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Written by Sarah Boslaugh Friday, 06 July 2012 00:00
Cases of mistaken identity? Latin American snuff film shoots? A Venician kid held for ransom? Just another day in the life of Modesty Blaise, the comics page's greatest globe-trotting crimefighter.
Well, you get something more in this volume—moral and philosophical dilemmas that could prompt a serious discussion of ethics, as well as a mini-Modesty who plays a key role in the first adventure. That would be "Samantha and the Cherub," and Samantha is the prize student in a martial arts class that Modesty's platonic best friend Willie teaches in London's East End. Sam, as she prefers to be known, has a doltish older brother rather improbably nicknamed "the Cherub" who's in a motorcycle gang that has hired out to do a political kidnapping (very Cold War—the strips in this volume were originally published in 1988 and 1989). Of course, the gang made a bad mistake by kidnapping a friend of Modesty and Willie, and Sam gets in on the act as well ("they won't suspect a kid" she says blithely as she approaches a house full of thugs).