Kane (comics)

Kane is a comic book series created, written and drawn by Paul Grist. Grist also self-published it through his company, Dancing Elephant Press. It concerns a police detective who works in the 39th precinct of the fictional American city of New Eden, which seems to be located on the west coast. Despite being a UK citizen, Grist appears to have modeled New Eden and its police force in the style of American Cop shows such as Hill Street Blues and NYPD Blue. Another clear influence is the work of Frank Miller, particularly his Sin City comics. Cerebus was another formative influence, particularly because it proved to Grist that self-published comics were a viable proposition; the first issue of Cerebus that Grist read was #39, hence the designation of Kane's precinct.

Flashback with his former partner
Cover of the first issue

Kane has a difficult relationship with his co-workers due to a violent encounter with his former partner, which unfolds gradually and in flashback during the series. Police corruption is a recurring theme however, Kane is also densely intertextual and brims with references to popular culture, particularly characters from British television, comics and films.

Since the end of 2001 Grist has concentrated his comics work on his superhero character Jack Staff, although he has announced plans to continue Kane as a series of original graphic novels.

Collections

Kane has been collected in the following trade paperbacks from Image Comics:

TitleMaterial collectedISBN
Kane vol. 1: Greetings from New Eden Kane #1–4 ISBN 1-58240-340-6
Kane vol. 2: Rabbit Hunt Kane #5–8 ISBN 1-58240-355-4
Kane vol. 3: Histories Kane #9–12 ISBN 1-58240-382-1
Kane vol. 4: Thirty Ninth Kane #13–18 ISBN 1-58240-422-4
Kane vol. 5: The Untouchable Rico Costas and Other Short Stories Kane #19–25 and others ISBN 1-58240-551-4
Kane vol. 6: Partners Kane #24–29, 31 ISBN 1-58240-704-5
gollark: Trees outnumber us 400 to 1. We need to prepare.
gollark: https://i.redd.it/r2lpbjnsf1521.png
gollark: (in the case of monopolies, it's almost certainly a better solution than regulating other stuff)
gollark: Regulation will fix everything!
gollark: See, the problem is is that corporations don't actually want to *sell* in free markets, but they do want to *buy* from them.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.