Review: Savage Sword of Conan #3 (2019)
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| Savage Sword of Conan (2019) #3: "The Siege of Khesatta" |
By TROY CHRISMAN
Paint Monk's Library Writer
Marvel’s
Savage Sword of Conan hits its third issue and readers are thrust
knee deep into the meat of the five-part story arc “The Cult of
Koga Thun.”
This issue, “The Siege of Kheshatta”, is the continuation of
Conan’s adventure in Stygia after escaping a cursed slaver ship with the help of his new companion, Suty.
Here's a quick recap of the first two issues to bring new readers up to speed: After uncovering an ornate
box - which, once opened, imprinted an ancient map in the Cimmerian’s
mind. Suty and Conan seek out the city of Kheshatta and an answer to the riddle of the map. Exploring the city uncovers a library and a guardian
within, a female warrior named Menes. While the trio discuss a plan
to follow the map, Menes is whisked away by followers of
Koga Thun, an evil sorcerer she believes is not only in search of the
map, but also an ancient secret buried underneath the city.
* SPOILER ALERT!*
Synopsis: Savage Sword of Conan (2019) #3
“The Siege of
Khesatta” begins as Menes confronts her assailants, peeling
away any visage of them being anything but evil agents of the foul
sorcerer and his cult. While she struggles to escape, Conan joins the
fray, unarmed save for his environment. A well-launched pillar ruin
halts the attack while well-aimed fists fell another cultist, finally surrendering a blade to the raging barbarian’s grip. When the odds
and number of cultists against Conan grow, he turns to cunning and a
natural lever to turn the tables and squash the opposition –
literally.
The trio again gather to
plot the battle against Koga Thun and his plan to find the map and
ancient weapons buried under the city which have evaded his grasp (despite decimating the town through magic and sheer force). But as the
three talk, a thick storm descends on the city in the form of fog,
sand, wind, and blazing magenta eyes.
While the barbarian grips
steel, ready to split the giant reptilian face in two, his senses
clear and standing before him is Koga Thun, flanked by two female
acolytes each with flames emanating from one of their hands. Koga
Thun demands the map, as sinewy, dead hands reach from all angles to
secure the barbarian. Conan promptly chews off a hand that wanders
too close to his face and spits it back in the sorcerer’s face –
a fitting response to his foul magic.
Koga Thun then lays his twisted
hands on Conan and peels back the layers in his brain, searching
deeper and deeper for the map. Menes breaks the evil one’s
concentration by sheer force, knocking the two female acolytes
together with a push and in turn knocking into Koga Thun, freeing the Cimmerian to
strike out and cut his way free.
As the three race for a break in
Koga Thun’s dark barrier, Suty is wounded, but the the trio breaks
through, regrouping and plotting yet another strategy. Menes believes Koga Thun
has been searching the wrong location for the ancient weapons and the
real mystery will be revealed underneath the city. Despite ancient
tales of cursed warriors who failed while seeking the weapons, the
three descend further under Khesatta. As Conan leads the way, seeing
visions shared to only him by the map in his head, they plunge forth
- and straight into a waiting crowd of undead.
CAPSULE REVIEW: The third issue of Savage
Sword of Conan is simply the best yet in Marvel’s revival of this
character. It is the most complete from cover to back. The story within
includes a delicious taste of the villainy of Koga Thun and even
while they escape, Conan and his new allies feel his presence
pounding in their souls (and Suty pounding in his veins).
The artwork
has grown leaps and bounds from the first issue, simply due to what
is going on behind the scenes. Background art is much more fleshed
out and the world of Hyboria feels full and robust. The city is ruined,
but daunting and the catacombs underneath are dank and brooding.
The only dent I can find
in the latest issue is one that may be the niggling of a longtime
comic reader. The combat sequence between Koga Thun and Conan was
confusing. I feel the writers captured the surreal quality of the
foul magic that had helped capture Conan and transported he and his
allies into a different reality of sorts. But the actions of Menes to
help free the barbarian required several views to capture what
actually happened. A bit of narration here would have
explained the actions and better served the story. It may be a small
quibble and maybe narration is a lost art, but in this case it could
have served as a great help.
Another issue is this new
Conan still hasn’t shown the mind-numbing avoidance to magic
Robert E. Howard’s barbarian showed this Howard canon. Here, the barbarian treats
Koga Thun as just another foe, not one that makes the hairs on his
neck bristle and his inner fire burn.
But those are minor issues
with a comic that steers us Conan enthusiasts in no direction but
full steam ahead for the conclusion of this story arc and the ones
that follow. The Savage Sword is in good hands and appears to be
thriving, Koga Thun be damned.
Once again, an Alex Ross cover hits all the
right marks and even includes an “after Buscema and Chan”
signature line in tribute to legends John and Ernie.
My little nitpicks aside,
this issue ranks a solid 8 of 10
and propels us in anxious anticipation to the next part of the
tale. This feels like the Savage Sword of old while boding well for
the future of the series.
.
The book also includes
part three of Scott Oden’s 12-part novella “The Shadow of
Vengeance.” I will be reviewing this tale at its conclusion and am
very happy to announce I have reached out to Scott and Perilous
Worlds’ Editor Howard Andrew Jones and will have an upcoming Q&A
with Scott.
Feel free to submit any questions you may have for Scott
through the Paint Monk or to me at troychrisman@gmail.com.




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