Angeltown (comics)

Angeltown is a 5-issue comic book limited series created in 2005 by writer Gary Phillips and artist Shawn Martinbrough, and published by Vertigo Comics, an imprint of DC Comics. The story is told in the blaxploitation idiom, with nods to the detective stories of Chester Himes and Walter Mosley.[1]

Angeltown
Cover for Angeltown #1 (January 2005), art by Shawn Martinbrough.
Publication information
PublisherVertigo Comics
ScheduleMonthly
FormatLimited series
Genre
Publication dateJanuary – May 2005
No. of issues5
Main character(s)Nate Hollis
Creative team
Created byGary Phillips
Shawn Martinbrough
Written byGary Phillips
Artist(s)Shawn Martinbrough
Letterer(s)Jared K. Fletcher
Colorist(s)Lee Loughridge
Editor(s)Will Dennis
Casey Seijas (assistant)

In 2011, the series was reprinted by Moonstone Books as Angeltown: The Nate Hollis Investigations, which included two new illustrated short stories by Phillips.

Plot

Allison Dillon, the white wife of African-American basketball star Theophus Burnett, is discovered murdered in her home. After the acrimonious end of their marriage, Dillon had written a scabrous tell-all celebrity memoir, and Burnett is considered the primary suspect, but has disappeared. He is sought not only by the police but by private detective Nate Hollis. The more Hollis digs, the more dirt on Burnett he finds, including a sex tape featuring Burnett with Monica Orozco, Burnett's lawyer and an ex-lover of Hollis', and soft-core porn starlet and z-list actress "Toasty", the daughter of local crime lord Paul Teddy.

Hollis comes to believe that Burnett is innocent, but cannot prove it without information from Burnett himself. Hollis eventually locates Burnett in a beach house in Malibu, where Paul Teddy's gangsters make an attempt on his life, which he survives. With the aid of his grandfather, "Clutch", Hollis deduces the identity of the real killer.[1]

References

  1. Irvine, Alex (2008), "Angeltown", in Dougall, Alastair (ed.), The Vertigo Encyclopedia, New York: Dorling Kindersley, p. 25, ISBN 978-0-7566-4122-1, OCLC 213309015
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