![]() ![]() You have a detective whose hiring has surpassed finding the answers he was hired to find and getting into the “why” of why he was hired. ![]() The story is pretty straightforward and in line with a lot of pulp stories. This entry in the collection is one of the better entries in that it is a good exploration in the noir genre and also doesn’t find itself too buried in vernacular and clever attempts at writing. I really like some of the stuff Azzarello did with the series, but I also hate a lot of the stuff Azzarello did with the series. It is very push-pull for 100 Bullets and me. Following 100 Bullets Volume 4: A Foregone Tomorrow, the series features art by Eduardo Risso, and issues in this collection were also collected as part of 100 Bullets-Volume 2 and 100 Bullets Omnibus-Volume 1. ![]() Written by Brian Azzarello, 100 Bullets Volume 5: The Counterfifth Detective is a DC Comics crime comic book collection published under the Vertigo imprint. Milo is about to discover that the past he thought he knew might not be as clear as he believed. ![]() Wrapped in bandages, Milo finds himself approached by Agent Graves who tells Milo that he has a chance to get even with the man who set him up…but Milo quickly finds himself caught in a spiral of lies and allies who might not be who they say they are. Milo Garret is a hardboiled detective who is recovering after losing a fight with his windshield after a car accident. ![]()
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