Jed MacKay has been writing the character of Moon Knight for a number of years and has created one of the best runs ever. However, because Marvel cannot help but relaunch books with new #1's next to a different title, his epic take on Moon Knight and his crew has been split up across various series, despite arguably being one big story. We had, "Moon Knight," followed by, "Vengeance of the Moon Knight," then, "Moon Knight: Fist of Khonshu," which ended with Marc Spector apparently kidnapped and leads us into, "Marc Spector: Moon Knight," picking up in a manner that is friendly to new readers but clearly could have just been a new issues of the previous series.
Don't get me wrong, I am thankful that in this era of Marvel killing off books barely ten issues in, MacKay has been able to keep telling us superb stories with Moon Knight with minimal interference from editorial outside of when the book heavily linked to the vampire event, "Blood Hunt," but it made sense as MacKay also wrote that (and there was a brief tie-in with, "Devil's Reign," in the form of a one-shot that was good too). Here we are, though, with, "Marc Spector: Moon Knight," #1, giving us a heavily-drugged and confused Spector put into a strange fake life to trick him into revealing various secrets--until a former foe-turned-temporary-ally (Zodiac) appears at the end of the issue to, "Help." It's good stuff, and Devmalya Pramanik is amazing, as many artists on these series have been. Paramanik keeps the feeling claustrophobic and tight with his art, making us feel uneasy and confused just like Spector/Moon Knight.
It is clear how I really enjoyed this issue, just as I have with anything Moon Knight-related created by MacKay and the assorted skilled artists he's worked with. The question remains, why is this a #1 issue? It is, at best, a new story arc. At least when, "Moon Knight," ended Marc Spector was temporarily dead with an imposter fighting his friends for much of, "Vengeance of the Moon Knight," until the Blood Hunt event brought Spector back. This new series just feels odd to give a new numbering, even if the series title, "Marc Spector: Moon Knight," is a fun throwback to the long-running 90's series many recall the later issues of fondly thanks to Stephen Platt's wild covers and artwork. Quibbles with renumbering aside, this is another amazing issue of a Moon Knight comic, whatever the official title may be. Whether you're starting with the series here or have read all of MacKay's work on the character, it remains stupendous stuff.











