"Habari Gani?! Umoja!"
This is the 50th anniversary of Kwanzaa.
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Monday, December 26, 2016
Sunday, December 25, 2016
I Reads You a Merry Christmas
We wish you the best. Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays.
Friday, December 23, 2016
Review: Star Wars: POE DAMERON #1
POE DAMERON No. 1
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel
[This review was originally posted on Patreon. And visit the "Star Wars Central" review page here.]
WRITER: Charles Soule; Chris Eliopoulos
ART: Phil Noto; Chris Eliopoulos
COLORS: Phil Noto; Jordie Bellaire
LETTERS: VC's Joe Caramagna; Chris Eliopoulos
COVER: Phil Noto
36pp, Color, $4.99 U.S. (June 2016)
Rated “T”
Book I: Black Squadron, Part I
We first met X-wing fighter jockey Poe Dameron, in the recent film, Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Now, Poe returns in the new comic book miniseries, Poe Dameron. It is written by Charles Soule; drawn and colored by Phil Noto; and lettered by Joe Caramagna.
Poe Dameron #1 (“Black Squadron,” Part I) opens 30 years after the Rebel Alliance defeated the Galactic Empire (as seen in Return of the Jedi), which was replaced by the New Republic. However, a new military force, the First Order, is plotting to overthrow the New Republic. To face this new threat, General Leia Organa founded the Resistance.
The First Order is also looking for Leia's brother, Luke Skywalker. Now, General Organa has tasked the galaxy's best pilot, Poe Dameron, to find Lor San Tekka, an explorer who investigates Jedi ruins. Tekka may know where Luke is, but finding him will put Poe and his droid, BB-8, in a place that is both strange and dangerous.
Marvel Comics is publishing about four to five Star Wars comic books every month, and for the most part, much of that output is high-quality. I was excited to learn that Marvel would be publishing a comic book focusing on Poe Dameron, who is one of the characters of which I want to see more in future Star Wars films. I am expecting a lot from this comic book because I hope that Charles Soule can deliver the same excitement and thrills he did in last year's five-issue miniseries, Lando, which depicted a tale of Lando Calrissian before he was a mining mogul.
Well, the first issue certainly delivers on action and intrigue. I have to be honest: one of the reasons I like this comic book is that it connects to The Force Awakens, taking place just before the events depicted in the film. Soule fleshes out more of Poe's personality, and he also expands into the unknown that surrounds the world of The Force Awakens. And I have to give artist Phil Noto credit; he has a photo-realistic touch when it comes to drawing Poe. Here, Poe the comic book character strong resembles Oscar Isaac, the actor who portrays Poe in The Force Awakens.
As a bonus, there is an eight-page backup story starring BB-8, written and drawn by the underrated cartoonist Chris Eliopoulos, who is known for his work as a comic book letterer. I loves me some BB-8, and I like what Eliopoulos does with the character. Encore!
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
-----------------------
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel
[This review was originally posted on Patreon. And visit the "Star Wars Central" review page here.]
WRITER: Charles Soule; Chris Eliopoulos
ART: Phil Noto; Chris Eliopoulos
COLORS: Phil Noto; Jordie Bellaire
LETTERS: VC's Joe Caramagna; Chris Eliopoulos
COVER: Phil Noto
36pp, Color, $4.99 U.S. (June 2016)
Rated “T”
Book I: Black Squadron, Part I
We first met X-wing fighter jockey Poe Dameron, in the recent film, Star Wars: The Force Awakens. Now, Poe returns in the new comic book miniseries, Poe Dameron. It is written by Charles Soule; drawn and colored by Phil Noto; and lettered by Joe Caramagna.
Poe Dameron #1 (“Black Squadron,” Part I) opens 30 years after the Rebel Alliance defeated the Galactic Empire (as seen in Return of the Jedi), which was replaced by the New Republic. However, a new military force, the First Order, is plotting to overthrow the New Republic. To face this new threat, General Leia Organa founded the Resistance.
The First Order is also looking for Leia's brother, Luke Skywalker. Now, General Organa has tasked the galaxy's best pilot, Poe Dameron, to find Lor San Tekka, an explorer who investigates Jedi ruins. Tekka may know where Luke is, but finding him will put Poe and his droid, BB-8, in a place that is both strange and dangerous.
Marvel Comics is publishing about four to five Star Wars comic books every month, and for the most part, much of that output is high-quality. I was excited to learn that Marvel would be publishing a comic book focusing on Poe Dameron, who is one of the characters of which I want to see more in future Star Wars films. I am expecting a lot from this comic book because I hope that Charles Soule can deliver the same excitement and thrills he did in last year's five-issue miniseries, Lando, which depicted a tale of Lando Calrissian before he was a mining mogul.
Well, the first issue certainly delivers on action and intrigue. I have to be honest: one of the reasons I like this comic book is that it connects to The Force Awakens, taking place just before the events depicted in the film. Soule fleshes out more of Poe's personality, and he also expands into the unknown that surrounds the world of The Force Awakens. And I have to give artist Phil Noto credit; he has a photo-realistic touch when it comes to drawing Poe. Here, Poe the comic book character strong resembles Oscar Isaac, the actor who portrays Poe in The Force Awakens.
As a bonus, there is an eight-page backup story starring BB-8, written and drawn by the underrated cartoonist Chris Eliopoulos, who is known for his work as a comic book letterer. I loves me some BB-8, and I like what Eliopoulos does with the character. Encore!
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
-----------------------
Labels:
Charles Soule,
Chris Eliopoulos,
Jordie Bellaire,
Marvel,
Phil Noto,
Review,
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Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Review: TRUTH: Red, White & Black #2
TRUTH RED, WHITE & BLACK No. 2
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
WRITER: Robert Morales
ARTIST: Kyle Baker
LETTERS: JG & Comicraft’s Wes
EDITOR: Axel Alonso
EiC: Joe Quesada
32pp, Color, $3.50 U.S. (February 2003)
Rated “PG”
Part Two: The Future
I recently read two books that greatly affected me. The first is a non-fiction book, Forgotten: The Untold Story of D-Day's Black Heroes, at Home and at War, by author Linda Hervieux. It details the experiences of African-Americans and especially Black soldiers before, during, and after World War II.
The second book is Lovecraft Country from author Matt Ruff. A work of historical fiction and science fiction and fantasy, Lovecraft Country is set in the early 1950s and follows two African-American families and their friends. They are caught in the middle of a struggle for power by white men who want to use these Black people for themselves and against their rivals.
These two books have had me thinking a lot about Jim Crow America and about the lingering effects of not only the enslavement of Africans and their descendants in the United States, but also of segregation. In a way segregation may have been worse than slavery. It codified Black people a second class of American citizen; as a permanent social, cultural, and financial underclass; and worst of all, as a group of people who must be kept separate.
With this in mind, I decided to return to Truth: Red, White & Black, a 2003, seven-issue, comic book miniseries from Marvel Comics. I have read the first issue about a decade ago and again two years ago. Truth: Red, White & Black was written by Robert Morales; drawn and colored by Kyle Baker; and lettered by JG and Wes (of Comicraft).
The purpose of Truth: Red, White & Black was to do some reconstruction of the fictional history of one of Marvel’s signature characters, Captain America. The Truth’s conceit was that the United States government first tested the “super-soldier” serum that created Captain America on black men.
In Captain America Comics #1 (cover dated: March 1941), we meet Steve Rogers, a young man who volunteered for “army service” but was refused because of his “unfit condition.” Basically, Rogers was too frail to serve in combat in World War II. Desperate to serve his country, Rogers agreed to be a lab rat for Professor Reinstein. The professor administered the “super soldier” formula to Rogers. The “strange seething liquid” worked, transforming Rogers into a strapping young buck and a supernaturally fit specimen of red-blooded American male, a white male, that is. Rogers eventually donned a flag-based costume and became Captain America.
Truth writer Robert Morales flipped the script on Captain America’s origin, and referenced a real-world situation, the infamous “Tuskegee experiment,” in which Black men were used as lab rats. “The Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male” was a real-life clinical study in which poor Black men were denied treatment for syphilis so that the doctors involved could study how the disease spreads through the human body and eventually kills the infected person.
Morales posed an intriguing question on Marvel Comics mythology, What if the United States government thought that the “Super Soldier” serum was potentially dangerous and perhaps fatal, so before testing it on a White man (Rogers), the government tested it on Black soldiers? Obviously, it is hard to imagine that even a fictional version of the U.S. government and military, especially in the 1930s and 40s, would risk creating a platoon of super Negroes. Still, this is just speculative fiction, so why not be imaginative...
Truth: Red, White & Black opens in mid-1940 and introduces a small core of Black soldiers and their family and friends. There is a young Negro couple, Isaiah and Faith Bradley, on honeymoon. Maurice Canfield, a Black communist, is the son of well-to-do Negroes in Philadelphia. He is a labor organizer, and his protests against the U.S.'s entry into World War II ends up getting him forced into the military (with the other choice being a lengthy prison sentence). Finally, the story moves to June 1941, where we meet Luke Evans, a former Army captain. He has been demoted to sergeant after shoving a white superior who belittled the life of a black soldier killed by White/cracker cops.
Truth: Red, White & Black #2 (“The Future”) opens in May 1942 at Camp Cathcart, Mississippi, a U.S. Army training facility. Sgt. Evans, who has plenty of experience in the ways of the “White man's army,” roughly and firmly guides the young Black man in his unit through the harsh realities of military service. Isaiah Bradley shares some good news with his fellow new privates. Maurice Canfield continues to rub White men the wrong way.
Meanwhile, Washington attaché, Homer Tully, and German psychiatrist and surgeon, Dr. Josef Reinstein, have arrived at Camp Cathcart, in need for an experimental Army project. Unbeknownst to the Black men of the camp, dark doings are going on in camp headquarters that will cost many men, Black and White, dearly.
The first time I read Truth: Red, White & Black #1, I enjoyed it, but found it a little underwhelming. I found Kyle Baker's art to be a little too... informal and cutesy. In the second reading, I focused more on the story that Morales told, trying to understand both the characters' personalities and the world in which they lived. When the reader understands the context of these characters' lives, Truth becomes quite powerful.
Kyle Baker's art and graphical storytelling also takes on a stronger quality. It becomes a blunt instrument, delivering the Jim Crow world of 1940s America because that is the story's mission. I see it now. Baker's graphic and artistic style has less to do with traditional comic book art and storytelling and more to do with the confrontational and scathing style of America's great newspaper and magazine political cartoonists.
That's the truth. After two issues, it seems to me that Morales and Baker are subversively using the ruse of telling a story set in Marvel Comics' fictional universe to chronicle some truths about American history. This is especially in regards to the deplorable treatment of Black folk in the land of freedom. That is also the truth.
A+
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
---------------------
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
WRITER: Robert Morales
ARTIST: Kyle Baker
LETTERS: JG & Comicraft’s Wes
EDITOR: Axel Alonso
EiC: Joe Quesada
32pp, Color, $3.50 U.S. (February 2003)
Rated “PG”
Part Two: The Future
I recently read two books that greatly affected me. The first is a non-fiction book, Forgotten: The Untold Story of D-Day's Black Heroes, at Home and at War, by author Linda Hervieux. It details the experiences of African-Americans and especially Black soldiers before, during, and after World War II.
The second book is Lovecraft Country from author Matt Ruff. A work of historical fiction and science fiction and fantasy, Lovecraft Country is set in the early 1950s and follows two African-American families and their friends. They are caught in the middle of a struggle for power by white men who want to use these Black people for themselves and against their rivals.
These two books have had me thinking a lot about Jim Crow America and about the lingering effects of not only the enslavement of Africans and their descendants in the United States, but also of segregation. In a way segregation may have been worse than slavery. It codified Black people a second class of American citizen; as a permanent social, cultural, and financial underclass; and worst of all, as a group of people who must be kept separate.
With this in mind, I decided to return to Truth: Red, White & Black, a 2003, seven-issue, comic book miniseries from Marvel Comics. I have read the first issue about a decade ago and again two years ago. Truth: Red, White & Black was written by Robert Morales; drawn and colored by Kyle Baker; and lettered by JG and Wes (of Comicraft).
The purpose of Truth: Red, White & Black was to do some reconstruction of the fictional history of one of Marvel’s signature characters, Captain America. The Truth’s conceit was that the United States government first tested the “super-soldier” serum that created Captain America on black men.
In Captain America Comics #1 (cover dated: March 1941), we meet Steve Rogers, a young man who volunteered for “army service” but was refused because of his “unfit condition.” Basically, Rogers was too frail to serve in combat in World War II. Desperate to serve his country, Rogers agreed to be a lab rat for Professor Reinstein. The professor administered the “super soldier” formula to Rogers. The “strange seething liquid” worked, transforming Rogers into a strapping young buck and a supernaturally fit specimen of red-blooded American male, a white male, that is. Rogers eventually donned a flag-based costume and became Captain America.
Truth writer Robert Morales flipped the script on Captain America’s origin, and referenced a real-world situation, the infamous “Tuskegee experiment,” in which Black men were used as lab rats. “The Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male” was a real-life clinical study in which poor Black men were denied treatment for syphilis so that the doctors involved could study how the disease spreads through the human body and eventually kills the infected person.
Morales posed an intriguing question on Marvel Comics mythology, What if the United States government thought that the “Super Soldier” serum was potentially dangerous and perhaps fatal, so before testing it on a White man (Rogers), the government tested it on Black soldiers? Obviously, it is hard to imagine that even a fictional version of the U.S. government and military, especially in the 1930s and 40s, would risk creating a platoon of super Negroes. Still, this is just speculative fiction, so why not be imaginative...
Truth: Red, White & Black opens in mid-1940 and introduces a small core of Black soldiers and their family and friends. There is a young Negro couple, Isaiah and Faith Bradley, on honeymoon. Maurice Canfield, a Black communist, is the son of well-to-do Negroes in Philadelphia. He is a labor organizer, and his protests against the U.S.'s entry into World War II ends up getting him forced into the military (with the other choice being a lengthy prison sentence). Finally, the story moves to June 1941, where we meet Luke Evans, a former Army captain. He has been demoted to sergeant after shoving a white superior who belittled the life of a black soldier killed by White/cracker cops.
Truth: Red, White & Black #2 (“The Future”) opens in May 1942 at Camp Cathcart, Mississippi, a U.S. Army training facility. Sgt. Evans, who has plenty of experience in the ways of the “White man's army,” roughly and firmly guides the young Black man in his unit through the harsh realities of military service. Isaiah Bradley shares some good news with his fellow new privates. Maurice Canfield continues to rub White men the wrong way.
Meanwhile, Washington attaché, Homer Tully, and German psychiatrist and surgeon, Dr. Josef Reinstein, have arrived at Camp Cathcart, in need for an experimental Army project. Unbeknownst to the Black men of the camp, dark doings are going on in camp headquarters that will cost many men, Black and White, dearly.
The first time I read Truth: Red, White & Black #1, I enjoyed it, but found it a little underwhelming. I found Kyle Baker's art to be a little too... informal and cutesy. In the second reading, I focused more on the story that Morales told, trying to understand both the characters' personalities and the world in which they lived. When the reader understands the context of these characters' lives, Truth becomes quite powerful.
Kyle Baker's art and graphical storytelling also takes on a stronger quality. It becomes a blunt instrument, delivering the Jim Crow world of 1940s America because that is the story's mission. I see it now. Baker's graphic and artistic style has less to do with traditional comic book art and storytelling and more to do with the confrontational and scathing style of America's great newspaper and magazine political cartoonists.
That's the truth. After two issues, it seems to me that Morales and Baker are subversively using the ruse of telling a story set in Marvel Comics' fictional universe to chronicle some truths about American history. This is especially in regards to the deplorable treatment of Black folk in the land of freedom. That is also the truth.
A+
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
---------------------
Labels:
About Race,
Black Superheroes,
Captain America,
Joe Quesada,
Kyle Baker,
Neo-Harlem,
Review,
Robert Morales
Monday, December 19, 2016
DC Comics from Diamond Distributors for December 21, 2016
DC COMICS
OCT160243 ALL STAR BATMAN #1 DIRECTORS CUT $5.99
OCT160165 AQUAMAN #13 $2.99
OCT160166 AQUAMAN #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160175 BATMAN #13 $2.99
OCT160176 BATMAN #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160245 CAVE CARSON HAS A CYBERNETIC EYE #3 (MR) $3.99
OCT160246 CAVE CARSON HAS A CYBERNETIC EYE #3 VAR ED (MR) $3.99
OCT160181 CYBORG #7 $2.99
OCT160182 CYBORG #7 VAR ED $2.99
DEC150389 DC COMICS BRASS BATMAN STATUE $5000.00
FEB160280 DC COMICS DESIGNER SER LEE BERMEJO BATMAN AF (RES) $28.00
FEB160283 DC COMICS DESIGNER SER LEE BERMEJO SUPERMAN AF (RES) $28.00
MAR160323 DC FILMS ARMORED BATMAN PREMIUM AF $50.00
MAR160324 DC FILMS SUPERMAN PREMIUM AF $45.00
APR160456 DC TV ARROW FLASH 2 PACK AF $50.00
OCT160197 GREEN ARROW #13 $2.99
OCT160198 GREEN ARROW #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160201 GREEN LANTERNS #13 $2.99
OCT160202 GREEN LANTERNS #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160209 HARLEY QUINN #10 $2.99
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OCT160271 HE MAN THUNDERCATS #3 (OF 6) $3.99
OCT160255 INJUSTICE GROUND ZERO #2 $2.99
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OCT160325 LUCIFER #13 (MR) $3.99
OCT160287 MAD MAGAZINE #543 $5.99
OCT160288 MAD MAGAZINE #543 BLANK VAR ED $5.99
SEP160351 METAL MEN FULL METAL JACKET TP $14.99
OCT160221 NIGHTWING #11 $2.99
OCT160222 NIGHTWING #11 VAR ED $2.99
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OCT160274 SUICIDE SQUAD MOST WANTED #5 (OF 6) EL DIABLO & AMANDA WALLE $4.99
SEP160353 SUICIDE SQUAD TP VOL 05 APOKOLIPS NOW $19.99
OCT160229 SUPERMAN #13 $2.99
OCT160230 SUPERMAN #13 VAR ED $2.99
AUG160337 SUPERMAN ACTION COMICS HC VOL 09 LAST RITES $24.99
SEP160355 SUPERMAN ACTION COMICS TP VOL 08 TRUTH $16.99
AUG160333 SUPERMAN WONDER WOMAN HC VOL 05 SAVAGE END $24.99
SEP160356 SUPERMAN WONDER WOMAN TP VOL 04 DARK TRUTH $16.99
OCT160286 TEEN TITANS GO #19 $2.99
SEP160349 TEEN TITANS YEAR ONE NEW EDITION TP $16.99
OCT160237 TRINITY #4 $2.99
OCT160238 TRINITY #4 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160243 ALL STAR BATMAN #1 DIRECTORS CUT $5.99
OCT160165 AQUAMAN #13 $2.99
OCT160166 AQUAMAN #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160175 BATMAN #13 $2.99
OCT160176 BATMAN #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160245 CAVE CARSON HAS A CYBERNETIC EYE #3 (MR) $3.99
OCT160246 CAVE CARSON HAS A CYBERNETIC EYE #3 VAR ED (MR) $3.99
OCT160181 CYBORG #7 $2.99
OCT160182 CYBORG #7 VAR ED $2.99
DEC150389 DC COMICS BRASS BATMAN STATUE $5000.00
FEB160280 DC COMICS DESIGNER SER LEE BERMEJO BATMAN AF (RES) $28.00
FEB160283 DC COMICS DESIGNER SER LEE BERMEJO SUPERMAN AF (RES) $28.00
MAR160323 DC FILMS ARMORED BATMAN PREMIUM AF $50.00
MAR160324 DC FILMS SUPERMAN PREMIUM AF $45.00
APR160456 DC TV ARROW FLASH 2 PACK AF $50.00
OCT160197 GREEN ARROW #13 $2.99
OCT160198 GREEN ARROW #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160201 GREEN LANTERNS #13 $2.99
OCT160202 GREEN LANTERNS #13 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160209 HARLEY QUINN #10 $2.99
OCT160210 HARLEY QUINN #10 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160271 HE MAN THUNDERCATS #3 (OF 6) $3.99
OCT160255 INJUSTICE GROUND ZERO #2 $2.99
OCT160215 JUSTICE LEAGUE #11 $2.99
OCT160216 JUSTICE LEAGUE #11 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160147 JUSTICE LEAGUE SUICIDE SQUAD #1 (OF 6) $3.99
OCT160148 JUSTICE LEAGUE SUICIDE SQUAD #1 (OF 6) CONNER VAR ED $3.99
OCT160149 JUSTICE LEAGUE SUICIDE SQUAD #1 (OF 6) FRANK VAR ED $3.99
OCT160325 LUCIFER #13 (MR) $3.99
OCT160287 MAD MAGAZINE #543 $5.99
OCT160288 MAD MAGAZINE #543 BLANK VAR ED $5.99
SEP160351 METAL MEN FULL METAL JACKET TP $14.99
OCT160221 NIGHTWING #11 $2.99
OCT160222 NIGHTWING #11 VAR ED $2.99
OCT160272 RAVEN #4 (OF 6) $2.99
OCT160274 SUICIDE SQUAD MOST WANTED #5 (OF 6) EL DIABLO & AMANDA WALLE $4.99
SEP160353 SUICIDE SQUAD TP VOL 05 APOKOLIPS NOW $19.99
OCT160229 SUPERMAN #13 $2.99
OCT160230 SUPERMAN #13 VAR ED $2.99
AUG160337 SUPERMAN ACTION COMICS HC VOL 09 LAST RITES $24.99
SEP160355 SUPERMAN ACTION COMICS TP VOL 08 TRUTH $16.99
AUG160333 SUPERMAN WONDER WOMAN HC VOL 05 SAVAGE END $24.99
SEP160356 SUPERMAN WONDER WOMAN TP VOL 04 DARK TRUTH $16.99
OCT160286 TEEN TITANS GO #19 $2.99
SEP160349 TEEN TITANS YEAR ONE NEW EDITION TP $16.99
OCT160237 TRINITY #4 $2.99
OCT160238 TRINITY #4 VAR ED $2.99
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Marvel Comics from Diamond Distributors for December 21, 2016
MARVEL COMICS
OCT160850 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #22 CC $3.99
SEP161147 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN EPIC COLLECTION GREAT RESPONSIBILITY TP $39.99
OCT160858 AVENGERS #2.1 $3.99
OCT160916 BLACK PANTHER WORLD OF WAKANDA #2 $3.99
SEP161145 BLACK WIDOW TP WEB OF INTRIGUE $24.99
OCT160907 CAGE #3 (OF 4) $3.99
OCT160878 CAPTAIN AMERICA SAM WILSON #16 $3.99
OCT160960 DEADPOOL AND MERCS FOR MONEY #6 $3.99
SEP161132 DEADPOOL WORLDS GREATEST TP VOL 05 CIVIL WAR II $17.99
OCT160919 DOCTOR STRANGE #15 $3.99
OCT160837 GAMORA #1 $3.99
SEP161138 GIANT SIZE LITTLE MARVEL TP AVX $15.99
OCT160927 GWENPOOL #9 $3.99
OCT160862 INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #2 $3.99
SEP161154 MARVEL UNIVERSE AVENGERS ULTRON REVOLUTION DIGEST TP VOL 01 $9.99
OCT160992 MARVEL UNIVERSE GUARDIANS OF GALAXY #15 $2.99
OCT160786 MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL #0 JOHNSON VAR NOW $3.99
OCT160784 MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL #0 NOTO VAR NOW $3.99
OCT160783 MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL #0 NOW $3.99
OCT160787 MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL #0 PHAM ICX VAR NOW $3.99
OCT160785 MIGHTY CAPTAIN MARVEL #0 ROSANAS VAR NOW $3.99
OCT160883 OCCUPY AVENGERS #2 $3.99
OCT160940 PATSY WALKER AKA HELLCAT #13 $3.99
SEP161137 PATSY WALKER AKA HELLCAT TP VOL 02 DONT STOP ME-OW $17.99
OCT160903 POWER MAN AND IRON FIST SWEET CHRISTMAS ANNUAL #1 $4.99
OCT160905 POWER MAN IRON FIST SWEET CHRISTMAS ANNUAL #1 ANKA VAR $4.99
OCT160904 POWER MAN IRON FIST SWEET CHRISTMAS ANNUAL #1 VON EEDEN VAR $4.99
SEP160967 PUNISHER #7 NOW $3.99
SEP161126 PUNISHER TP VOL 01 ON ROAD $17.99
SEP161140 SILK TP VOL 02 NEGATIVE $15.99
JUL160983 SILVER SURFER #8 $3.99
OCT160949 SOLO #3 $3.99
OCT160896 SPIDER-GWEN #15 $3.99
SEP161141 SPIDER-GWEN TP VOL 02 WEAPON OF CHOICE $15.99
OCT160946 SQUADRON SUPREME #14 $3.99
OCT160982 STAR WARS DOCTOR APHRA #2 $3.99
OCT160830 STAR-LORD #1 $3.99
OCT160925 THANOS #2 $3.99
OCT160941 ULTIMATES 2 #2 $3.99
SEP161129 ULTIMATES: OMNIVERSAL TP VOL 02 CIVIL WAR II $17.99
OCT160721 UNCANNY X-MEN #16 IVX $3.99
OCT160722 UNCANNY X-MEN #16 MOORE VAR IVX $3.99
OCT160892 VENOM #2 $3.99
SEP161150 VENOM SEPARATION ANXIETY TP NEW PTG $34.99
OCT160850 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #22 CC $3.99
SEP161147 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN EPIC COLLECTION GREAT RESPONSIBILITY TP $39.99
OCT160858 AVENGERS #2.1 $3.99
OCT160916 BLACK PANTHER WORLD OF WAKANDA #2 $3.99
SEP161145 BLACK WIDOW TP WEB OF INTRIGUE $24.99
OCT160907 CAGE #3 (OF 4) $3.99
OCT160878 CAPTAIN AMERICA SAM WILSON #16 $3.99
OCT160960 DEADPOOL AND MERCS FOR MONEY #6 $3.99
SEP161132 DEADPOOL WORLDS GREATEST TP VOL 05 CIVIL WAR II $17.99
OCT160919 DOCTOR STRANGE #15 $3.99
OCT160837 GAMORA #1 $3.99
SEP161138 GIANT SIZE LITTLE MARVEL TP AVX $15.99
OCT160927 GWENPOOL #9 $3.99
OCT160862 INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #2 $3.99
SEP161154 MARVEL UNIVERSE AVENGERS ULTRON REVOLUTION DIGEST TP VOL 01 $9.99
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IDW Publishing from Diamond Distributors for December 21, 2016
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OCT160501 MAXX MAXXIMIZED HC VOL 07 $24.99
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OCT160456 TMNT UNIVERSE #5 $4.99
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