Not a bad re-birth to one of my favorite characters in comics (the other being John Constantine). Art is good and Snyder has a great mythology that he is putting together... But at times, everything seems a bit rushed. Perhaps that's the way newer comics are written, but I would have preferred the story to gestate more. Some great horror elements, though, which I loved! I would give it 3 1/2 stars. Reprints Swamp Thing (5) #1-7 (November 2011-May 2012). Alec Holland was never Swamp Thing, but he remembers being Swamp Thing. Alec is contacted by the Parliament of Trees and asked to return to the Green to battle a new threat from the Rot. When Alec learns that his biggest enemy could be Swamp Thing's former lover Abigail Arcane, Alec debates returning to the life that caused him pain.Written by Batman’s writer Scott Snyder, Swamp Thing brings Swamp Thing really back into the fold and makes him an important part of the DC Universe in the New 52. Loved by critics, Swamp Thing was considered one of the better books to come out of the New 52.For years, Swamp Thing was relegated to DC's Vertigo line and never had any interaction with the DC Universe proper...or at least any significant interaction. With the Brightest Day, both Swamp Thing and John Constantine were re-merged with the DCU...then Flashpoint happened. After Flashpoint, the DC Universe was rewritten again and much of Brightest Day seems to be eliminated (much to my frustration as a reader of Brightest Day), but Constantine and Swamp Thing survived the re-imagining (with Constantine joining one of Swamp Thing's sister book Justice League Dark).The story running in these issues of Swamp Thing also is connected heavily to Animal Man starting issues (collected as Animal Man 1: The Hunt). Both comics involve the rise of the Rot. It is spreading across the land and both Animal Man and Swamp Thing are facing it. Here in Swamp Thing, the Rot is going after the Green, in Animal Man it is going after the Red.Scott Snyder’s Swamp Thing isn’t Alan Moore, but it is very good and creepy. Swamp Thing manages to be brought back into the world of horror and DC at the same time. Alan Moore did that seamlessly in his storyline (still within the DC universe) and hopefully Snyder will walk that line. The story and art are fun, and in spite of the fact that Alec Holland isn't even the Swamp Thing throughout the story, it still remains compelling.Swamp Thing is one of the better New 52 titles and the first arc of the story shows great promise for a series which had such a high point in the 1980s. I'm looking forward to seeing more from Snyder and the direction he's going to take the story. With strong sales, it looks like it is going to happen...let’s just hope that DC doesn't start mucking with the formula and the vegetable vindicator stays on top. Swamp Thing 1: Raise Them Bones is followed by Swamp Thing 2: Family Tree.
What do You think about De Sève Et De Sang (2012)?
Right along the lines of Animal Man... the art style fits the title so well. Bring on Vol 2!
—tabster23
Ugh! I can't read another death/resurrection story.
—barnacle1