I'm puzzled. When I logged on Goodreads that I'd started reading this, I saw, with some confusion, that I'd already read it. Rated it four stars and everything. Now it's certainly possible that I did. I read a lot, as anyone who follows my reviews can attest. It's not surprising that I would forget some of those books over the years. Indeed, that's one of the reasons I started keeping a reading journal many years before I'd even heard of Goodreads, and why I went through those journals once I did and logged them all as read. Indeed, it's one of the reasons I decided to start writing reviews of everything I read, as a way of fixing the book in my mind, the review acting as a memory aid. Anyway, I figured it would all come back to me once I started reading this book.
But it didn't. I would be willing to swear that I have never read this book before. I have no idea why I logged it as read or where the four star rating came from, not that it's undeserved or anything. Weird.
In any case, I definitely really just did read it for sure. Honestly. And it was good. Sam and Twitch originally appeared in Todd MacFarlane's Spawn. Then Bendis and Angel Medina got the go-ahead to build a series around them. Bendis was, at the time, known primarily for crime comics: Jinx and Goldfish, and just starting on Torso. A comic book about a couple of NYC cops with a touch of the supernatural was right up his alley. This is definitely an early Bendis title. The trademark dialogue and pacing crackle with nervous energy. He's out to dazzle the reader with everything he's got. This first volume is mostly one long storyline, involving dead mobsters and four severed thumbs, all seemingly from the same person ... The story will keep you on the edge of your seat through countless twists and turns. It's no wonder this book was so highly praised when these comics first came out. The artwork is lovely, every bit up to the challenge of keeping up with Bendis' thumbnails while still retaining a strong identity of its own. Angel Medina's expressive figures remind me of Sam Keith's work in some ways. It's beautiful stuff.
All in all, this is an impressive book that certainly lives up to its reputation. I prefer to think that I somehow got it confused with another book, because the idea that I would have forgotten it to this extent is just too crazy for words. Highly recommended!