it's not to sample the tempura. He's been hired as a bodyguard for a Japanese statesman called Oshio, who happens to be at odds with the current regime. Naturally the powers-that-be want Oshio pushing up bonsai trees, and they won't think twice about using Blackjack for some additional fertilizer. That's where the action begins, and it doesn't let up until the last page. Blackjack is one bad dude, but is he bad enough to take on the Japanese equivalent to the Gestapo?

Don't worry, this is not simply an Indiana Jones-as-a-black-guy clich. It's a rip-stitch period-piece thriller that delves into real prewar history that ultimately affected all of our lives. Blackjack is not a superhero, he's a real hero, one of a rare few who faced some truly grim odds to do the right thing. (There's actually some serious evidence that guys like this really existed!)

I like my action served up straight but with brains and relevant social issues thrown into the mix. Blackjack: Blood and Honor delivers the goods.

Blackjack: Blood and Honor, The Graphic Novel (Blackjack)

Blackjack: Blood and Honor, The Graphic Novel (Blackjack),Alex Simmons,Dark Angel Productions,0967634105,Fiction,Fiction - General,General,Graphic Novels - General

Book Details:

  1. Cafe Occult Volume 3
  2. Chicken Soup for the Soul Cartoons for Dads (Chicken Soup for the Soul (Paperback Health Communications))
  3. Chicken Soup for the Soul Cartoons for Moms (Chicken Soup for the Soul)
  4. Crayon Shinchan #4
  5. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon #4 - Revised & Expanded Edition
  6. CSI: Crime Scene Investigation--Dominos, Vol. 4 (Csi: Crime Scene Investigation)
  7. Dirty Boxes
  8. Disney Presents Carl Barks' Greatest DuckTales Stories Volume 1
  9. Dragon Ball, Vol. 1
  10. Dragon Ball, Vol. 4

Book Details

Book Details

Recommended Books

  1. Drawing Realistic Pets: From Photographs
  2. The Gumshoe, the Witch, and the Virtual Corpse
  3. Film Europe and Film America: Cinema, Commerce and Cultural Exchange 1920-1939
  4. Microsoft Excel 2003 Programming Inside Out
  5. Listen Up : Learning Activities
  6. Lunar Exploration : Human Pioneers and Robotic Surveyors
  7. Introduction to Theoretical Organic Chemistry and Molecular Modeling
  8. Group Theory in Quantum Mechanics
  9. Lodore
  10. Kids Who Think Outside The Box: Helping Your Unique Child Thrive In A Cookie-Cutter World
  11. Made in America: From Levi's to Barbie to Google
  12. Feng-Shui
  13. Leading to the 2003 Iraq War : The Global Media Debate
  14. Linear Programming
  15. More Than Just the Strokes: Personal Best Tennis in Clubland and Beyond