 Jason Lowe 11/24/00 . chapter 1 As a perspective on Nightwing, this story's unique; we so seldom hear one of the Gotham boys speaking in first person unless it's to give a really long, boring list of hard-boiled crime-related exposition. The author gets into Dick Grayson's head and audaciously, confidently navigates his emotional landscape - Bruce wayne's personality, body image, use of voice in crime fighting, throwaway references to relationships with celebrity superfolk - ultimately creating a compelling, believable homo.
The sex, however, isn't as appealingly raunchy as the stuff in Taking Aim (same author), nor is the portrait of Roy Harper as satisfying. While it's refreshing in any context to hear two men who've just slept together discuss parenting and self-esteem issues, it's quite disappointingly grating to watch a gay protagonist urge the object of his desire back into the nubile arms of a heterosexual relationship with no self-interest on display.
Worth reading for the Jericho references alone. |