CONAN RED SONJA #1 (OF 4)
DARK HORSE COMICS/DYNAMITE ENTERTAINMENT – @DarkHorseComics and @dynamitecomics
WRITER: Gail Simone and Jim Zub
ARTIST: Dan Panosian
COLORS: Dave Stewart
LETTERS: Richard Starkings & Comicraft
COVER: Dan Panosian
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (January 2015)
Part 1 of 4: The Age of Innocence
Conan the Cimmerian (also Conan the Barbarian) was born in the pulp fiction of Robert E. Howard, first appearing in magazine, Weird Tales (1932). Marvel Comics brought Conan to comic books in 1970, with the long running series, Conan the Barbarian. In Conan the Barbarian #23 (cover dated February 1973), writer Roy Thomas and artist Barry Windsor-Smith created a high fantasy sword and sorcery heroine. She was named Red Sonja and was loosely based on “Red Sonya of Rogatino,” a female character that appeared in the 1934 short story, “The Shadow of the Vulture,” written by Robert E. Howard.
Conan and Red Sonja are reunited in comic books again in Dark Horse Comics' new four-issue miniseries, Conan Red Sonja. This series is written by Gail Simone and Jim Zub, drawn by Dan Panosian, colored by Dave Stewart, and lettered by Richard Starkings & Comicraft.
Conan Red Sonja #1 (“The Age of Innocence”) opens when Manus Drath arrives on the Barachan Isles, off the coast of Zingara. He has brought with him a container of mysterious seeds for an unwary farmer to plant. Meanwhile, in the city of Enshophur, in the country of Koth, Conan and Red Sonja find themselves after the same prize. Their quest will take each into royal chambers, where they will learn that not everything is what it is supposed to be.
I have not read very many comic books written by Gail Simone, but what I have read, I have enjoyed. I only discovered the work of writer Jim Zub within the last two years and have found great pleasure in his recently launched creator-owned series, Wayward (Image Comics). Thus, I am not surprised that the Simone-Zub union would create such a hugely enjoyable series as Conan Red Sonja.
Conan Red Sonja captures the spirit of a Conan adventure as well as any Conan comic book ever has. It is brawny and pulpy and has a humorous streak that cuts across most of the first issue. Red Sonja's sly wit is the perfect foil for Conan's murderous sense of humor. What makes their union so special is the reality that these two cannot trust each other long enough for them to take on a long campaign together. It will be interesting to see how this duo comes together at just the right time to take on the darkness that is ahead of them because of their actions in this first issue.
Dan Panosian's art tells a lean and mean story, and Panosian captures how quickly our barbarian heroes can change fate with the sharp edge of their swords. Panosian sets the mood; this first issue is just the beginning – the introduction and set-up. The real pain is yet to come, and the art portends in all the right places while offering up the Hyborian version of a heist story.
Conan Red Sonja #1 makes me want to keep reading. I hope that the rest of this series lives up to my high expectations.
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
[“We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.”]
Sunday, February 15, 2015
I Reads You Review: CONAN RED SONJA #1
Labels:
Conan,
Dan Panosian,
Dark Horse,
Dave Stewart,
Dynamite Entertainment,
Gail Simone,
Jim Zub,
Review,
Richard Starkings
Saturday, February 14, 2015
Review: HAPPY MARRIAGE?! Volume 10
HAPPY MARRIAGE?!, VOL. 10
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia
CARTOONIST: Maki Enjoji
TRANSLATION: Tetsuichiro Miyaki
EDITOR/ENGLISH ADAPTATION: Nancy Thislethwaite
LETTERS: Inori Fukuda Trant
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5943-8; paperback (January 2015); Rated “M” for “Mature”
192pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK
Happy Marriage?! is the longest manga series (to date) produced by mangaka Maki Enjoji. It debuted in the Japanese josei manga magazine, Petit Comic. VIZ Media published an English-language version of the series for North America.
Happy Marriage?! focuses on Chiwa Takanashi. She is a young woman who never had any girlish fantasies about courtship and marriage, but she found herself in an unlikely scenario. The 22-year-old married a total stranger in order to get her father out of debt! Chiwa's husband, 28-year-old Hokuto Mamiya, was the President and CEO of Mamiya Commerce. Their marriage, for a time, was a secret, with only Hokuto’s personal assistant, Taeko Soma, knowing of the union’s true nature. Two years later, Chiwa and Hokuto are trying to be a real married couple.
As Happy Marriage?!, Vol. 10 (Chapters 37 to 39 to Final Chapter) opens, Chiwa recovers from the would she received when she tried to protect Hokuto from a savage knife attack. Even after that, she still cannot reveal to Hokuto the letter she received from her his now-deceased father, Seiji Mamiya, that revealed a secret.
Her reticence will not stop the turmoil within the Mamiya family. Hokuto will learn a shocking truth about his mother, Yoko Miura, and about himself. The revelations could ruin Chiwa and Hokuto's marriage.
I am not happy about saying goodbye to the Happy Marriage?! manga. However, I must accept that Happy Marriage?! Volume 10 is the final volume of this series that I have come to really enjoy reading.
I don't want to spoil anything, but I will admit that there are some some explosive revelations and that there are some character revelations that are worse than some readers my have expected. I can say that Happy Marriage?! has a happy ending. It has a celebratory last chapter that will remind readers why this typical shojo soap opera romance manages to be something different and also something especially lovable.
Readers looking for shojo/josei romantic drama will be happy with the Shojo Beat title, Happy Marriage?!
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia
CARTOONIST: Maki Enjoji
TRANSLATION: Tetsuichiro Miyaki
EDITOR/ENGLISH ADAPTATION: Nancy Thislethwaite
LETTERS: Inori Fukuda Trant
ISBN: 978-1-4215-5943-8; paperback (January 2015); Rated “M” for “Mature”
192pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK
Happy Marriage?! is the longest manga series (to date) produced by mangaka Maki Enjoji. It debuted in the Japanese josei manga magazine, Petit Comic. VIZ Media published an English-language version of the series for North America.
Happy Marriage?! focuses on Chiwa Takanashi. She is a young woman who never had any girlish fantasies about courtship and marriage, but she found herself in an unlikely scenario. The 22-year-old married a total stranger in order to get her father out of debt! Chiwa's husband, 28-year-old Hokuto Mamiya, was the President and CEO of Mamiya Commerce. Their marriage, for a time, was a secret, with only Hokuto’s personal assistant, Taeko Soma, knowing of the union’s true nature. Two years later, Chiwa and Hokuto are trying to be a real married couple.
As Happy Marriage?!, Vol. 10 (Chapters 37 to 39 to Final Chapter) opens, Chiwa recovers from the would she received when she tried to protect Hokuto from a savage knife attack. Even after that, she still cannot reveal to Hokuto the letter she received from her his now-deceased father, Seiji Mamiya, that revealed a secret.
Her reticence will not stop the turmoil within the Mamiya family. Hokuto will learn a shocking truth about his mother, Yoko Miura, and about himself. The revelations could ruin Chiwa and Hokuto's marriage.
I am not happy about saying goodbye to the Happy Marriage?! manga. However, I must accept that Happy Marriage?! Volume 10 is the final volume of this series that I have come to really enjoy reading.
I don't want to spoil anything, but I will admit that there are some some explosive revelations and that there are some character revelations that are worse than some readers my have expected. I can say that Happy Marriage?! has a happy ending. It has a celebratory last chapter that will remind readers why this typical shojo soap opera romance manages to be something different and also something especially lovable.
Readers looking for shojo/josei romantic drama will be happy with the Shojo Beat title, Happy Marriage?!
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
josei,
Maki Enjoji,
manga,
Nancy Thislethwaite,
Review,
shojo,
Shojo Beat,
Tetsuichiro Miyaki,
VIZ Media
Read Webcomic Grumble: Chapter One - Page 16
Friday, February 13, 2015
Book Review: CANE AND ABE
CANE AND ABE
HARPERCOLLINS – @HarperCollins @James_Grippando
AUTHOR: James Grippando
ISBN: 978-0-06-229539-2; hardcover (January 20, 2015)
368pp, B&W, $26.99 U.S.
Cane and Abe is a 2015 crime novel and suspense thriller from James Grippando, a New York Times bestselling author of legal thrillers. My previous experiences with Grippando are the two most recent novels in his Jack Swyteck series. In Cane and Abe, a South Florida prosecutor becomes the prime suspect in the disappearance of his wife, which may be connected to a serial killer who is dumping bodies in cane fields throughout South Florida.
Abraham “Abe” Beckham is the senior trial counsel at the Office of the State Attorney for Miami-Dade County. Abe may a star prosecutor, but he has suffered some heartache. He lost the love of his life, his beautiful wife, Samantha Vine, to cancer. Some say he remarried to quickly, when Abe wed Angelina, who had been his girlfriend before he married Samantha.
Abe's personal soap opera takes a backseat when a woman's body is discovered, dumped in the Everglades, and Abe is called upon to monitor the investigation. The FBI is tracking a serial killer in South Florida, who is called “Cutter,” and this body may belong to his latest victim. Cutter's brutal methods of murder recall Florida's dark past, when men, who were practically turned into slaves by large sugar companies, cut sugarcane by hand with a machete in the blazing sun.
Then, things go horribly wrong. Angelina disappears, and for some reason, FBI Agent Victoria Santos makes Abe the top suspect in both his wife's disappearance and in the murder of the woman just found in the Everglades. Suspicion surrounds Abe, mainly because everyone seems to suspect him of doing something wrong. And Cutter may watching him.
I have to admit that Cane and Abe is indeed the “spellbinding” novel that HarperCollins, the book's publisher, calls it. HarperCollins gave me a galley copy of Cane and Abe for review, and I'm glad they did. I found this book hard to stop reading once I started. It is a summer potboiler for chilly winter nights, and it casts a spell that binds you to its riveting prose.
However, Cane and Abe is about 40 to 50 pages too long. That is what keeps it from being the perfect suspense and mystery thriller. There is a point where the novel should end. Past that point, Cane and Abe alternates between being engaging and being annoying. Authors should also realize that red herrings can sometimes become stinky fish that can ruin a story, when there are too many of them. Luckily, James Grippando fills this novel with characters that do crazy things, the kind of crazy things which actually make sense from the standpoint of motivation.
What keeps Cane and Abe from being derailed by being a bit too long (see, size does matter) is that the reader will try to find out what each character's part in this conspiracy is. What is his or her's real motivation? That will keep you thinking about the book on those occasions when you have to stop reading it for a bit.
A-
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
HARPERCOLLINS – @HarperCollins @James_Grippando
AUTHOR: James Grippando
ISBN: 978-0-06-229539-2; hardcover (January 20, 2015)
368pp, B&W, $26.99 U.S.
Cane and Abe is a 2015 crime novel and suspense thriller from James Grippando, a New York Times bestselling author of legal thrillers. My previous experiences with Grippando are the two most recent novels in his Jack Swyteck series. In Cane and Abe, a South Florida prosecutor becomes the prime suspect in the disappearance of his wife, which may be connected to a serial killer who is dumping bodies in cane fields throughout South Florida.
Abraham “Abe” Beckham is the senior trial counsel at the Office of the State Attorney for Miami-Dade County. Abe may a star prosecutor, but he has suffered some heartache. He lost the love of his life, his beautiful wife, Samantha Vine, to cancer. Some say he remarried to quickly, when Abe wed Angelina, who had been his girlfriend before he married Samantha.
Abe's personal soap opera takes a backseat when a woman's body is discovered, dumped in the Everglades, and Abe is called upon to monitor the investigation. The FBI is tracking a serial killer in South Florida, who is called “Cutter,” and this body may belong to his latest victim. Cutter's brutal methods of murder recall Florida's dark past, when men, who were practically turned into slaves by large sugar companies, cut sugarcane by hand with a machete in the blazing sun.
Then, things go horribly wrong. Angelina disappears, and for some reason, FBI Agent Victoria Santos makes Abe the top suspect in both his wife's disappearance and in the murder of the woman just found in the Everglades. Suspicion surrounds Abe, mainly because everyone seems to suspect him of doing something wrong. And Cutter may watching him.
I have to admit that Cane and Abe is indeed the “spellbinding” novel that HarperCollins, the book's publisher, calls it. HarperCollins gave me a galley copy of Cane and Abe for review, and I'm glad they did. I found this book hard to stop reading once I started. It is a summer potboiler for chilly winter nights, and it casts a spell that binds you to its riveting prose.
However, Cane and Abe is about 40 to 50 pages too long. That is what keeps it from being the perfect suspense and mystery thriller. There is a point where the novel should end. Past that point, Cane and Abe alternates between being engaging and being annoying. Authors should also realize that red herrings can sometimes become stinky fish that can ruin a story, when there are too many of them. Luckily, James Grippando fills this novel with characters that do crazy things, the kind of crazy things which actually make sense from the standpoint of motivation.
What keeps Cane and Abe from being derailed by being a bit too long (see, size does matter) is that the reader will try to find out what each character's part in this conspiracy is. What is his or her's real motivation? That will keep you thinking about the book on those occasions when you have to stop reading it for a bit.
A-
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
Book Review,
HarperCollins,
James Grippando,
Review
Thursday, February 12, 2015
07-Ghost: Sweet 16
I read 07-GHOST, Vol. 14
I posted a review at the ComicBookBin, which is seeking donations. Follow me at Twitter or on Grumble.
I posted a review at the ComicBookBin, which is seeking donations. Follow me at Twitter or on Grumble.
Labels:
Comic Book Bin,
Hope Donovan,
manga,
Satsuki Yamashita,
shonen,
VIZ Media,
Yuki Amemiya,
Yukino Ichihara
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Review: INCREDIBLE CHANGE-BOTS Two Point Something Something
INCREDIBLE CHANGE-BOTS TWO POINT SOMETHING SOMETHING
TOP SHELF PRODUCTIONS – @topshelfcomix
CARTOONIST: Jeffrey Brown
ISBN: 978-1-60309-348-4; paperback (November 2014)
224pp, Color and B&W, $19.95 U.S.
Jeffrey Brown is one of my favorite cartoonists. As a reviewer, I have been fortunate to receive numerous books authored by Brown from his frequent publisher, Top Shelf Productions. One of my favorite books by Jeffrey Brown is the recent Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something, of which Top Shelf provided me a copy.
First, about Jeffrey Brown: I imagine that many comics readers probably know Brown from his Star Wars young readers book series, Darth Vader and Son and Jedi Academy. Brown has also produced a number of beautifully executed autobiographical comics that have been collected under such titles as Clumsy, Little Things, and Undeleted Scenes, to name a few.
The best description that I can give of Jeffrey Brown is “joyous.” I don't know if he suffers for his art, but when I read his comics, I think of someone joyfully going about his art and craft. Brown's Incredible Change-Bots comics personify that sense of joy. The Incredible Change-Bots are Brown's nostalgic tribute and love letter to and parody of the Transformers.
Thus, the Incredible Change-Bots story is similar to that of the Transformers. It begins on the planet, Electronocybercircuitron, where two factions of giant transforming, shape-shifting, changing robots – the Incredible Change-Bots – wage war. The ostensible protagonists are the Awesomebots, and the bad bots are the self-interested, Fantasticons. The two groups go to war over a disputed election, and promptly destroy Electronocybercircuitron.
Top Shelf Productions published two paperback collections, Incredible Change-Bots (2007) and Incredible Change-Bots Two (2011), that collected Brown's Incredible Change-Bots comics. However, over the past decade, Brown has produced a lot of Incredible Change-Bot miscellany, including newsletter art, exclusive mini-comics, and custom original art for the Incredible Change-Bots Fan Club.
That fan club material and more are collected in the 5” x 6.5,” color, trade paperback, Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something. This book includes the first appearance of a Change-Bot (in Sulk Sketchbook #10). There are also art show and commission drawings and Incredible Change-Bot art and comics produced for magazines and special edition comics books (like those produced for “Free Comic Book Day”).
I must hasten to add that Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something is not a collection of throw-away stuff and odds-and-ends. These are fully functional short stories and vignettes, and I had a blast reading this. I have read Incredible Change-Bot comics before, but these short pieces are the best of this series/franchise, thus far. The material in this collection is a mixture of black and white comics and full-color comics, and the color comics are gorgeous; an Eisner Award nomination for the coloring would be deserved.
The production, binding, and paper quality on Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something is good enough to fool you into believing that this is one of those high-end archival projects. I heartily recommend this book to Transformers fans, admirers of Jeffrey Brown's work, and readers looking for truly funny humor comics.
A
www.topshelfcomix.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
TOP SHELF PRODUCTIONS – @topshelfcomix
CARTOONIST: Jeffrey Brown
ISBN: 978-1-60309-348-4; paperback (November 2014)
224pp, Color and B&W, $19.95 U.S.
Jeffrey Brown is one of my favorite cartoonists. As a reviewer, I have been fortunate to receive numerous books authored by Brown from his frequent publisher, Top Shelf Productions. One of my favorite books by Jeffrey Brown is the recent Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something, of which Top Shelf provided me a copy.
First, about Jeffrey Brown: I imagine that many comics readers probably know Brown from his Star Wars young readers book series, Darth Vader and Son and Jedi Academy. Brown has also produced a number of beautifully executed autobiographical comics that have been collected under such titles as Clumsy, Little Things, and Undeleted Scenes, to name a few.
The best description that I can give of Jeffrey Brown is “joyous.” I don't know if he suffers for his art, but when I read his comics, I think of someone joyfully going about his art and craft. Brown's Incredible Change-Bots comics personify that sense of joy. The Incredible Change-Bots are Brown's nostalgic tribute and love letter to and parody of the Transformers.
Thus, the Incredible Change-Bots story is similar to that of the Transformers. It begins on the planet, Electronocybercircuitron, where two factions of giant transforming, shape-shifting, changing robots – the Incredible Change-Bots – wage war. The ostensible protagonists are the Awesomebots, and the bad bots are the self-interested, Fantasticons. The two groups go to war over a disputed election, and promptly destroy Electronocybercircuitron.
Top Shelf Productions published two paperback collections, Incredible Change-Bots (2007) and Incredible Change-Bots Two (2011), that collected Brown's Incredible Change-Bots comics. However, over the past decade, Brown has produced a lot of Incredible Change-Bot miscellany, including newsletter art, exclusive mini-comics, and custom original art for the Incredible Change-Bots Fan Club.
That fan club material and more are collected in the 5” x 6.5,” color, trade paperback, Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something. This book includes the first appearance of a Change-Bot (in Sulk Sketchbook #10). There are also art show and commission drawings and Incredible Change-Bot art and comics produced for magazines and special edition comics books (like those produced for “Free Comic Book Day”).
I must hasten to add that Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something is not a collection of throw-away stuff and odds-and-ends. These are fully functional short stories and vignettes, and I had a blast reading this. I have read Incredible Change-Bot comics before, but these short pieces are the best of this series/franchise, thus far. The material in this collection is a mixture of black and white comics and full-color comics, and the color comics are gorgeous; an Eisner Award nomination for the coloring would be deserved.
The production, binding, and paper quality on Incredible Change-Bots Two Point Something Something is good enough to fool you into believing that this is one of those high-end archival projects. I heartily recommend this book to Transformers fans, admirers of Jeffrey Brown's work, and readers looking for truly funny humor comics.
A
www.topshelfcomix.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2014 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
alt-comix,
Jeffrey Brown,
Review,
Top Shelf
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
DC Comics from Diamond Distributors for February 11, 2015
DC COMICS
DEC140369 ARROW SEASON 2.5 #5 $2.99
DEC140406 ASTRO CITY #20 $3.99
NOV140310 BATMAN DARK NIGHT DARK CITY TP $16.99
DEC140322 BATMAN ETERNAL #45 $2.99
NOV140294 BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT TP VOL 04 CLAY (N52) $16.99
DEC140408 COFFIN HILL #15 (MR) $2.99
OCT140394 COFFIN HILL TP VOL 02 DARK ENDEAVORS (MR) $14.99
DEC140273 CONSTANTINE #22 $2.99
OCT140355 DC THE NEW FRONTIER DELUXE ED HC $49.99
DEC140275 EARTH 2 WORLDS END #19 $2.99
AUG140365 FABLES COMPLETE COVERS BY JAMES JEAN HC NEW ED (MR) $49.99
DEC140412 FABLES THE WOLF AMONG US #2 (MR) $3.99
DEC140416 FBP FEDERAL BUREAU OF PHYSICS #18 (MR) $2.99
DEC140359 GREEN LANTERN CORPS #39 $2.99
DEC140349 HARLEY QUINN VALENTINES DAY SPECIAL #1 $4.99
NOV140338 HELLBLAZER TP VOL 10 IN THE LINE OF FIRE (MR) $19.99
DEC140371 INJUSTICE GODS AMONG US YEAR THREE #9 $2.99
DEC140289 JUSTICE LEAGUE 3000 #14 $2.99
DEC140267 JUSTICE LEAGUE UNITED #9 $3.99
DEC140288 KLARION #5 $2.99
DEC140367 MORTAL KOMBAT X #2 (MR) $3.99
DEC140295 NEW 52 FUTURES END #41 (WEEKLY) $2.99
DEC140298 NEW SUICIDE SQUAD #7 $2.99
DEC140401 SCOOBY DOO WHERE ARE YOU #54 $2.99
NOV140313 SCRIBBLENAUTS UNMASKED A DC COMICS ADVENTURE TP $14.99
NOV140303 SECRET ORIGINS TP VOL 01 (N52) $14.99
NOV140208 SECRET SIX #2 $2.99
NOV140314 SECRET SIX TP VOL 01 VILLAINS UNITED $19.99
DEC140376 SMALLVILLE SEASON 11 CONTINUITY #3 $3.99
OCT140362 SUPERMAN KRYPTON RETURNS HC (N52) $24.99
DEC140320 WORLDS FINEST #31 $2.99
DC COMICS/DC COLLECTIBLES
AUG140386 DC COMICS BOMBSHELLS HAWKGIRL STATUE $124.95
AUG140378 SUPERMAN MAN OF STEEL STATUE BY GARY FRANK $79.95
DEC140369 ARROW SEASON 2.5 #5 $2.99
DEC140406 ASTRO CITY #20 $3.99
NOV140310 BATMAN DARK NIGHT DARK CITY TP $16.99
DEC140322 BATMAN ETERNAL #45 $2.99
NOV140294 BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT TP VOL 04 CLAY (N52) $16.99
DEC140408 COFFIN HILL #15 (MR) $2.99
OCT140394 COFFIN HILL TP VOL 02 DARK ENDEAVORS (MR) $14.99
DEC140273 CONSTANTINE #22 $2.99
OCT140355 DC THE NEW FRONTIER DELUXE ED HC $49.99
DEC140275 EARTH 2 WORLDS END #19 $2.99
AUG140365 FABLES COMPLETE COVERS BY JAMES JEAN HC NEW ED (MR) $49.99
DEC140412 FABLES THE WOLF AMONG US #2 (MR) $3.99
DEC140416 FBP FEDERAL BUREAU OF PHYSICS #18 (MR) $2.99
DEC140359 GREEN LANTERN CORPS #39 $2.99
DEC140349 HARLEY QUINN VALENTINES DAY SPECIAL #1 $4.99
NOV140338 HELLBLAZER TP VOL 10 IN THE LINE OF FIRE (MR) $19.99
DEC140371 INJUSTICE GODS AMONG US YEAR THREE #9 $2.99
DEC140289 JUSTICE LEAGUE 3000 #14 $2.99
DEC140267 JUSTICE LEAGUE UNITED #9 $3.99
DEC140288 KLARION #5 $2.99
DEC140367 MORTAL KOMBAT X #2 (MR) $3.99
DEC140295 NEW 52 FUTURES END #41 (WEEKLY) $2.99
DEC140298 NEW SUICIDE SQUAD #7 $2.99
DEC140401 SCOOBY DOO WHERE ARE YOU #54 $2.99
NOV140313 SCRIBBLENAUTS UNMASKED A DC COMICS ADVENTURE TP $14.99
NOV140303 SECRET ORIGINS TP VOL 01 (N52) $14.99
NOV140208 SECRET SIX #2 $2.99
NOV140314 SECRET SIX TP VOL 01 VILLAINS UNITED $19.99
DEC140376 SMALLVILLE SEASON 11 CONTINUITY #3 $3.99
OCT140362 SUPERMAN KRYPTON RETURNS HC (N52) $24.99
DEC140320 WORLDS FINEST #31 $2.99
DC COMICS/DC COLLECTIBLES
AUG140386 DC COMICS BOMBSHELLS HAWKGIRL STATUE $124.95
AUG140378 SUPERMAN MAN OF STEEL STATUE BY GARY FRANK $79.95
Labels:
Batman,
comics news,
Darwyn Cooke,
DC Comics News,
DC Direct,
Diamond Distributors,
Gary Frank,
Green Lantern,
Hellblazer,
Justice League,
Superman,
Vertigo
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