 
 
 Tailgunner JO was a six issue mini-series published by DC in 1988. 
  The series is related to Senator McCarthy only by the title. Instead it is a 
  dystopian tale of cyborg assassins and virtual reality. Mixing imaginary teddy 
  bears and and ruthless corporations, it's one of the best comic books I've ever 
  seen, being perhaps a decade too soon and in the wrong country. Thematically, 
  it's more related to manga or French comics than the American comics of its 
  time. Lars and Maire Gunnar are two very gifted and amoral scientists who get 
  a very intense ethics lesson on the ramifications of their research. Their first 
  payment installment is their daughter, the eponymous JO, who is born hideously 
  deformed due to prenatal exposure to mutagenic chemicals used by Satrap Corporation. 
  They jump ship to Telemachus along with their work on the hideous Double 
  Star technology which allows two or more human brains to be cybernetically 
  linked together. The one hitch is to to genetically match "donors" together. 
  The corporation decides to accelerate the process by arranging for a traffic 
  accident involving JO and her dad. Maire is tricked into operating on them, 
  much to her horror when she she starts to recognize the medical stats. JO loses 
  what deformed body she did have and becomes just a disembodied brain in a dome 
  shaped package on her father's back. He is also highly modified, although superficially 
  in street clothes he can pass for a human. JO becomes his "tailgunner" watching 
  their collective rear and operating the special cyborg weapons suite. Her father 
  is in charge of the software and creates a virtual fairyland world for her, 
  complete with endless luncheons, dinners, and picnics with talking animals, 
  a princess, and heroes. The outside, "real" world appears symbolically in Jo's 
  world, and when the software gets confused, the two worlds start to meld together. 
  JO can take over the Cyborg body and does so in one sequence when her father 
  becomes indisposed. She is a very moral 10 year old and hates the killing of 
  cyborg warfare, but does what she must to survive and to find her mother. This 
  future world is divided between economically self-sufficient freeholders and 
  the giant multinational corporations, whose only role is to supply technology 
  for entertainment and arms. Those who fall under the rule of the corporations 
  are referred to as "barrackers" for whom life can be very cheap, as we see in 
  one scene. 
|  Issue 1 |  Issue 2 |  Issue 3 |  Issue 4 |  Issue 5 |  Issue 6 | 
 
|  JO's Virtual World |   Princess Anara |   Inez, a playmate JO creates from a girl her father sees. | 
 
|  The battle on Alpha Alley |   Cyborg combat. | 
|   Freeholder Lalique Fonseca gives Gunnar a ride to the Gates of Heaven, end entry to the Satrap/Telemachus Skyhook. |   Captain Destrier's "death" during the battle for Heaven. | 
|   Death of Outlaw |  The funeral. |  JO and Dad relate | 
|  War in Heaven |  JO in Combat |   | 
The story seems to end on a hopeful note with the family at least reunited and Maire thinking that somehow she can restore her husband and daughter back to normal bodies. However, that doesn't quite fit in with the tone of the book. Although JO is portrayed as a sympathetic character and we're rooting for her, if not for her opportunistic parents, we suspect that it's not going to be easy for her in any form in this hellish world of the future. JO Gunnar does seem to be one of those unusual people who can cope, such as those refugee kids you read about who are forced to grow up too quickly.
|  Destruction of the BEO ship as seen by JO |  the Final panel | 
 
 
 
 
