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X-Men: Wisdom - Rudiments of Wisdom (MAX Comics)

X-Men: Wisdom - Rudiments of Wisdom (MAX Comics)
By Paul Cornell

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Product Description

Pete Wisdom has a lot of fairies to kill. Yes, fairies are supposed to be nice and magical and charming, but they are currently attacking England. Hugo Award nominee Paul Cornell (BBC's Dr. Who and Robin Hood) brings you a sci-fi mini-series unlike anything you've seen before! Collects Wisdom #1-6


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #163735 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-08-29
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 144 pages

Customer Reviews

An interesting piece of work.4
Pete Wisdom was created in the mid-90s by Warren Ellis during his acclaimed run on "Excalibur v.1", one of several Ellis characters who function as versions of Ellis' own public persona (see also: Elijah Snow). Wisdom was an antisocial rogue, unpopular with his teammates but popular with readers. After the end of "Excalibur", he was included in Elllis' "Counter-X" revamp, and then, after a period in limbo, on Chris Claremont's revived "Excalibur" (Claremont's grasp of the character could be said to be equal to his grasp on most other characters these days). And then, for some reason, Marvel greenlit a MAX miniseries on Wisdom by British sci-fi author Paul Cornell, with art by Trevor Hairsine (issues 1 and 2) and Manuel Garcia (issues 3 through 6, after Hairsine was removed either for slowness or because of poor sales).

Cornell's story is initially primarily a series of standalone tales following Wisdom and his team a low-rent British superheroes investigating various mystical disturbances throughout the British Isles; along for the ride are Tink, a fairy dissident; Maureen, a clairvoyant; John the Skrull, a member of the "Skrull Beatles" who were assigned to take over the world, but decided not to ("Lads, I've found that I like money and power."); and Captain Midlands, a parody of Ultimate Captain America. Together, they raid the Otherworld to rescue a kidnapped baby, deal with awakened giants, a Welsh Dragon, an army of Jack the Rippers, and, finally, the Martians, those classic British sci-fi villains. Woven throught his are Cornell's ideas about British identity, and Wisdom's disdain for its trappings, trappings his villains often exemplify; and ideas about Wisdom's corrosive karma.

The art is excellent, from both artists, bringing a realistic feel to the proceedings. Cornell's writing is quite inventive, with an odd sense of humour, and very quirky ideas. It is especially interesting, as a Canadian, to read something so obviously written for a non-North American audience, unlike most North American comics (of course, this may have contributed to its poor American sales). Occasionally, Cornell gets a bit too obscure for my tastes (one issue has a bunch of British songs mentioned as being the soundtrack for particular scenes, but the bands in question are all utterly unknown to me, so it comes as rather pretentious), but on the whole it's a winning piece of work. Marvel was obviously interested enough to put Cornell in charge of a relaunched "Excalibur" title, where hopefully we will see Wisdom and his cohorts continue their adventures.

Goofy, yet enjoyable4
Interesting to say the least, Wisdom: Rudiments of Wisdom stars lower-tier mutant and former Excalibur member Pete Wisdom as his beloved Britain is under siege. Between hordes of murderous fairies, insane telepaths, and invading martians (yes, you read that right); Pete has his hands full to say the least. In between all the mayhem, Pete and his team (including Captain Midlands, the British version of Captain America, and a shape changing Skrull in the guise of John Lennon) make for easy laughs and thrills as the carnage piles upward. British writer Paul Cornell (writer of BBC's Doctor Who) churns everything along with a goofy rhythm that will leave you laughing out loud at some spots, while Trevor Hairsine provides some solid pencil work. Wisdom is good for what it is (and more enjoyable than many MAX mini's usually turn out being) and doesn't try to be anything more than that either. All in all, Wisdom: Rudiments of Wisdom is one of the goofier, and enjoyable, MAX mini's to come along in a while; and is definitely worth checking out for X-Men fans and MAX fans alike.

Could be better.2
A single story line based on Pete Wisdom. Since it was written by the Doctor Who guy, the book comes off alot like Torchwood. Too abstract for me to get into. You got fairy/human relationship problems, than there is an alien invasion. Overall I found this book kinda boring.