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Mystic v. 1: Rite of Passage
 
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Mystic v. 1: Rite of Passage [Paperback]

Ron Marz (Author), Brandon Peterson (Illustrator), John Dell (Illustrator)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Mystic January 1, 2002
Ciress is a world that runs on magic, and those with the most magic run the world. Genevieve Villard was in line to become a great leader, but during her Rite of Ascension something went horribly wrong. Her sister Giselle, a flibbertigibbet society girl, was conferred not only the power that was rightly Genevieve’s but that of every other Guild Master on Ciress. Now Giselle must come to terms with being the magical protector of her entire planet – if the Guild Masters let her live that long. Vibrant color and lush detail brings the magic of MYSTIC to life each month, as Giselle learns to live with her strange new power and the responsibility that goes with it.


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Ron Marz has been writing comics since 1990, giving up a journalism career when he found that it was more fun to make up the stories. In those years, he has written extensively for publishers including DC, Marvel, Dark Horse, Image, and Acclaim. You've read his work in the pages of Superboy, Silver Surfer, Star Wars Tales, StormWatch, X-O Manowar, DC vs. Marvel, the Amalgam title Dr. Strangefate, and most notably Green Lantern. He brought his skills and voracious fans with him to CrossGen, where he writes the titles Scion, Sojourn, The Path, and Crossgen Chronicles. Ron received a Harvey Awards nomination as Best Writer in 2002 for his work on Scion, which was also nominated for Best Continuing Series.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Cross Generation Comics; First Edition edition (January 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1931484007
  • ISBN-13: 978-1931484008
  • Product Dimensions: 10.2 x 6.6 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,353,777 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great art, good story, and really...er...'hot' costumes, January 18, 2003
By 
This review is from: Mystic v. 1: Rite of Passage (Paperback)
Giselle is your ultimate rich, beautiful, party animal and she likes it that way. Her sister Genevieve is the responsible one who is about to be promoted to guild master of one of the seven major guilds and gain access to the spirit of the founder of her guild (a magical spirit who has seen just about everything).

All Giselle wants to do is party. All Genevieve wants is her sister to show up for the promotion and not embarass her. Someone or something else wants to shake up the world before it's too late. So suddenly Giselle has all the power of the seven guild spirits, the former guildmasters after her life, more power than she can handle and a heck of a lot more responsibility than she ever wanted. It does make life interesting, while she can keep it.

The color quality and other production values are excellent. The art is very good (the monsters look monstrous, the beautiful women look beautiful, etc). The story is dramatic and compelling.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "Go easy with the metaphysical stuff. I'm still pretty new at this.", May 22, 2010
By 
H. Bala "Me Too Can Read" (Just moved to posh Marina Del Rey, CA - where if you drop a quarter, why, you just keep on walking) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Mystic v. 1: Rite of Passage (Paperback)
How do you foist responsibility on a feckless socialite? Why, with a random handshake, of course. Or that's the way it works out in MYSTIC, the first ongoing series trotted out by CrossGen Comics back in 2000. One such random handshake gives our heroine something more worrying than cooties.

On the planet Ciress magic is a very real and pervasive element. Society is structured around it. Everything, in fact, is run by the seven magical guilds. All her life the gifted and no-nonsense Genevieve Villard had strived and studied, determined to become a Guild Master, and at last she's on the cusp of achieving her goal. But then, during her Rite of Ascension, the mystical ritual which officially elevates her to Master of the Nouveau Guild, the fickle universe gives her a wink.

In the audience at Genevieve's ceremony is her capricious younger sister, Giselle, and Giselle couldn't care less about magic. She'd rather keep an eye out for the next party. Imagine her distress when a passing handshake from a stranger results in a mark on her right palm, and this mark suddenly activates and disrupts Genevieve's Rite of Ascension. Suddenly the spirit of the Nouveau Guild's founder - meant to pass into Genevieve to act as guide and repository of all arcane knowledge contained in her guild - instead is sucked into Giselle. But it doesn't end there. Giselle's mark also yanks the founding spirits of the other six guilds from their hosts and then plants them within the party girl. Oh, she doesn't like this. Just like that, though disinclined and wholly untrained, Giselle had become the most powerful sorceress maybe ever in the history of Ciress. Her older sister is pretty cheesed.

MYSTIC Vol. 1: RITE OF PASSAGE collects the first seven issues of the ongoing series, as well as the five-paged story from CROSSGEN CHRONICLES #1, and the narrative immediately draws you in. The studious Genevieve was originally intended to be the series protagonist but Ron Marz connived his way into making it be the irresponsible Giselle instead, and this works better in terms of group dynamics and character arc. The humorless Genevieve is a tame character, and she's already incredibly responsible. It's absolutely more intriguing that Giselle is the sister ending up with the sigil. She has further to travel to achieve that same level of maturity. She's also a more fun character to hang with.

The mark on Giselle's palm, that sigil, apparently creates a "synthesis of all the major magics." Meaning that she might know squat about magic, but she can still wield the damn thing, and effectively. But it doesn't help that most of the spirits trapped within her rail against their captivity. Their original hosts want the spirits back in the worse way, and since these hosts are pretty formidable magic users themselves, they quickly make things tough and dangerous for Giselle.

Also aggravating Giselle is an odd feline-ish pet (called a squit) that came out of nowhere and began speaking to her. Giselle decides to call it Skitter (although it prefers the name "Dirk"). Skitter reminds me quite a bit of Snarf from the Thundercats. But Skitter the talking cat pales in comparison to how frustrating it is that Giselle finds herself stuck in this tattered outfit - her "magic" seems intent on keeping her in it. So, you see, weight of the world on her shoulder and the girl is still flighty.

Writer Ron Marz was a CrossGen workhorse (he also penned THE PATH, SCION, SOJOURN), and he's good again in MYSTIC. Nothing fancy here or even new, really. Marz just delivers good old solid storytelling, core characters with well-definied personalities, and a heroine reluctantly undertaking a compelling age-old journey. MYSTIC boasts sibling rivalry and inter-guild intrigue and politics and magical throwdowns. Marz easily creates a sympathetic voice for Giselle, convinces you to overlook her more stereotypical traits. Given, artist Brandon Peterson puts Giselle in so many provocative poses and in skimpy outfits that sometimes it's a bit too much, but dang she looks good. Peterson has admitted that his art style is inspired by art nouveau, and, yeah, a lot of his visuals here do seem decorative and ornamental. I like it. A cool bonus in this trade, by the way, is that each issue is preceded by a text page which features various of the creative team offering behind-the-scenes stuff on the series. MYSTIC got cancelled when CrossGen Comics went bankrupt in '04, but it's still recommended reading. Better late than never, right?
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5.0 out of 5 stars Crossgen's best title (it's NOT only girl comic), August 12, 2005
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This review is from: Mystic v. 1: Rite of Passage (Paperback)
OK, after reading Sandman, I tried Preacher. First book was great, others not so. I tried all kinda books, some were good like first issues of Strangers in Paradise and Mangas like Oh My Goddess and Blade of Immortal, there were some nice Marvel Knights like Paul Jenkins' stuff, but then I discovered Crossgen, well written comics which have well illustrated stories. I LOVED Meridian, The First, and , of course Mystic. They can be rated teen or all ages. Buy all trades of Mystic, both original writer and Tony Bedard were great.

I got all trades of Mystic and read comics that follow. It's a SHAME if nobody publishes those comics collected as trade five, six and so on, because they get greater and greater near the end.

As far as I know, Mystic and just a slightly weaker Meridian have story ending logically, there is a wrap up. Sojourn was more popular, but CrossGen bankrupted before story ended. Sniff :(
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