The Good
Arthur and Mera's journey continues and they come one step closer to finding Atlanna, Arthur's mother. That's what I find completely wonderful about the Maelstrom arc. It feels like a journey. It feels like an adventure. Although we can't look at writer Jeff Parker's whole work on this series simply because he's still going strong. It feels like this arc is really where he hit his stride. He's taken Aquaman, who was well-defined by Geoff Johns, and made the series into something new and something different. Aquaman is an adventure book now? Yes and I'm fully on board.
Parker continues to build on the mythos and history of Atlantis, which is just another stamp Parker is putting on his run. We get to see some Dr Shin in the mix as well, and it's really cool to see everyone working together instead of against each other. Although there's danger and fighting, this run on Aquaman is strangely friendly.
There's spoilers here, but if you've been reading the back of recent DC comic books, then I'm not spoiling much. Atlanna looks really awesome. I've always been a fan of Paul Pelletier's work on this series, but his costume design for Atlanna and character design for the animal she's riding is so awesome. Certain elements of her outfit remind the reader of Atlantis, mainly the orange and green, but she has this whole Red Sonja/Conan look going for her too. I'm truly impressed with the design of this character and the build-up for the past few months really pays off.
The Bad
There's one particular moment that really rubbed me the wrong way. Mera and Arthur enter a gate and it drops them off underwater because at some point, the gate sunk into the sea. As he and Mera rise to the surface, he reminds Mera that ancient Atlantians couldn't breathe underwater. The way the dialogue plays out, which is merely a single line, feels like Arthur is giving a history lesson to Mera, not talking to her. Also, wouldn't she know that? Maybe I'm getting too fanboy about one line.
The Verdict
AQUAMAN #38 is the issue that really solidifies what Jeff Parker is doing with this book, or at least with this story line. Aside from one line that got me a tiny bit fanboy-mad, the writing and dialogue on this book is great and leaves the reader wanting more, and as always, Paul Pelletier and Rain Beredo on colors provide some spectacular art, including that final splash page, which is awesome. I highly recommend checking out AQUAMAN and more importantly, Maelstrom.
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