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|  |  | | Customer Reviews: | | | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Excellent dark and gritty! Sep 05, 2009 If Buffy, the petite pop-modern vampire slayer wasn't enough for you this second volume from Joss Whedon's "Season Eight" of Buffy brings tortured, anti-heroine slayer Faith back into play in a role even more suited to her than vampire and demon slaying.
Part of the draw of the Buffy-verse is the balance of darkness and good. Every character has had their dips into evil, from Xander's flirtations with all manner of monsters to Willow's grief-induced stint as the Big Bad. But some characters start out from deeper in the evil well. Giles and Faith are two of the darkest, Faith representing the out of control youth, caught in a cycle of violence from a young age and carrying on the chaos in her own life in a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy. Giles' history, merely glanced upon in the TV series feels more like a betrayal, when you come to love this patient, always-trying man only to discover he has a hard core of frightening ruthlessness.
Buffy, Xander and even Willow are the Superman and the Spidermans of the Buffy-verse, but Faith and Giles are the Punishers.
This analogy is proven hard and fast from the first few pages when Giles calls on Faith to do what the other Slayers can't, walk into the house of a single mother who was turned into a vampire and slay the kids she turned. After this trying scene Giles meets back up with Faith at her apartment and asks her to handle a special case for him, one he doesn't even want Buffy, Xander, Willow and the other Slayers to know about. It stands to reason that not all the Potentials who are now endowed with Slayer powers would turn out good, especially as other creatures of power find and foster them since Buffy's operation is busy with the new threats from the mysterious "Twilight" and the good old U.S. Government.
Assassinating a Slayer, even if she is evil is not an easy task, as this volume proves.
Furthermore, "No Future for You" also proves that the switch to comics was an excellent move for Whedon and the Buffy-verse as the format allows a lot more playing, and a hyperfocus on characters otherwise glanced over in the series. Many plots dealt with Faith and her waffling between the forces of good and evil, but the glimpses we see of her past in these pages are heart breaking and enlightening at the same time.
One could easily argue, after this addition to Season Eight, that Faith might make a better lead, if the audience can handle a grittier, darker, less reliable narrator.
*Also, this volume features the cameo of my publisher's wife, Robin, which I was very glad to finally get to read.
Love me some Faith!!! Aug 24, 2009 Brian K. Vaughan comes aboard and the story and dialog kepp clicking. Faith returns for a seriously "un-slayer" like mission but she's perfect for it. Seeing some things fro her point of view is great. We also get some answers to some nagging little questions. Great stuff!
Plenty of future for this series yet Apr 21, 2009 After reading the first arc that left me with a bad taste in my mouth, i bought this one to give it another chance.
I can say i'm very, very glad that i did. Brian does a great job writing a solid story with Faith and Giles at the helm. It just felt like the show, great dialogue, just great writing.
Definately the best arc of the series so far.
2 of 21 found the following review helpful:
Perfect title Mar 18, 2009 There is no future for buffy in either tv, film or novels. the poor conceived concepts and terrible writing make it a terrible read. the characters are so bad that not even novels can make them better. poor thoughts and poorly put together just like the tv show that was canceled twice
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
More Faith please! Jan 05, 2009 For me, this is the best one of the Buffy Season 8 so far. I love the stories with Faith and that no matter how good Faith's intentions are, she always ends up with her face meeting Buffy's fist. I also love the idea that Giles and Faith will team up in the future to protect Buffy from those things that she just shouldn't need to deal with.
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