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GHOST RIDER: TRAIL OF TEARS # 2 SYNOPSIS Parham rides into the nearby town and asks the sheriff details of any arrests made in the murders of Caleb and his family. When the sheriff makes a racist comment about Caleb, Travis throws him through a window and demands to know the location of George Reagan. The sheriff's deputy, also his young nephew, tells Travis that Reagan was gone - he'd owned several slaves that he refused to set free after the war, and when a union patrol came through the area he shot all of the slaves out of spite before killing the lieutenant of the patrol. The boy explains that all of Reagan's band headed out that night except for the Dragwells, who weren't involved that day. The deputy then agrees to lead Parham to the Dragwells' home. During the trip to the Dragwells' farm, the deputy tells Parham about George Reagan. Killing slaves was one thing, the boy explains, but killing a union officer was something different. They arrive soon after at the Dragwells' farm, but find it to be occupied by horribly mutilated corpses. The boy tells Parham that there were four Dragwells - two sons, the father, and an uncle. Parham had only counted three bodies, but the fourth Dragwell appears behind them, his neck broken and his body terribly disfigured. As he shambles towards them, his body bursts into flame, finally killing him. Shaken by what they've seen, Parham decides to head out to Wyoming, where Reagan owns land. As they leave the farm, they fail to notice a cloaked man in chains on a demonic horse watching them. ANNOTATIONS Past incarnations of the Ghost Rider throughout history, including Caleb, were shown in detail in Ghost Rider # 33 (vol. 5). This issue was reprinted in the Ghost Rider: Trail of Tears trade paperback. REVIEW And, well, looks like I was wrong. Heh, let's move along now, shall we? Garth Ennis and Clayton Crain continue their prequel (of sorts) to 2005's "Road to Damnation", and their slow-burn approach to telling the story is still in full effect in an almost infuriating way. Don't get me wrong, this is an incredibly well-written issue that further develops the building mystery now that the main chunk of set-up has been established. Travis Parham is an intriguing lead character - even if I was totally wrong about him being the Ghost Rider's host - and he's developed enough to logically anchor the story. But c'mon guys, the Ghost Rider doesn't actually show up until the last page of the second issue? That's a bit like cheating, I think, considering "Ghost Rider" is right there in the book's title. I get it, I really do - this is not adhering to the normal comic rules where the title protagonist has to be up front and center at all times. This is a separate mini-series that is able to take more liberties, and that's all fine and good. But we're coming across with the same problem that marked the opening chapters of "Road to Damnation" where the book's selling point is mysteriously absent for most of the narrative. Naturally, it's looking like this will all change with the next issue, and it's lucky that Ennis is talented enough to make me overlook this considering how well he's writing this book (and story wise, so far, it's vastly superior to his last Ghost Rider story), because this could easily get pretty damn frustrating. This issue does go so far as to set up the story's villains, namely Reagan and his murderous band, without actually introducing them other than via flashback. It works in this instance since it builds up their threat plausibly, especially during their flashback scenes detailing Caleb's murder, and I really felt the desire to see these villains get a nice heaping dose of vengeance in the coming issues. A disappointment did come, I hate to say, in the work of Clayton Crain with this issue. His digitally painted artwork is normally breathtaking in its beauty and style, but this issue seemed, well, rushed is the only word coming to mind. It looks sloppy in places, with an almost blurry effect taking place in the issue's second half. He also confuses the narrative during the second half by combining two panels into one during several sequences without a panel border. I actually had to look back over the page a few times to get the flow right, because the split panels actually looked like one panel with the characters appearing in multiple places. Still, though, Crain gave his standard when it came to the issue's "shock" moments - the slaughter of the Dragwells and the spectacular last-page-reveal of the Ghost Rider. So far, "Trail of Tears" is setting up to be a classic-in-the-making that could easily surpass "Road to Damnation" but isn't quite there yet. But things should only get better now that the Ghost Rider himself is actually being brought out to play. Grade: B
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Ghost Rider: Trail of Tears # 2 Title: "Trail of Tears", Part 2 |