‘West Coast Avengers’ Is Making Me Give Marvel Comics Another Chance Again

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Marvel is that abusive boyfriend I just can’t seem to quit. I kick his ass out, throw his stuff out the window because there’s no way I’m letting him back in, and change the locks. Then, a few months later, I see him around. He’s swearing he’s changed his ways. He’s begging me for another chance, telling me it’ll be different this time. I remember how good it was when it was good, and against my better judgment, I give him another shot. I hate myself for doing it, but I think that West Coast Avengers might be me giving Marvel another chance to break my heart.

Several figures piled onto a blue motorcycle. The title reads West Coast Avengers
Cover of West Coast Avengers Issue #1

West Coast Avengers Sounds Like Everything I Love

Marvel announced yesterday that Kelly Thompson will be writing a new team bookWest Coast Avengers will be made up in large part of the characters who were unfairly canceled, with Clint Barton (Hawkeye) in charge. The West Coast Avengers appear to consist of America Chavez, Kate Bishop (also Hawkeye, and perpetually annoyed at being confused with the other one), Kid Omega, and Gwenpool. According to Thompson, Clint wants to help Kate, but he is steadfastly refusing to admit how much fun it is to be a mentor.

The last time the West Coast Avengers were active, Tony Stark was funding the team from New York. Now, the team’s apparently funding their exploits through their work on a reality show (a framing device Thompson previously used in Jem and the Holograms: The Misfits). I can’t imagine anything going wrong with a Marvel comic that has a premise I love and marginalized characters with whom I identify. (For the autists in the room, myself included, I’m being sarcastic. I think everything is going to go wrong.)

The Team’s History With Female Characters Is Exceptional

I trust Kelly Thompson with my whole heart. Her best-known work is Jem and the Holograms, the greatest pink comic to ever pink. She also co-wrote A-Force and Captain Marvel and the Carol Corps, which were arguably the best things to come out of that entire Secret Wars event nonsense. She wrote the Kate Bishop Hawkeye series, and co-wrote the crossover issues on America with Gabby Rivera. She wrote Mega Princess, which my 10-year-old adored, and is furious that there isn’t a follow-up. Her female characters are not defined by their relationships with men, are rarely in competition with other women (I’m not talking villain/hero conflict here), and are confident even when they’re scared. Thompson’s work with Kate Bishop was what really sold me on her as a writer; Kate is struggling in L.A., struggling being on her own financially for the first time in her life, and struggling to understand who she is as a hero. Her struggle, however, is always matched with her dogged determination to never let the bastards grind her down.

I’m less familiar with Stefano Caselli’s work on pencils and inks, but what I have seen in Ironheart leaves me quite convinced that he can draw girls who are more than cheesecake.

Image from Issue #3 of Ironheart
I actually had to work to find an image of Riri in the suit with her face showing; the vast majority of the time, panels focus on her face and upper body

Caselli’s work is clean, emotive, and enjoyable. Panels are clean and easy to track. Facial expressions are distinct and clear. I can’t wait to see what he brings to this new team.

West Coast Avengers: The Team and the Lineup

So to review, we have:

  • Kelly Thompson, powerhouse of comics that feature kick-ass girls doing kick-ass things
  • Stefano Caselli, an artist with a history of drawing young girls with appropriate costumes that don’t need double-sided tape to stay in place

Working on a team that includes:

Images of Gwenpool, Kid Omega, Kate Bishop, and America Chavez
  • Kate Bishop, who has no particular powers beyond her Daddy’s credit card (which she doesn’t have anymore) but who is dead set determined to sort out the super crime happening in L.A., Jessica Jones-style. The noir-ish detective part, not the self-destructive alcoholic part.
  • America Chavez, an interdimensional hero who can punch star-shaped holes in reality and travel between dimensions. She just met her galactic abuela and dramatically increased her power potentials.
  • Quentin Quire, aka Kid Omega, who is a… frankly a weird and ill-defined character that played a pretty substantial role in Wolverine and the X-Men. He went to a cosmic casino with Logan, and has changed allegiances so many times that I suspect he is as confused as the readers are. His powers are psychic, but whether they’re telepathy based a la Emma Frost or more projection-oriented like Psylocke’s has been left vague.
  • Gwen Poole, aka Gwenpool, who is sometimes dismissed as “Deadpool in pink,” but with less trauma and bloody murder. She’s a kickass fighter, a sometimes mercenary, ludicrously funny, and more than willing to break the fourth wall—she is, after all, someone from our world transported to Earth-616.
  • Clint Barton, the original Hawkeye and the previous head of the West Coast Avengers. Ostensibly a mentor. Alright, he also starred in the acclaimed Fraction/Aja run of Hawkeye. I loved 3/4ths of that run, which was also the first post-Young Avengers book where Kate got a real role, which almost makes up for Jeremy Renner playing him in the MCU. Clint is the only one who gets to call Kate “Katie” without getting punched.

So Why Am I Hesitating?

I’ve written (and written) about why Marvel pisses me off so much when it comes to characters exactly like these—female characters, characters of color, LGBT characters. They tend to get canceled before they get to issue 8 (and then sell phenomenally well in trade). At least one factor in this pattern is how modern fans shop for comics, who is willing to collect physical single issues rather than trades, who still goes to local comic book stores, and who doesn’t quite know how to cross over from the MCU into comics, since they really aren’t all that similar.

But one of the solutions that I’ve often bandied about is just this: make a team book. Kate Bishop got popular because of her leading role on Young Avengers followed by her role in Fraction and Aja’s Hawkeye. America Chavez was also a Young Avenger, and developed a significant following. The only reason I recognize Quentin Quire’s name is because of his role in Wolverine and the X-Men. To go back a-ways, I found my beloved Laura Kinney (X-23) from her place on Uncanny X-Force.

Team books can attract new audiences in a way that single title books often don’t. When you have a team of young heroes led by a well known and loved hero, you’re more likely to get readers. You see which characters collect fans, and then develop solo titles for them.

I’m far from the first person to think of this, okay? Big Two comics have been using team books to launch new characters since the earliest days of The Avengers and Justice League, and this was from an era where Jimmy Olsen turned into a giant turtle every other week. The individual heroes were given a chance to shine with the likes of Captain America and Batman, bolstering their individual titles while telling interesting stories in their own right. Not to get too far into corporate lingo, but this is what we call “synergy” and “spotlighting content.” I read Uncanny X-Force, so I read X-23, so I read (Lord help me) Avengers Arena which pulled me into Schism, and just like every abusive boyfriend, Marvel knows how to tease me, use the language of social justice to make me think he really does understand this time, and then gaslight me for weeks until my friends wise me up.

I Got You a New Key Made…

I’m going to buy this book, which releases on August 22nd. And I know what this means. I know this means I’ll start picking up Ms. Marvel again regularly, and I’ve been seriously missing All-New Wolverine, and I’m hearing such good things about the current Captain Marvel book.

Even his friends say my ex has changed. That it’s going to be different this time. There’s a new editor-in-chief, and… you know what, we may all just be better off if we don’t talk about that time he wore that completely culturally appropriative costume, it was just that one time for 22 months, right?

I’m that girl, watching my ex move back in again. At first, it’s his toothbrush, and then I keep his beer in the fridge, and then I’m making room in the closet for his work clothes. I am so glad he’s back, and at the same time, I’m just praying he won’t break my heart all over again.

Maybe West Coast Avengers makes it past Issue 8. Maybe this time the abusive boyfriend really will have changed. Just this once.

Want to read more before the series starts? 

Hawkeye: Kate Bishop Vol 1: Anchor Points, Vol 2: Masks, and Vol. 3: Family Reunion

America Vol 1: The Life And Times of America Chavez, Vol 2: Fast and Fuertona

The Unbelievable Gwenpool Vol 1: Believe It

Hawkeye by Matt Fraction and David Aja

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2 thoughts on “‘West Coast Avengers’ Is Making Me Give Marvel Comics Another Chance Again

  1. First of all, I think West Coast Avengers might be a miniseries.
    Second of all, All-New Wolverine just ended this week.

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