I read these two volumes together, so I'm reviewing them as one block for ease.
Quantum And Woody is about the (mis)adventures of Eric and Woody Henderson - Woody was adopted by Eric's father and, when said father is mysteriously murdered, the pair team up to try and track down the true killers. Along the way, they find themselves exposed to a dangerous quantum energy experiment which gives them the ability to project energy blasts and forcefields. The catch being that if they don't klang their golden wristbands together once per 24 hours, their atoms will disappate and they'll both die. Unfortunately, getting along isn't really their strong point.
The first volume details Q&W's fight against the ERA, another secret society (the Valiant Universe has a hell of a lot of these) that steals scientific innovations so that they can make money. The second sees Eric go back to work for his security firm, only to wind up a contracted superhero and stuck in a war between a private military corporation and a group of white supremacists. You can't make this stuff up.
James Asmus' dialogue is quick and snappy, full of great (if risqué) jokes and a fun bond between the two brothers that's always strained but also always hilarious. The villains are as cartoonish and zany as the heroes, and the supporting characters don't get skimped out on either, from their teenage-clone sidekick/girlfriend to the peculiarly unexplained genetically modified goat. Yes, they have a goat. He's on all the covers, and his name is Vincent Van Goat.
The artwork in the first four issues is by Tom Fowler, while Ming Doyle takes over for the second four. Both have similar art styles, playing fast and loose with human anatomy but never to the point of caricature, while Jordie Bellaire colours all eight issues for consistency. This is the first Valiant book I've read where the artist on the flashbacks is the same as the main artist too, but Bellaire uses a distinctly different palette for these to the point that it almost feels like someone else doing the pencils.
Quantum & Woody doesn't take itself too seriously, from the dialogue to the caption boxes to the goat, but it's genuinely good fun and another great entry into the Valiant Universe (that I need to get back to reading more of).