THE TERRORS
By Brian K. Morris
Rising Tide Pub.
245 pgs
Any comic fan upon seeing the gorgeous Jeffrey Hayes cover
to this book would have done a double-take. Here is a black man wearing the all
too familiar costume of The Black Terror. The Black Terror appeared in Exciting
Comics # 9. He was pharmacist Bob Benton, who had formulated a chemical he
called formic ethers, which gave him superpowers. He used these to fight crime
with his sidekick, a young Tim Rowland, and together they were known as the
“Terror Twins.” Many of those early stories were penned by Patricia Highsmith
before she became a bestselling crime novelist.
But here’s the rub. Neither Bob or Tim was black. This race
switch becomes the lynch pin of writer Brian K. Morris’ unique reinterpretation
of these heroes. Keeping the original World War II setting, he’s able to
incorporate a social underpinning to his drama while at the same time tipping
his cap to those golden age characters. And it works without ever becoming
preachy. He deftly defines his cast, the racism of the times and the drama all
of them are caught up in, both personally and publicly.
As if that wasn’t enough to sink your teeth into, he then
has the guts to bring as yet another old timer into the fray. Any true comic
fan, upon being introduced to the Cobalt Scarab, a redheaded mystery man who
Benson encounters, will immediately recognize the long-lived hero with the BB
initials. His name and origin here also connect with the original. Of course,
Morris also throws in some new and nasty villains ala the beautiful Sylvia
Devereux. One of the most cold-hearted women this side of Delilah.
“The Terror” is a clever, thrill ride with an honest appreciation of what was good and bad about the past. Here’s hoping there’s a sequel in the works.
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