Scott Cohn, continuing on from last issue. It's the most elegant in it's simplicity.
Michael Dooney, who also did some covers for the SNES video games! First part of Leonardo: Blind Sight, a mini series Jim Lawson does mostly in white silhouettes about Leo coping with blindness. It's gorgeous but has a weird ending. Might blog someday. Meanwhile aww, Shadow!
Chris Henderson with inks by Dan Berger. This handsome fellow is Cha Ocho, Leo's rival introduced in vol 4. This is the story of how Leo gave him that scar, by Archie's Dean Clarrian and Chris Allan. It is a...very Archie TMNT story.
Michael Dooney. Shadow's a big Hello Kitty and Hellboy fan apparently. Also think that plush toy in the corner is Fluffy Brockelton, one of the stars from Dooney's own Mirage series Gizmo!
Michael Gaydos. Kinda sad Leatherhead can't use the Scottish version because oh my god can you imagine a giant alligator man just bellowing "GANG AFT A-GLEY!" in the sewers?
Keiron Dwyer. For context, Leo owes a monkey god a favour and their choice of repayment is plucking four versions of Leo from diffrent points in time to make sure he's born. In the course of this adventure the Leo's save Moses from crocodiles.
Sean Wang. It's a nice and moody piece made inadvertently funny by how seriously Don takes reading blogs on the internet in 2005.
Derek Fridolfs.
"My name is Donatello, and I condescend to hopelessly lost normal turtles in the sewers!"
Stephen Sims.
That play on the "Let Me Tell You a Story" tag is because this is the 20th issue of volume 2! To celebrate Mirage changes it up and does three stories this time. Maybe I'll ramble about them at some point, but rn I'm trying to keep this going.
Eric Talbot, who's also on lettering this issue! It deals with the return of the Turtles friend Gosei Hattori, a samurai who channels and draws on the spirits of his ancestors to kick ass, and Raph has a throwing star in his head, what the hell?
George Flint, depicting Donatello venting his displeasure with the Beast Machine's cartoon.
Sophie Campbell, current writer on IDW's TMNT series and creator of two of my favourite comics, Wet Moon and Shadow Eyes!
Robert Atkins. Mirage Casey is neat because while he's the crazed hockey stick wielding loon we all loves, Mirage managed to pull off taking the character to far more serious places in a way big two comics almost never quite pull off.
Christian Colbert. The issue itself is by Archie TMNT team Dean Clarrian and Chris Allan, a story of Splinter and the Rat-King inspired by a conversation they once had in an elevator ride during an Anthrocon. "Make of that what you will," indeed.
Sophie Campbell again! What a perfect pissy teen Shadow.
Michael Dooney, presenting Leonardo's Adventures in Babysitting.
Dooney.
Michael Dooney again. This is a neat story, POV of a kid who signs up with the Foot, but it's set during City of War, which feels pretty arbitrary to me. Coulda just been it's own thing and you wouldn't change much.
--Jim Lawson, in the first instance of the issue artist doing the frontpiece! This bare chested gentleman is Mr Braunze, psychic Doc Savage tribute, who debut in the Twin Peaks style vol 2.
#TMNT #DocSavage #Well,kinda
And from here on out Michael Dooney was on frontpiece duty until the end of the series.
♫gotta getta gift gotta getta gift
gotta getta gift for splinteeeeeer ♫
Huh. This might be the first and only time Fugitoid shows up in any of these.
The third chapter of the C.O.W.-Boys trilogy! Yes, that's Archie's lovable/horrifying Cuddly Cowlick. They have to fight a Galactus vampire that sleeps in a giant coffin and looks like Annihlus and GOD, comics are great!
I both do and do not like this issue. It's an odd mix of things that don't quite go together, and it makes the mistake of being set in the ongoing vol 4 "present"...which I don't think had had an issue for a bout two or three years at this point. You know how a normal person trying to pick up an ongoing cape comic is going to be overwhelmed because there's all this unrelated tie in stuff going on from years ago? That.