Margins
The Maxx #21 book cover
The Maxx #21
1995
First Published
3.75
Average Rating
30
Number of Pages

Part of Series

We jump ahead in time and find a 25 year old Sara (formerly Sarah) living in a very small and very strange apartment with a guy named Steve. Due to a change in the law Sara is no longer eligible for social assistance and must find her father (Mr. Gone) since the new law states that he is responsible for her welfare. After talking to her mother, Sara heads to Seattle and finds her dad Their she finds him living happily with a girlfriend. Sara and Gone (now simply calling himself Artie Pender) talk. Artie hints that Mr. Gone was only a representation that Sarah somehow manifested when Artie used his magic to communicate with her. Sara is upset by him not taking responsibility for Gone and leaves stating that she does not want his money. During this whole ordeal Sara is being followed by 3 C.I.A. agents carrying an urn and looking for Artie. That night these three agents find him. Although we are not privy to how he did it, Artie made short work (killed?) these agents and is now in possession of the urn. At the same time Sara has a dream of this occurrence but in her dream the agents kill her father. Sara goes back to see Artie the next day but still cannot find it in herself to forgive him.
Avg Rating
3.75
Number of Ratings
16
5 STARS
44%
4 STARS
13%
3 STARS
25%
2 STARS
13%
1 STARS
6%
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Author

Sam Kieth
Sam Kieth
Author · 40 books

Kieth first came to prominence in 1984 as the inker of Matt Wagner's Mage, his brushwork adding fluidity and texture to the broad strokes of Wagner's early work at Comico Comics. In 1989, he drew the first five issues of writer Neil Gaiman's celebrated series The Sandman, but felt his style was unsuited to the book (specifically saying that he "felt like Jimi Hendrix in The Beatles") and left, handing over to his former inker Mike Dringenberg. He acted as illustrator on two volumes of writer William Messner-Loebs' Epicurus the Sage and drew an Aliens miniseries for Dark Horse Comics, among other things, before creating The Maxx in 1993 for Image Comics, with, initially, writing help from Messner-Loebs. It ran for 35 issues and was adapted, with Kieth's assistance, into an animated series for MTV. Since then, as a writer-artist, he has gone on to create Friends of Maxx, Zero Girl, Four Women and Ojo. Ojo comprises the first and My Inner Bimbo the second, in a cycle of original comic book limited series published by Oni Press. Loosely connected, the cycle will concern the intertwined lives of people with each other and sometimes with a supernatural entity known as the Mysterious Trout. Kieth has stated that other characters from The Maxx series will appear in this cycle of stories. My Inner Bimbo #1 was published in April 2006. Issue #2 was delayed past its original release date; It was finally resolicited in "Previews" in 2007 and hit the store shelves in November 2007. DC Comics' Batman/Lobo: Deadly Serious, a two-issue prestige format mini-series that started in August 2007, was written and drawn by Kieth. This was followed by 2009's two-issue prestige format mini-series Lobo: Highway to Hell, written by Scott Ian and featuring art by Kieth.

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