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Titan Books in conjunction with 2000 AD is doing Alan Moore fans a great
favor. Those of you who fit the category are certainly reading the
"America's Best Comics" line in which Moore is writing everything from late
Victorian fantasy in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (which
stars, among others, Captain Nemo, Mr. Hyde, and the Invisible Man), to
pulp magazine/silver age comic adventures in Tom Strong, to cop-show
teleplay-style workings of police in a world populated by super-heroes in
Top Ten, to the elusive and exquisite mysticism of the wonderful
Promethea. All recommended but already in your pull files, I
expect.
And if you've been reading Moore comics for a decade or so, you are
certainly also familiar with Watchmen, From Hell,
Miracleman, The Killing Joke, and Swamp-Thing.
But you may not know about the work that appeared in five or six page
chapters in the British Science Fiction weekly 2000 A.D., the
self-styled "Galaxy's Greatest Comic". Now, though, that work is being
reprinted in oversized paperbacks by Titan Books. There is The Complete
D.R. and Quinch", "Skizz", and the best of the lot, The
Complete Ballad of Halo Jones. In fact, Halo is not only the
best of this group, it is among the best of Alan Moore's work, which is to
say, among the best comic work you'll find anywhere.
The First Book of The Ballad of Halo Jones originally appeared in Progs
(Issues) #376-385 (July 7-September 8, 1984), the Second Book in Progs
#406-415 (February 23-April 27, 1985), and the Third Book in Progs #451-466
(January 4-April 19, 1986) of the Galaxy's Greatest Comic. The story begins
in The Hoop, a city-sized domed mall and multiplex situated off the coast
of Manhattan sometime in the future. The Hoop is home to the alien
Proximen, brain implanted "glombies" known as Drummers (as in "march to the
beat of a different..."), roving bands of elitist fashion-conscious gangs
and regular folks like Halo Jones and her roommates Rodice, Brinna, Ludy,
and the robot dog Toby. For the first few chapters, Moore dabbles with the
story of a young fun-loving girl in a strange future environment whose
biggest ordeal is the trauma of undergoing a shopping expedition. It is
clever and entertaining but not especially earth shattering. But, just when
you think you've got all the characters and the series figured out,
everything changes. One of Halo's friends is brutally murdered, another
joins the Drummers, and Halo goes to Manhattan and takes a job as a hostess
on the luxury space liner Clara Pandy.
I don't want to reveal too much more than that but I will say that
subsequent chapters introduce a whole new set of characters such as the
dolphin steersman Kititirik Tikriktit, the rat king whose mind is created
by a half-dozen rats with their tails entwined, the amazon-like soldier
Toy, and the androgynous nobody who no one can ever remember. Along the
way, the murder is resolved in a surprising fashion, Halo ships out of the
solar system, and ends up a mercenary in a war that eventually involves her
in shifting rates of time. By the time the series ends, she has changed
considerably from the teenager she was at the beginning. It is one of the
most remarkable transitions of a character ever presented in comics and it
includes some of the most poignant and thought-provoking moments you could
wish for. It created such an impact that, even now, almost twenty years
later, readers are writing in to 2000 AD (in Prog 1272, for example) asking
for a continuation of the series. It is still so esteemed that, in the 2000
AD 25th Anniversary Annual (Prog "2002"), the editors chose an event from
"The Ballad" (which I will not give away) as #2 in the Most Heart-Breaking
Moments in the whole of the history of their magazine.
The price is $19.99 and is absolutely worth it. Buy it.
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