Thursday, May 1, 2025

The Great Comic Reread: Shi




Recently I finished collecting all the Shi Comics (well almost, I still have one Lethargic Lad crossover and the Shi CGI preview to find but neither are important to the story of Shi) and then of course Billy Tucci then announces more comics specifically Shi: Gatecasher and a crossover/team-up with La Muerta (another character I collect who also has a number of similarities to Shi)  - so I figure it’s time to read the complete Shi in preparation for these new releases.

Shi is the story of Ana Ishikawa, a young woman whose father and brother were murdered by the Yakuza when she was a girl.  She was trained as a Sohei warrior monk by her paternal grandfather – an unpopular move among his brethren not only because of her gender but the fact that she is half American and a Christian.   Now Shi is trying to take revenge against the man who killed her family and is now a high ranking member of the Yakuza in America.

It's a simple plot (some would say the oldest - revenge) and the interplay between the deadliness of her martial arts and her Christian beliefs make for some interesting tension. Which forms the first series Shi (later subtitled Way of the Warrior)

And then it gets more complicated and the range of stories quickly widens with demons, super-soldiers, werewolves, and kitsune all coming into play.  Shi also became a legacy character appearing in the 12th Century, the 17th Century, World War Two and a dystopian manga future.

Shi also was one of the poster girls for the Bad Girl Art movement in the 90s (a label Tucci doesn’t like) with characters like Razor, Lady Death and Witchblade, featuring strong female comic book characters with cheesecake art, anti-heroines often battling supernatural threats. 

Shi appeared 130 odd issues across 50 miniseries and one shots published by several publishers – London Night, Crusade, Image, Dark Horse, Avatar. 

It’s fascinating Shi made her debut in a Razor annual and that Tucci seems to operate on the idea that a rising tide lifts all ships and Shi appears in multiple crossovers with other independent characters like Grifter, Cyblade (a crossover that introduced the Witchblade), the Horseman, Lethargic Lad, Eenie Weenie Comics, War of Independents, Ash, Jetta, Fallen Angel, Vampirella as well as Marvel characters like Daredevil and Wolverine.

I really enjoyed the adventures of Shi and it was interesting that Tucci and his fellow writers have built a comprehensive and mostly cohesive history for the character.  I am looking forward to the new adventures to see where they will go.

Let’s explore the world of Shi over the next few posts.

1 comment:

  1. I haven't read much 90s "bad girls" comics but I sorta of gathered Shi was a bit better than most of them.

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