Decent neo-noir graphic novel. I know Bendis as a writer, but I didn't realize he was an artist early on, so it was interesting to see his illustrations. He has decent chops--hints (occasionally more than hints) of Frank Miller's Sin City-style art, but without seeming to be a copy or "homage," so much as an influence. Heavy on the blacks makes for some nicely stark pages and also (probably) goes some way towards concealing limitations with anatomy and so on, though Bendis nevertheless shows some difficulty in drafting women, especially their faces, and with page layout--at times, it's difficult to figure out how to proceed through a page, and occasionally dialogue balloons disappear off the edge of the page or into the spine of the book. The writing errors don't help either, especially when a correct and an incorrect usage--e.g. your vs you're--occur literally on the same page. As for the story, it has some interesting twists on the standard noir tropes--femme fatale, crook with a heart of gold (not to mention being named Gold--bit on the nose) coming back to town years later for vengeance, corrupt cops, pervasive cynicism, etc--by making the protagonist's primary motive reclaiming his son (and by making him learn, by the end, that if he'd just aimed for that and let the vengeance thing go, events might well have worked out much better), and by making the climax turn on a minor character stepping up and radically altering events. Nevertheless, despite being solid enough, it doesn't really break new ground. Noir fans will find a lot to like here, probably. Non-noir fans will probably just be confused.