New Statesmen

New Statesmen was a "political superhero series"[1] featured in British comic Crisis, created by John Smith and Jim Baikie, which lasted for fourteen episodes from 1988 to 1989.

New Statesmen
Publication information
PublisherCrisis
Publication date1988 - 1989
No. of issues15
Creative team
Written byJohn Smith
Artist(s)Jim Baikie

Sean Philips

Duncan Fegredo
Collected editions
New StatesmenISBN 1-85386-217-7

Publications history

Sean Philips and Duncan Fegredo were brought in to cover for Jim Baikie on issues five, thirteen and fourteen and issues seven and eight, respectively.

New Statesmen, was the story which, along with Third World War, launched 2000 AD's sister comic Crisis.

The series was published in Crisis from issue #1–14 with a reappearance in issue #28. It was also repackaged for the American market as a five-issue prestige format limited series released in 1989. This had been part of the business plan for Crisis from the start but only the early series, like New Statesmen, got this treatment.[2] In 1990 the story was collected into a trade paperback.

Plot

Set in America in 2047, the series told the story of a number of genetically modified "optimen", created with superhuman 'hard' and 'soft' talents, who were essentially biological weapons. Similar to contemporary comics such as Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns, series asked what 'superheroes' would be like if they were far more human than traditional heroes. The series depicted a dystopian future in which Britain had become the 51st state of America and the world is in the grip of fear of genetic engineering and political warmongering.

Publication

  • New Statesmen (by John Smith):
    • "Halcyon Days" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, #1, 1988)
    • "Perspectives" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, #2, 1988)
    • "Behind the light" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, #3, 1988)
    • "Shadowdancing" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, #4, 1988)
    • "Downtime" (with Sean Phillips, in Crisis, #5, 1988)
    • "Holding the fist" (with Sean Phillips, in Crisis, #6, 1988)
    • "Where the railroad meets the sea" (with Duncan Fegredo, in Crisis #7, 1988)
    • "Memories on Ice" (with Duncan Fegredo, in Crisis #8, 1988)
    • "All doors lead to the Minotaur" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, ##9, 1989)
    • "Life during wartime" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, ##10, 1989)
    • "Riding the tiger" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, ##11, 1989)
    • "The power and the glory" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, ##12, 1989)
    • "White Death" (with Sean Phillips, in Crisis, #13-14, 1989)
    • "Epilogue" (with Jim Baikie, in Crisis, ##28, 1989)

Collected editions

It was collected into a trade paperback:

  • New Statesmen (240 pages, Fleetway Quality, November 1990, ISBN 1-85386-217-7)

Notes

  1. 2000 AD books - Creators - B Archived 2008-10-07 at the Wayback Machine
  2. David Bishop Thrill Power Overload, p. 127
gollark: Anyway, this should demonstrate Tux1's alternatecy excellently.
gollark: ```coqTheorem gollarks_alts : forall (alt : Tux1), owner alt = gollark.Proof. intro. simpl. reflexivity. Qed.```
gollark: Give me a minute.
gollark: Okay, I can do this mathematically.
gollark: https://wiki.mondecitronne.com/wiki/POOT-421I mean, *really*?

References

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