Thief of Thieves

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Thief of Thieves
Thief of Thieves.jpg
Cover of Thief of Thieves 1, art by Shawn Martinbrough and Felix Serrano
Publication information
Publisher Image Comics/Skybound
ScheduleMonthly
Format Ongoing series
Publication dateFebruary 2012 – June 2019
No. of issues43
Creative team
Created byRobert Kirkman
Written by Robert Kirkman
Nick Spencer
James Asmus
Andy Diggle
Brett Lewis
Artist(s) Shawn Martinbrough
Letterer(s) Rus Wooton
Colorist(s) Felix Serrano

Thief of Thieves is a monthly comic book series published by Image Comics' Skybound imprint which premiered in 2012. Created by Robert Kirkman, the comic centers on Conrad Paulson, a highly successful thief who quits the business and begins a new life stealing from other thieves. The series features a rotation of writers, including Nick Spencer on the first story arc, and art by Shawn Martinbrough. The first three issues sold out upon release, and a television series based on the comic is in development at AMC.

Contents

Publication history

At the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con, Thief of Thieves was announced as one of the titles that would help launch Robert Kirkman's Skybound, an imprint of Image Comics. [1] [2] A year later, Kirkman told USA Today that working on AMC's The Walking Dead television series influenced his approach on co-writing Thief of Thieves: "Having worked on the Walking Dead TV show, I've really fallen in love with the way that TV shows are written, where a bunch of people get together and they plot stuff and people split off into their own little splinter groups and write episodes," he said. "I think that's a really neat way to tell stories and something that could be utilized in comics more often." [3] Kirkman put together a team of four other writers, beginning with Nick Spencer, to rotate different story arcs. [4] [5] The second arc, which begins with the eighth issue, will be written by James Asmus. [6] Shawn Martinbrough is the book's permanent artist. [3] Kirkman wanted Spencer to write the first arc because of his "knack for good and interesting dialogue," and liked Martinbrough's "cinematic flair" and ability to "portray characters realistically." The series debuted on February 8, 2012. [5]

Plot

Redmond is a master thief who decides to quit just before attempting what would be his biggest heist yet. He then begins a new career of stealing from other thieves in an effort to make up for all his previous mistakes, but finds himself on the run from people on both sides of the law. [3] [7] Kirkman explained, "He's got this compulsion where he has to steal or he doesn't feel like he's living, but he doesn't want to break the law anymore." [3] Thief of Thieves depicts both sides of Redmond's life: one as the thief along with his young apprentice, Celia; and the other as his real name, Conrad Paulson, who has an estranged wife and adult son. [3] [7]

Characters

The Paulson family

The Thieves Guild

The F.B.I.

The Cartel

Reception

The first three issues of the series sold out on their respective release dates. [8] [9] Erik Norris of IGN called the first issue "a satisfying introduction to this series that establishes the main cast with some great characterization and ends strongly with a cliffhanger that's sure to get me back next month." [10] Iann Robinson of CraveOnline, while critical of some of the first issue's artistic elements and dialogue, said "Thief Of Thieves works well enough to give it the benefit of the doubt. Let’s hope Kirkman and his crew work out the kinks soon." [11] Newsarama's Edward Kaye called the book's concept "solid [...] if not a bit clichéd, but I really don’t think that the premise is presented very well in [the] debut issue." [12] Augie De Blieck Jr. of Comic Book Resources, in a review of the first issue, wrote "Thief of Thieves is off to a good start, setting things up nicely without feeling like 'just' a set-up issue." [13]

After the release of the second issue, IGN's Jesse Schedeen remarked, "Two issues in, the series is proving itself to be very competent and well crafted", but that "the plot isn't exactly racing along, and readers are left with far too many questions about [...] the general course Redmond's story will be taking." [14] Jason Clyma of Broken Frontier said that "initially it appeared that the core of Thieves would be Paulson's life of crime, but as the series progresses, it is entirely possible that his move to repair his life will become the central and most interesting aspect of the book." [15]

Collected editions

TitleMaterial collectedPublication dateISBN
Thief of Thieves, Volume 1: I QuitThief of Thieves #1–7September 2012 978-1607065920
Thief of Thieves, Volume 2: Help MeThief of Thieves #8–13May 2013 978-1607066767
Thief of Thieves, Volume 3: VeniceThief of Thieves #14–19March 2014 978-1607068440
Thief of Thieves, Volume 4: The Hit ListThief of Thieves #20–25December 2014 978-1632150370
Thief of Thieves, Volume 5: Take MeThief of Thieves #26–31March 2016 978-1632154019
Thief of Thieves, Volume 6: Gold RushThief of Thieves #32–37January 2017 978-1534300378
Thief of Thieves, Volume 7: ClosureThief of Thieves #38–43March 2019 978-1534310360

Television adaptation

AMC is developing a television drama series based on the comic book. [8] Chic Eglee will serve as the showrunner if the project is picked up to series. [16] Kirkman said that "because of the success of The Walking Dead and my relationships with the people over at AMC, the conversation eventually comes up: 'What else are you working on? Is there anything else you have on the horizon that might be interesting to us?' I was able to talk to them about what I was doing with Thief of Thieves while I was developing it as a comic book series, so the show and the comic are more or less developing concurrently." [17] More than a year after the original announcement, at the 2013 San Diego Comic-Con, Kirkman said the adaptation is still in development. "Sometimes that's a short process; sometimes that's a long process. For The Walking Dead, it was five years, but we're really very hopeful Thief of Thieves will keep going and make it to series. Fingers crossed!" [18] By 2016, Kirkman was still working on the project. "Frustrating that I can't say more, I know. It's a long process but it's still in process." [19]

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References

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