A review by dorinlazar
100 Bullets Book One by Eduardo Risso, Brian Azzarello

3.0

It starts slow then it switches to some other apparently unimportant story. It pissed me off in the beginning, because it definitely was not what I would've expected. I'm not necessarily a fan of the noir or pulp fiction, and this is just that - and in the beginning it felt like it will be a set of completely unrelated stories, with one common character.

But then some threads start to come together. Dizzy Cordova reappears, with less of that heavy accent, and it starts being part of a more complex story. There are things happening in the background, and an overall interesting... what do I say, captivating story emerges.

The only problem is that the story and the style gets better only after passing the first half of the first volume. and this says a lot. It doesn't become compelling until the second arc of Dizzy and the story of Loop, which closes this volume. So yes, it will take some motivation to read this volume, but there is great hope that the next ones get better