Tag Archives: american caper

Preview: American Caper #6

American Caper #6

Writer: Dan Houser · Lazlow
Artist: David Lapham
Colorist: Lee Loughridge
Cover artist: Tyler Boss

A ballad of predators, prey, and performance enhancing drugs. Aaron Olds sends Orson to Marty’s ranch on a slightly salacious mission. William visits his angry daughter Arabella in Brooklyn before attending a woke opera with his boss. Marnie machine guns a few memories. And the FBI begins to put the pieces together just as a terrifying cartel hitman castrates their case.

American Caper #6

Preview: American Caper #5

American Caper #5

Writer: Dan Houser · Lazlow
Artist: David Lapham
Colorist: Lee Loughridge
Cover artist: Tyler Boss

William Hamilton dodges a bullet. Literally. Eliza Charmers discovers a murder weapon. Nearly. Eva and Maria run into some very familiar “friends.”

Meanwhile: Marnie and her conspiracy crush meet up at a gun range. And Eva reveals a dark secret of her former life in Mexico amongst the cartels as a glamour model.

American Caper #5

Preview: American Caper #4

American Caper #4

Writer: Dan Houser · Lazlow
Artist: David Lapham
Colorist: Lee Loughridge
Letterer: Nate Piekos
Cover artist: Tyler Boss

Once upon a time William and Marnie were happy, healthy, progressive newlyweds in Chicago. Now they’re angry parents in Wyoming. She’s DM flirting with the Order of 1780 Militia while she and gambling addict William load up on junk food. Meanwhile, Orson’s boss lays out plans for dealing with the FBI, as Freddie Abel, recently escaped from prison, pays a surprise visit to an old friend, whose betrayal put him away in the first place. Join us for cocktails, lines of chang, and treachery as brunch gets bloody.

American Caper #4

Preview: American Caper #3

American Caper #3

Writer: Dan Houser · Lazlow
Artist: David Lapham
Colorist: Lee Loughridge
Letterer: Nate Piekos
Cover artist: Tyler Boss

The Hamilton family disappears into separate fantasy worlds of cowboy cosplay, conspiracy, and computer games. The Charmers are questioned by the FBI about the recent murders in Verona and the van full of smuggled immigrants and escaped convicts. Agent Carter Evans tests if his new partner is crooked. Marty parties while breeding bulls. And Freddie interrupts an old friend’s poolside brunch of cocaine and cocktails with a surprise visit.

American Caper #3

American Caper’s collection arrives June 23, 2026

Dark Horse Comics and Absurd Ventures have announced that the first collected edition volume of creator-writer Dan Houser’s acclaimed new crime fiction comic book series, American Caper, will be released on June 23, 2026. Titled American Caper: Red-Pilled Blues, this trade paperback collects the first four issues of the series and preorders are now live.

Created and written by Rockstar Games co-founder and longtime creative force behind Grand Theft Auto and Red Dead Redemption, Dan Houser, the series features a murderer’s row of fellow crime fiction talent including Houser’s longtime writing collaborator, Lazlow, and artwork by Eisner Award–winner David Lapham, Chris Anderson, and Lee Loughridge, with covers by Tyler Boss.

Set in Verona, Wyoming, American Caper follows two neighboring families on the brink of collapse: 

A Mormon hitman. A gambling-addict lawyer. Two neighbors intertwined in a real estate deal gone wrong. Mix in a Mexican beauty queen on the run from her past, a red-pilled housewife, two escaped convicts in love, a Wall Street billionaire who has become a cowboy, and a maniac hell-bent on revenge. The manicured wilderness of Verona, Wyoming is the perfect cocktail of American culture: real estate development, violence and snake oil.

From the tax-avoiders in the Rockies, to the thought police of Brooklyn, to the confused political and environmental battlegrounds of Florida, one thing is certain: This tragedy is someone else’s fault.

To be among the first to secure a pre-order of the inaugural trade paperback collected volume, please visit Bookshop, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or place an order via your local comic book shop or bookstore. Copies will be available in-store starting June 23, 2026.

American Caper: Red-Pilled Blues

Mini Reviews: Absolute Wonder Woman #15, American Caper #2, Event Horizon: Dark Descent #4

Absolute Wonder Woman #15

Sometimes, the staff at Graphic Policy read more comics than we’re able to get reviewed. When that happens you’ll see a weekly feature compiling reviews of the comics, or graphic novels, we just didn’t get a chance to write a full one for.

These are Graphic Policy’s Mini Reviews and Recommendations.

Logan

Absolute Wonder Woman #15 (DC Comics) – The first Absolute Universe crossover is an intricately drawn, smartly plotted, Gothic masterpiece from Kelly Thompson, Hayden Sherman, and Jordie Bellaire. Thompson’s dialogue shows the contrast between Diana’s desire for community despite her dark origins and Batman’s taciturnity, and Sherman and Bellaire’s visuals marry dark magic with dark detective work. Despite having “Wonder Woman” on the cover, this feels like a Batman comic with a story centered around detective work while mysterious forces gather in the background. The bond between Bruce and Diana also feels organic, and I love how the Absolute book are slowly building connectivity between the books instead of just lumping them into one Crisis-level slugfest. I look forward to Scott Snyder and Nick Dragotta’s take on this dark, dynamic duo as well as the upcoming year of more gorgeous art from Hayden Sherman, heavy metal color palettes from Jordie Bellaire, and supernaturally-tinged character arcs from Kelly Thompson. Overall: 8.7 Verdict: Buy

Brett

Event Horizon: Dark Descent #4 (IDW Publishing) – Writer Christian Ward, artist Tristan Jones, colorist Pip Martin, and Letterer Alex Ray deliver more terror in this fourth issue. The series reveals what happened to the Event Horizon and we finally find out what led to the infamous message left in the film, “Libera Te Tutemet Ex Inferis.” The series has explored the torture and hell of the various crew, and this fourth issue focuses on John Kilpack, the captain of the ship. The King of Hell has tortured all of the other crew and here John is not just forced to watch his failure to protect his crew in the present but also the torture he experienced in the past. We see an abusive father and the ridicule and bullying of John because he’s gay. It’s an interesting issue that shifts things a bit in that John is an innocent compared to other members of the crew who have done terrible things, instead he was teased and abused growing up, which the King of Hell uses. The visuals continue the aesthetic of the series provided gore and terror as John has to decide what he needs to do to escape what he sees before him. It’s an interesting issue and key for fans of the film revealing the answer to a mystery of the series. Overall Rating: 7.95 Verdict: Buy

American Caper #2 (Dark Horse Comics) Dan Houser, Lazlow, David Lapham, Chris Anderson, Lee Loughridge, and Nate Piekos continue to present a comic that skewers everything and there’s few to cheer on. The series has so far hit hot topic issues and exaggerated today’s politics and both left and right are in the crosshairs. American Caper #2 gives us more of bad people doing bad things as we learn a little more about motivations behind actions. It’s satire. It’s lampooning the world. Nothing is sacred. Everything is on the table. This is a comic where it’s ok to hate everyone and just sit back and enjoy the disaster unfolding for readers. Overall Rating: 7.5 Verdict: Read

Preview: American Caper #2

American Caper #2

Writer: Dan Houser, Lazlow
Artist: David Lapham
Colorist: Lee Loughridge
Letterer: Nate Piekos
Cover artist: Tyler Boss

Verona, Wyoming is rattled by a murder, a van crash of illegal immigrants, and three escaped fugitives on the run. William visits Marty Blowman, the erratic, HGH-swilling millionaire turned cowboy, who reveals a little too much of his insecurities. Meanwhile, Orson violates his Mormon oath in Mexico, seeks redemption, and finds his wife at home baking pie for a concerning visitor.

American Caper #2

American Caper #1 Delivers an Extreme and Absurd Look at Today’s America

American Caper #1

American Caper is a tale of two totally normal, completely damaged families in a world of corrupt business, inept politics, bungling crime, self-righteous justice, and problematic leisure wear. We follow the fortunes of two neighbors who are on the point of collapse: a Mormon hitman and a gambling addict lawyer, both intertwined in a real estate deal gone wrong. Added to the mix are a Mexican beauty queen on the run from her past, two escaped convicts in love, a Wall Street billionaire who has become a cowboy, and a maniac hell-bent on revenge. From the tax avoiders in the manicured wilderness of Wyoming, to the thought police of Brooklyn, to the confused political battlegrounds of Florida, one thing is certain: this tragedy is someone else’s fault.

A skewering and exaggeration of today’s America. That’s exactly what I’d expect from the co-founder of Rockstar Games and longtime head writer and creative director of the Grand Theft Auto and Red Dead Redemption series. American Caper #1 delivers a debut that offends everyone with a take on the state of the country that takes everything to 11.

Written by Dan Houser, with additional writing by Lazlow, American Caper #1 takes us to Wyoming where everyone is horrible and there are no good people at all. Like a Tarantino film, the debut issue jumps around a little weaving threads and setting up the story in a way that’ll eventually come together in a tapestry of everything wrong with the world today.

The story is of two neighbors, one a corrupt lawyer, and the other a Mormon with a perfectly family and life who also happens to be a hitman. Everyone presented, no matter where they are on the spectrum of beliefs, are horrible blights on the world. They come off as unredeemable and the type of characters you want to see terrible things happen to them because they deserve it. From a racist Red-pilled Karen of a wife, to developers destroying the environment, to a far left daughter who is the caricature that the right paints, no one is safe from getting the spotlight of how awful they are. It’s exactly the type of story that you’d expect from folks from Rockstar, taking the real world and just hyperbolize every aspect.

This is a story of horrible people doing horrible things that you want to see horrible things happen to.

The art by David Lapham delivers his signature style. With finishes by Chris Anderson, color by Lee Loughridge, and lettering by Nate Piekos, it’s a comic where many jokes are in the details. American Caper #1 wants you to linger on the pages to pick up all the small additions and every element helps tell the story and at times, land the jokes. Graffiti on a sign, a picture on a wall, the look characters give each other, it all adds to the story, the world, and give the characters depth.

If you like stories where everything is on the table to make fun of, skewer, poke, jab, and nothing is sacred, American Caper #1 is for you. It’s an out there start that’ll keep you on your toes with no idea what to expect next for what will happen and to who. It’s also a story where you’ll cheer when everyone gets what they deserve. It’s a cathartic middle finger to the state of things with a focus on the hyper polarization and self-centeredness that the world has become. It’s a comic where lines are drawn and it’s the reader against everyone on the page.

Story: Dan Houser, Lazlow Art: David Lapham
Finishes: Chris Anderson Color: Lee Loughridge Letterer: Nate Piekos
Story: 8.5 Art: 8.5 Overall: 8.5 Recommendation: Buy

Dark Horse provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Purchase: Zeus ComicsKindle

Preview: American Caper #1

American Caper #1

Writer: Dan Houser
Artist: David Lapham
Colorist: Lee Loughridge
Cover Artist: Tyler Boss

The new crime-fiction saga created and written by Dan Houser (Grand Theft Auto, Red Dead Redemption), with additional writing by Lazlow, art by Eisner Award winner David Lapham, and covers by Tyler Boss.

A tale of two totally normal, completely damaged families in a world of corrupt businesses, inept local politicians, bungling criminals, and unfortunate leisurewear. We follow the fortunes of two neighbors on the point of collapse: a Mormon hit man and a gambling-addict lawyer, both intertwined in a real-estate deal gone wrong. Mix in a Mexican beauty queen on the run from her past, two escaped convicts in love, a Wall Street billionaire who has become a cowboy, and a maniac hell-bent on revenge. American culture has become a war about real estate, violence, and snake oil.

From the tax avoiders in the manicured wilderness of Wyoming to the thought police of liberal Brooklyn to the confused political and environmental battlegrounds of Florida, one thing is certain: This tragedy is someone else’s fault.

American Caper #1

Early Review: American Caper #1 Delivers an Extreme and Absurd Look at Today’s America

American Caper #1

American Caper is a tale of two totally normal, completely damaged families in a world of corrupt business, inept politics, bungling crime, self-righteous justice, and problematic leisure wear. We follow the fortunes of two neighbors who are on the point of collapse: a Mormon hitman and a gambling addict lawyer, both intertwined in a real estate deal gone wrong. Added to the mix are a Mexican beauty queen on the run from her past, two escaped convicts in love, a Wall Street billionaire who has become a cowboy, and a maniac hell-bent on revenge. From the tax avoiders in the manicured wilderness of Wyoming, to the thought police of Brooklyn, to the confused political battlegrounds of Florida, one thing is certain: this tragedy is someone else’s fault.

A skewering and exaggeration of today’s America. That’s exactly what I’d expect from the co-founder of Rockstar Games and longtime head writer and creative director of the Grand Theft Auto and Red Dead Redemption series. American Caper #1 delivers a debut that offends everyone with a take on the state of the country that takes everything to 11.

Written by Dan Houser, with additional writing by Lazlow, American Caper #1 takes us to Wyoming where everyone is horrible and there are no good people at all. Like a Tarantino film, the debut issue jumps around a little weaving threads and setting up the story in a way that’ll eventually come together in a tapestry of everything wrong with the world today.

The story is of two neighbors, one a corrupt lawyer, and the other a Mormon with a perfectly family and life who also happens to be a hitman. Everyone presented, no matter where they are on the spectrum of beliefs, are horrible blights on the world. They come off as unredeemable and the type of characters you want to see terrible things happen to them because they deserve it. From a racist Red-pilled Karen of a wife, to developers destroying the environment, to a far left daughter who is the caricature that the right paints, no one is safe from getting the spotlight of how awful they are. It’s exactly the type of story that you’d expect from folks from Rockstar, taking the real world and just hyperbolize every aspect.

This is a story of horrible people doing horrible things that you want to see horrible things happen to.

The art by David Lapham delivers his signature style. With finishes by Chris Anderson, color by Lee Loughridge, and lettering by Nate Piekos, it’s a comic where many jokes are in the details. American Caper #1 wants you to linger on the pages to pick up all the small additions and every element helps tell the story and at times, land the jokes. Graffiti on a sign, a picture on a wall, the look characters give each other, it all adds to the story, the world, and give the characters depth.

If you like stories where everything is on the table to make fun of, skewer, poke, jab, and nothing is sacred, American Caper #1 is for you. It’s an out there start that’ll keep you on your toes with no idea what to expect next for what will happen and to who. It’s also a story where you’ll cheer when everyone gets what they deserve. It’s a cathartic middle finger to the state of things with a focus on the hyper polarization and self-centeredness that the world has become. It’s a comic where lines are drawn and it’s the reader against everyone on the page.

American Caper #1 hits shelves November 12 with final order cut-off October 6.

Story: Dan Houser, Lazlow Art: David Lapham
Finishes: Chris Anderson Color: Lee Loughridge Letterer: Nate Piekos
Story: 8.5 Art: 8.5 Overall: 8.5 Recommendation: Buy

Dark Horse provided Graphic Policy with a FREE copy for review


Pre-Order: Kindle

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