The Ballad of Halo Jones: Full Colour Omnibus Edition

by Alan Moore

Hardcover, 2023

Status

Available

Call number

741

Publication

2000 AD (2023), 240 pages

Description

Where did she go? Out. What did she do? Everything. 2000 AD and DC Comics are proud to present Alan Moore and Ian Gibsons all-time classic feminist space opera, THE BALLAD OF HALO JONES. When Halo Jones grows bored with her life in The Hoop, a futuristic world where jobs are scarce and excitement is nonexistent, she sets out to see the galaxy any way she can. But can she survive the highs and lows that lie in her path, including an extended period of shipboard servitude and a tour of duty in a terrifying war that defies the physics of space and time?

User reviews

LibraryThing member paradoxosalpha
This trade volume collects the entire run of "The Ballad of Halo Jones" from the English comics weekly 2000 AD. This mid-1980s material was some of Alan Moore's early work, and it shows him tackling class oppression, military imperialism, personal trauma, and cultural anomie, all in the context of
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a 50th-century dystopia-cum-space opera. Protagonist Halo is an underclass nobody whose discontent carries her across the galaxy. The real moral heft to these stories keeps them from being careless and speedy reads. At the end, the major plot elements have all been resolved, but Jones is on her way out to some new experiences, having survived nearly everyone with whom she has been involved during the three major parts of the story: her origins in the floating "Hoop" off the New York coast, her adventure off-planet as staff on a space liner, and her military service in the Tarantulan War. Moore clearly left room for more story, although he never filled that room.

Ian Gibson's art is effective in the black-and-white panels, and the pages reproduce well enough at the full-page magazine size used for this volume.
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LibraryThing member missizicks
This was my first encounter with Alan Moore and I really liked it. I liked being plunged directly into a new world and learning about it as the story unfolded. I enjoyed the social commentary on materialism, media inanity, wars off stage conducted for bad reasons, and the demonisation of the
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unemployed. The comic first appeared in the ultra materialist Thatcher years, but it feels very relevant still. The characters were all believable, and there was a good mix of action, tension and pathos.

Halo is an intriguing character. I liked her because she was normal, average, unremarkable in so far as she was aimless in her boredom, innocent of the worst aspects of other people, liked shopping and clothes but wasn't that bothered about shopping and clothes, and was gauche around men, unfazed or oblivious to celebrity. I liked her because she realised that her life on The Hoop wasn't enough and she took control of her life in order to change it. I liked her because she was true to herself, even when she didn't know she had anything to be true to and was stumbling through life. I liked her because she startdd to wake up to what was going on around her and because, even when it seemed that she'd lost everything, she didn't give up. She still saw that she had a future. She never had a game plan. Her only ambition was to live, and to live to the best of her ability. I like her most of all for that. It's what we all should do, whatever circumstance we find ourselves in.

It was really obvious that Moore and Gibson had put a lot of work into creating the world that Halo inhabits. The story builds gradually, and drops in hints of what has gone before without laying it all out on a plate. With each new plot development, too, just enough is said to allow links to be formed and anticipation for the next chapter to build. It's such a shame that legal wrangling with the publishers meant that Moore and Gibson stopped after three books, rather than completing the nine they originally intended.
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LibraryThing member NatalieSW
This graphic novel, originally appearing in Brit mag 2000 AD in 1984 is a great read and fantastic to look at. The pictures are all black and white, as were almost comics in the UK at the time, and very detailed. The artist, Ian Gibson, has worked on Judge Dredd and Robo-Hunter, among other things,
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since then. Alan Moore, prolific writer of Top Ten, V for Vendetta, Swamp Thing, The Watchmen, and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, and more, was at the top of his form with Halo Jones.

Halo Jones herself is a kind of unintentional, everywoman hero, who can't help being talented, pretty, adventurous, and in some of the right places at the right times -- and in some of the wrong ones too. She's a sympathetic character in the 50th century, who needs to escape the slum she lives in "Hoopside" and go find life. And she does.
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LibraryThing member mrgan
I had always assumed Halo Jones was a bit cheesy, but I ended up liking it quite a bit. Lots of fun experiments by Moore, and a crazy variety of stories. The art is so very 80s, but once you adjust to that, it's nice.
LibraryThing member raschneid
Feminist dystopian science fiction, and officially one of my favorite comic books ever.

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

240 p.; 11.13 inches

ISBN

1786187701 / 9781786187703
Page: 0.3238 seconds