I rarely give comics 5 stars, especially when they're just enjoyable superhero books, but Madman is special. I can't pinpoint what it is that has given this book such a lasting appeal to me, but I love it as much now as when I first read it nearly 20 years ago. Allred's art had, by this point, long since surpassed his cod-Nagel style that first attracted me to his work. By now, he'd found his own unmistakable style and this was its showcase.
Allred's Grafik/Graphique Muzak/Musique hero Frank Einstein has moved on past the G-Men From Hell story arc, and finds himself utterly rudderless and in a strange uniform. Einstein's musings are the sort of thing that a 20-something would find deep, but just what I'd expect a groundless adult orphan to be thinking as he tries to find himself.
While we couldn't have known what we were missing without his wife Laura's superb colouring, the blue-tint monotone shading adds to the off-kilter effect of a noticeably left-of-center book. The writing was here still just short of what would become his more distinct hand, but that 'keen and neato, gee whiz' charm is already there in spades.
Though it's not for everybody (I could not, in good conscience, let my 3-year-old see the eyeball-devouring scene), The Oddity Odyssey is an all-around superb book, and so much more than just a guy in a stupid costume.