Ratings26
Average rating3.7
Reprinting issues #31-36 of the Harvey and Eisner Award-winning VERTIGO series, 100 BULLETS: THE COUNTERFIFTH DETECTIVE brings to light another chapter in the story of Agent Graves and the remnants of his old outfit the Minutemen. In this fifth suggested for mature readers trade paperback collection by acclaimed writer Brian Azzarello (HELLBLAZER, BATMAN/DEATHBLOW: AFTER THE FIRE), featuring art by Eduardo Risso (BATMAN: GOTHAM KNIGHTS) and a new cover by Dave Johnson, Agent Graves presents his trademark attaché case containing a gun and 100 untraceable bullets to Milo Garret — a small-time private dick who's just gotten out of the hospital after losing an argument with his car's windshield. With his face covered in bandages, Milo has become an invisible man in more ways than one. As his latest case draws him into the shadowy world of the Trust, he's forced to confront the blank space that is his past and figure out what it has to do with the attaché case he's holding in the present... and do it before what he doesn't know ends up finishing the job that the windshield started.
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0 released books100 Bullets is a 0-book series first released in 2002 .
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Strongest entry in the series so far. Good enough for me to pick up the next, after being close to dropping it all for good.
Crime fiction, as a genre fascinates me, although I don't read a lot of it. Part of it's because it's rather uniquely named; science fiction stories, for example, contain fiction driven by science, and horror stories contain horrific elements, etc. A good Crime story, though, isn't really about crime at all - it's about Justice, and that is clearly the case wit 100 Bullets.
There's an interesting moral question asked in the story, one that parallels Plato's Ring of Gyges myth; if you were given the tools with which to kill someone, without fear of reprisal, would you do it? What about if the person you're asked to kill is someone who also ruined your life, and you know that they'll never face justice under the legal system? When does “street justice” become justified?
That philosophical aspect is really what makes 100 Bullets worth reading; if it was just a bunch of stories where Agent Graves gave people a gun with 100 untraceable bullets, it wouldn't be nearly as interesting. I'll definitely be picking up the rest of this series, though, to see what kind of morality tales Azzarello chooses to tell next.