Sunday, 18 May 2025

Solomon Kane: The Serpent Ring #1 - Titan Comics

SOLOMON KANE: THE SERPENT RING No. 1, April 2025
Proudly announced by its British publisher in December 2024 as “the first Solomon Kane solo series in fifteen years”, this supposed “much-anticipated return” of Robert E. Howard’s creation quite possibly proved somewhat disconcerting to those readers familiar with the early Seventeenth century Puritan. For whilst the twenty-three page periodical certainly opens in a blaze of glory, as long-fanged savages attack a village of much-more agreeable African natives, and the titular character does bloody murder aboard a Portuguese caravel, Patrick Zircher’s narrative subsequently seems to get a little too bogged down in dialogue-driven conversations, word-heavy discourses and a bewildering carousel of new cast members.

Indeed, by the time a somewhat sore and badly limping ‘Sword of Vengeance’ has somehow managed to make his way to the gloomy Ghetto Vecchio, some bibliophiles’ heads may well be swimming from all the different people and their stacked speech bubbles which this comic’s American author relentlessly throws at them; “I am bringing old Tujaru. His eyes are not what they were, but he is like you -- a good teacher.”

Happily however, Issue One of “Solomon Kane: The Serpent Ring” still provides plenty of hooks and thrills with which to ensnare its audience. Kane’s lone charge on horseback against three mounted brigands in a darkly lit mountain tunnel is especially well-paced and lively, as is the suddenly rather tense discovery of a Serpent-man’s flesh-stripped skeleton on the vast tundra of Ndongo. These sadly short-lived scenes manage to inject this book with some much-needed energy, just as it’s in danger of drowning in the aforementioned sedentary sequences set in the Republic of Venice, and ultimately should keep the attention of any peruser of “Dead Man’s Promise” throughout.

Easily this comic’s biggest draw though, is surely the Dayton-born illustrator’s pencilling, which along with his very own colour work, does a fabulous job in bringing his interpretation of the Age of Elizabeth to vibrant life. Of particular note has to be the stark contrast between the brutally harsh Africa and La Serenìssima’s supposedly stylishly civilised world that is just as diabolically dangerous. Likewise, the artist-turned-author is extremely good at imbuing Solomon with the quiet mannerisms of a man confident in his god’s good graces, despite him aggressively blazing away with a pistol and slashing pirates to death with a sword.

The regular cover art of "SOLOMON KANE: THE SERPENT RING" #1 by J.H. WILLIAMS III

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