Let's kick off March 2015. Welcome to I Reads You, a little sister publication of the ComicBookBin (www.comicbookbin.com). We write about the things we read: mostly comic books, comics, and related books. Sometimes, we’ll write about or link to other topics: typically books, politics, and entertainment.
All images and text appearing on this publication are copyright © and/or trademark their respective owners.
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Sunday, March 1, 2015
I Reads You March(es) On in 2015
Saturday, February 28, 2015
I Reads You Review: NARUTO Volume 66
NARUTO, VOL. 66
Creators: Masashi Kishimoto; Mari Morimoto (Translator), John Hunt (Lettering)
Publishing Information: VIZ Media (@VIZMedia); 192 pages, $9.99 (US), $12.99 (CAN), £6.99 U.K.
Ordering Numbers: ISBN: 978-1-4215-6948-2 (ISBN), paperback (July 2014)
Rated: “T” for “Teen”
Uzumaki Naruto is a young shinobi (ninja) with a knack for mischief. Once, he was the biggest troublemaker at the Ninja Academy in the shinobi Village of Konohagakure. However, Naruto was also two things: special and an outcast. When he was a baby, his parents (father Minato and mother Kushina) imprisoned a nine-tailed fox spirit (Kurama) inside his infant body. Now, 16-years-old and incorrigible as ever, Naruto is still serious about his quest to become the world’s greatest ninja.
Guided by their secret ally, Uchiha Obito, Akatsuki villains Uchiha Madara and Kabuto declare war on the Five Great Nations of the ninja. This begins the Fourth Great Ninja War, and the five great shinobi leaders, known as the Gokage, form the Allied Shinobi Forces to fight this war. Obito and Madara's goal is to revive the monstrous tailed-beast, Ten Tails.
As Naruto, Vol. 66 (entitled The New Three – Chapters 628 to 637) begins, Obito and Madara have indeed revived Ten Tails. While Madara guides Ten Tails, Obito faces his one-time teammate, Hatake Kakashi, who is also Naruto's teacher and mentor.
All is not lost for the shinobi forces. The Four Lords Hokage arrive, including someone dear to Naruto. Speaking of our favorite teen ninja, Naruto and Sakura Haruno are reunited with their prodigal teammate, Sasuke Uchiha – Cell 7. Will they be enough to stop Ten Tails? Meanwhile, troublemaker Lord Orochimaru and his partners, Suigetsu and Karin, make their play.
It has been almost 11 months since I last read a volume of the Naruto manga. Naruto is my favorite comic, and I put off keeping up with it, as I read other things. I recently snagged two volumes, including Naruto Volume 66.
A year ago, in a review of Vol. 65 for the ComicBookBin website, I wrote that Naruto creator Masashi Kishimoto was doing some of his best storytelling. That is still true. Naruto is on the precipice of making its next big leap, but first this, long war of the tailed-beast needs to wrap up. Kishimoto is using this time in the narrative to not only make shocking reveals, but also to reunite many characters and to dig into the past of some. As always, Kishimoto gives his readers a reason to keep reading, because Naruto Vol. 66 is as good as the promise made by Vol. 65, which sets a high standard for Vol. 67.
A+
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
Creators: Masashi Kishimoto; Mari Morimoto (Translator), John Hunt (Lettering)
Publishing Information: VIZ Media (@VIZMedia); 192 pages, $9.99 (US), $12.99 (CAN), £6.99 U.K.
Ordering Numbers: ISBN: 978-1-4215-6948-2 (ISBN), paperback (July 2014)
Rated: “T” for “Teen”
Uzumaki Naruto is a young shinobi (ninja) with a knack for mischief. Once, he was the biggest troublemaker at the Ninja Academy in the shinobi Village of Konohagakure. However, Naruto was also two things: special and an outcast. When he was a baby, his parents (father Minato and mother Kushina) imprisoned a nine-tailed fox spirit (Kurama) inside his infant body. Now, 16-years-old and incorrigible as ever, Naruto is still serious about his quest to become the world’s greatest ninja.
Guided by their secret ally, Uchiha Obito, Akatsuki villains Uchiha Madara and Kabuto declare war on the Five Great Nations of the ninja. This begins the Fourth Great Ninja War, and the five great shinobi leaders, known as the Gokage, form the Allied Shinobi Forces to fight this war. Obito and Madara's goal is to revive the monstrous tailed-beast, Ten Tails.
As Naruto, Vol. 66 (entitled The New Three – Chapters 628 to 637) begins, Obito and Madara have indeed revived Ten Tails. While Madara guides Ten Tails, Obito faces his one-time teammate, Hatake Kakashi, who is also Naruto's teacher and mentor.
All is not lost for the shinobi forces. The Four Lords Hokage arrive, including someone dear to Naruto. Speaking of our favorite teen ninja, Naruto and Sakura Haruno are reunited with their prodigal teammate, Sasuke Uchiha – Cell 7. Will they be enough to stop Ten Tails? Meanwhile, troublemaker Lord Orochimaru and his partners, Suigetsu and Karin, make their play.
It has been almost 11 months since I last read a volume of the Naruto manga. Naruto is my favorite comic, and I put off keeping up with it, as I read other things. I recently snagged two volumes, including Naruto Volume 66.
A year ago, in a review of Vol. 65 for the ComicBookBin website, I wrote that Naruto creator Masashi Kishimoto was doing some of his best storytelling. That is still true. Naruto is on the precipice of making its next big leap, but first this, long war of the tailed-beast needs to wrap up. Kishimoto is using this time in the narrative to not only make shocking reveals, but also to reunite many characters and to dig into the past of some. As always, Kishimoto gives his readers a reason to keep reading, because Naruto Vol. 66 is as good as the promise made by Vol. 65, which sets a high standard for Vol. 67.
A+
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
manga,
Mari Morimoto,
Masashi Kishimoto,
Naruto,
Review,
shonen,
Shonen Jump,
VIZ Media
Friday, February 27, 2015
Read Webcomic Grumble: Chapter One - Page 18
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Review: JOJO'S BIZARRE ADVENTURE: Part 1 – Phantom Blood Volume 1
JOJO'S BIZARRE ADVENTURE: PART 1 - PHANTOM BLOOD, VOL. 1
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia
CARTOONIST: Hirohiko Araki
TRANSLATION: Evan Galloway
LETTERS: Mark McMurray
ISBN: 978-1-4215-7879-8; hardcover (February 2015); Rated “T+” for “Older Teen”
260pp, B&W with some color, $19.99 U.S., $22.99 CAN, £12.99 U.K.
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is a multi-genre, shonen manga created by Hirohiko Araki. It first appeared in the Japanese manga anthology magazine, Weekly Shonen Jump, in 1986, but has been in Ultra Jump for the last decade.
VIZ Media is making the legendary manga available in English for the first time as a series of deluxe edition graphic novels with color pages and new cover art. A multi-generational tale, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure centers on the heroic Joestar family and their never-ending battle against evil. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure begins with the “Phantom Blood” arc. It is the story of two brothers; one ambitious, but also cruel and evil, and the other is dignified and strives to be a just man.
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1 – Phantom Blood, Vol. 1 (Chapters 1 to 11) opens far in the past, as an ancient ritual reveals the power of a mysterious stone mask. Centuries later, in Great Britain, a cliff side accident brings together two men, Lord Joestar and Dario Brando. The former is a grateful gentleman; the other is a thief who, by chance, appears to be a kind and helpful man.
Then, the story leaps forward to 1881. Lord Joestar adopts Dario's son, Dio Brando, and brings the lad into his home. However, Dio immediately begins to plot against his new brother, Jonathan Joestar, only son of Lord Joestar. Although Jonathan makes an effort to bond with his adopted brother, he finds that Dio only causes him grief and pain. Secretly, Dio plans to usurp Jonathan as heir to the Joestar family. The return of the ancient stone mask will change both fates and plans.
I had heard of the JoJo's Bizarre Adventure manga, which was first published in 1986 in Weekly Shonen Jump, but I cannot remember when. VIZ Media recently sent me a copy of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1 – Phantom Blood Volume 1 for review, which surprised me because I had assumed that this was going to be a digital release.
As I am unfamiliar with this series, I do not know how it evolves over time as story. I imagine the visual and graphical style of the art also changes. Phantom Blood, Vol. 1 is certainly bizarre in terms of the overall graphical storytelling and the visual presentation. Creator Hirohiko Araki has an awkward, chunky approach to drawing male characters. Jonathan and Dio grow into behemoths who smash and crash into each other, and into anyone else who wants to fight them. There is a strangely beautiful quality to this odd, ungainly cartooning of the human figure and head and face. I found myself eager to see how characters would look from one panel to the next.
The story is a blast to read. I read it in big chunks, stopping only when I had to do something else. Honestly, I hated to come to the end this volume. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is outlandish, and the fights are wild affairs that seem like comic book parodies of the fights in martial arts movies. There is also a cliffhanger quality to each chapter that demands that readers come back to see more of this kooky manga that blends horror and fantasy adventure. In fact, I already want more. Fans of unusual shonen manga will want to try the Shonen Jump Advanced series, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1 – Phantom Blood.
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: Hirohiko Araki
TRANSLATION: Evan Galloway
LETTERS: Mark McMurray
ISBN: 978-1-4215-7879-8; hardcover (February 2015); Rated “T+” for “Older Teen”
260pp, B&W with some color, $19.99 U.S., $22.99 CAN, £12.99 U.K.
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is a multi-genre, shonen manga created by Hirohiko Araki. It first appeared in the Japanese manga anthology magazine, Weekly Shonen Jump, in 1986, but has been in Ultra Jump for the last decade.
VIZ Media is making the legendary manga available in English for the first time as a series of deluxe edition graphic novels with color pages and new cover art. A multi-generational tale, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure centers on the heroic Joestar family and their never-ending battle against evil. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure begins with the “Phantom Blood” arc. It is the story of two brothers; one ambitious, but also cruel and evil, and the other is dignified and strives to be a just man.
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1 – Phantom Blood, Vol. 1 (Chapters 1 to 11) opens far in the past, as an ancient ritual reveals the power of a mysterious stone mask. Centuries later, in Great Britain, a cliff side accident brings together two men, Lord Joestar and Dario Brando. The former is a grateful gentleman; the other is a thief who, by chance, appears to be a kind and helpful man.
Then, the story leaps forward to 1881. Lord Joestar adopts Dario's son, Dio Brando, and brings the lad into his home. However, Dio immediately begins to plot against his new brother, Jonathan Joestar, only son of Lord Joestar. Although Jonathan makes an effort to bond with his adopted brother, he finds that Dio only causes him grief and pain. Secretly, Dio plans to usurp Jonathan as heir to the Joestar family. The return of the ancient stone mask will change both fates and plans.
I had heard of the JoJo's Bizarre Adventure manga, which was first published in 1986 in Weekly Shonen Jump, but I cannot remember when. VIZ Media recently sent me a copy of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1 – Phantom Blood Volume 1 for review, which surprised me because I had assumed that this was going to be a digital release.
As I am unfamiliar with this series, I do not know how it evolves over time as story. I imagine the visual and graphical style of the art also changes. Phantom Blood, Vol. 1 is certainly bizarre in terms of the overall graphical storytelling and the visual presentation. Creator Hirohiko Araki has an awkward, chunky approach to drawing male characters. Jonathan and Dio grow into behemoths who smash and crash into each other, and into anyone else who wants to fight them. There is a strangely beautiful quality to this odd, ungainly cartooning of the human figure and head and face. I found myself eager to see how characters would look from one panel to the next.
The story is a blast to read. I read it in big chunks, stopping only when I had to do something else. Honestly, I hated to come to the end this volume. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is outlandish, and the fights are wild affairs that seem like comic book parodies of the fights in martial arts movies. There is also a cliffhanger quality to each chapter that demands that readers come back to see more of this kooky manga that blends horror and fantasy adventure. In fact, I already want more. Fans of unusual shonen manga will want to try the Shonen Jump Advanced series, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1 – Phantom Blood.
A-
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
Labels:
Evan Galloway,
Hirohiko Araki,
manga,
Review,
shonen,
Shonen Jump Advanced,
VIZ Media
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Review: PUNKS: The Comics #4
PUNKS: THE COMIC #4
IMAGE COMICS – @ImageComics
CREATORS: Joshua Hale Fialkov and Kody Chamberlain – @JoshFialkov @KodyChamberlain
COVER: Kody Chamberlain
VARIANT COVER: Joe Infurnari
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (January 2015)
Rated T+ / Teen Plus
Yeah, I was late getting to the comic shop, so I am late with a review of the fourth issue of Punks: The Comics. By the time I was able to get to the shop, the only copy left sported a variant cover by Joe Infurnari. I really wanted the main cover, which featured a send-up of Todd McFarlane's “classic” cover for Spider-Man (August 1990).
Punks: The Comic is the revival of writer Joshua Hale Fialkov and artist Kody Chamberlain's 2007 small press comic book, Punks. Chamberlain produces Punks' “original art” with a cut-and-past, do-it-yourself technique and style. Punks focuses on a quartet of cut-ups: Dog (a bulldog head on a human figure), Skull (human skull on figure), Fist (a male fist on figure), and Abe Lincoln (images of President Abraham Lincoln's head on various figures). It's like paper dolls and puppet theater turned inside out and inside again.
As Punks: The Comic #4 opens, Abe, Skull, Fist, and Dog return from their latest (mis)adventure. Well, dear readers, that means the end of the latest issue of Punks, but wait... Didn't this issue just begin? See the stars try to end their show. And in the “classic” Punks, Dog turns into an alien butt hole surfer, or something like that.
[Punks: The Comic #4 includes some story pages from the original Punks comix.]
Early in my reading of Punks: The Comic #4, I found something to steal for my own writing. As they say, talent borrows; genius steals. Who knew that a story about getting to the end of the story could be so much fun. I think I can build at least a three-issue miniseries out of that.
In the reprint story, Punks proves that it was ahead its time, literally. I think Punks: The Comics may be trying to match its own surreal and cockamamie beginnings. Punks is still just scratching at the black ice surface of its potential. I hope “mainstream” North American comics has a place for this especially funny comic book.
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
IMAGE COMICS – @ImageComics
CREATORS: Joshua Hale Fialkov and Kody Chamberlain – @JoshFialkov @KodyChamberlain
COVER: Kody Chamberlain
VARIANT COVER: Joe Infurnari
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (January 2015)
Rated T+ / Teen Plus
Yeah, I was late getting to the comic shop, so I am late with a review of the fourth issue of Punks: The Comics. By the time I was able to get to the shop, the only copy left sported a variant cover by Joe Infurnari. I really wanted the main cover, which featured a send-up of Todd McFarlane's “classic” cover for Spider-Man (August 1990).
Punks: The Comic is the revival of writer Joshua Hale Fialkov and artist Kody Chamberlain's 2007 small press comic book, Punks. Chamberlain produces Punks' “original art” with a cut-and-past, do-it-yourself technique and style. Punks focuses on a quartet of cut-ups: Dog (a bulldog head on a human figure), Skull (human skull on figure), Fist (a male fist on figure), and Abe Lincoln (images of President Abraham Lincoln's head on various figures). It's like paper dolls and puppet theater turned inside out and inside again.
As Punks: The Comic #4 opens, Abe, Skull, Fist, and Dog return from their latest (mis)adventure. Well, dear readers, that means the end of the latest issue of Punks, but wait... Didn't this issue just begin? See the stars try to end their show. And in the “classic” Punks, Dog turns into an alien butt hole surfer, or something like that.
[Punks: The Comic #4 includes some story pages from the original Punks comix.]
Early in my reading of Punks: The Comic #4, I found something to steal for my own writing. As they say, talent borrows; genius steals. Who knew that a story about getting to the end of the story could be so much fun. I think I can build at least a three-issue miniseries out of that.
In the reprint story, Punks proves that it was ahead its time, literally. I think Punks: The Comics may be trying to match its own surreal and cockamamie beginnings. Punks is still just scratching at the black ice surface of its potential. I hope “mainstream” North American comics has a place for this especially funny comic book.
A
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux
The text is copyright © 2015 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication rights and fees.
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
DC Comics from Diamond Distributors for February 25, 2015
DC COMICS
DEC140270 AQUAMAN #39 $2.99
DEC140337 ARKHAM MANOR #5 $2.99
DEC140325 BATMAN #39 $3.99
DEC140328 BATMAN #39 COMBO PACK $4.99
DEC140366 BATMAN 66 #20 $2.99
DEC140324 BATMAN ETERNAL #47 $2.99
NOV140295 BATWING TP VOL 05 INTO THE DARK (N52) $16.99
DEC140413 BODIES #8 (MR) $3.99
DEC140352 CATWOMAN #39 $2.99
DEC140281 DEATHSTROKE #5 $2.99
DEC140277 EARTH 2 WORLDS END #21 $2.99
DEC140410 EFFIGY #2 (MR) $2.99
DEC140283 FLASH #39 $2.99
DEC140338 GOTHAM ACADEMY #5 $2.99
DEC140339 GOTHAM BY MIDNIGHT #4 $2.99
NOV140311 HE MAN AND THE MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE TP VOL 04 $14.99
DEC140373 HE MAN THE ETERNITY WAR #3 $2.99
DEC140279 JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK #39 $3.99
NOV140299 JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK TP VOL 05 PARADISE LOST (N52) $14.99
DEC140403 MAD MAGAZINE #532 $5.99
DEC140368 MORTAL KOMBAT X #3 (MR) $3.99
DEC140297 NEW 52 FUTURES END #43 (WEEKLY) $2.99
DEC140362 RED LANTERNS #39 $2.99
DEC140415 SANDMAN OVERTURE #4 SPECIAL EDITION (MR) $4.99
NOV140323 SCOOBY DOO TEAM UP TP $12.99
DEC140290 SECRET ORIGINS #10 $4.99
DEC140363 SINESTRO #10 $2.99
DEC140299 STAR SPANGLED WAR STORIES GI ZOMBIE #7 $2.99
DEC140404 SUICIDERS #1 (MR) $3.99
DEC140270 AQUAMAN #39 $2.99
DEC140337 ARKHAM MANOR #5 $2.99
DEC140325 BATMAN #39 $3.99
DEC140328 BATMAN #39 COMBO PACK $4.99
DEC140366 BATMAN 66 #20 $2.99
DEC140324 BATMAN ETERNAL #47 $2.99
NOV140295 BATWING TP VOL 05 INTO THE DARK (N52) $16.99
DEC140413 BODIES #8 (MR) $3.99
DEC140352 CATWOMAN #39 $2.99
DEC140281 DEATHSTROKE #5 $2.99
DEC140277 EARTH 2 WORLDS END #21 $2.99
DEC140410 EFFIGY #2 (MR) $2.99
DEC140283 FLASH #39 $2.99
DEC140338 GOTHAM ACADEMY #5 $2.99
DEC140339 GOTHAM BY MIDNIGHT #4 $2.99
NOV140311 HE MAN AND THE MASTERS OF THE UNIVERSE TP VOL 04 $14.99
DEC140373 HE MAN THE ETERNITY WAR #3 $2.99
DEC140279 JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK #39 $3.99
NOV140299 JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK TP VOL 05 PARADISE LOST (N52) $14.99
DEC140403 MAD MAGAZINE #532 $5.99
DEC140368 MORTAL KOMBAT X #3 (MR) $3.99
DEC140297 NEW 52 FUTURES END #43 (WEEKLY) $2.99
DEC140362 RED LANTERNS #39 $2.99
DEC140415 SANDMAN OVERTURE #4 SPECIAL EDITION (MR) $4.99
NOV140323 SCOOBY DOO TEAM UP TP $12.99
DEC140290 SECRET ORIGINS #10 $4.99
DEC140363 SINESTRO #10 $2.99
DEC140299 STAR SPANGLED WAR STORIES GI ZOMBIE #7 $2.99
DEC140404 SUICIDERS #1 (MR) $3.99
Labels:
Batman,
comics news,
DC Comics News,
Diamond Distributors,
Flash,
Green Lantern,
J.H. Williams III,
Justice League,
Lee Bermejo,
Neil Gaiman,
The Sandman
Marvel Comics from Diamond Distributors for February 25, 2015
MARVEL COMICS
DEC140875 ALL NEW CAPTAIN AMERICA FEAR HIM #4 $3.99
DEC140914 ALL NEW INVADERS #15 $3.99
DEC140829 ALL NEW X-MEN #38 BV $3.99
DEC140849 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #15 SV $3.99
DEC140936 AMAZING X-MEN #17 $3.99
DEC140945 AVENGERS AND X-MEN AXIS HC $49.99
DEC140952 AVENGERS TIME RUNS OUT PREM HC VOL 02 $24.99
DEC140988 BLACK PANTHER TP WHO IS BLACK PANTHER NEW PTG $24.99
DEC140906 DAREDEVIL #13 $3.99
DEC140971 DARK TOWER TP DRAWING OF THREE PRISONER (MR) $19.99
DEC140803 DARTH VADER #2 $3.99
DEC140930 DEADPOOL #42 $3.99
DEC140979 DEATH OF WOLVERINE TP LOGAN LEGACY $17.99
DEC140865 FANTASTIC FOUR #643 $3.99
DEC140892 INHUMAN #12 $3.99
DEC140939 KICK-ASS 3 TP (MR) $24.99
DEC140812 MARVEL UNIVERSE ULT SPIDER-MAN WEB WARRIORS #4 $2.99
DEC140940 MEN OF WRATH BY AARON AND GARNEY #5 (MR) $3.50
DEC140854 NEW AVENGERS #30 TRO $3.99
DEC140956 NEW AVENGERS TP VOL 03 OTHER WORLDS $19.99
DEC140852 SECRET AVENGERS #13 $3.99
DEC140869 SHIELD #3 $3.99
DEC140832 SPIDER-GWEN #1 $3.99
DEC140844 SPIDER-MAN 2099 #9 $3.99
DEC140924 SPIDER-MAN AND X-MEN #3 $3.99
DEC140885 SUPERIOR IRON MAN #5 $3.99
DEC140896 THOR ANNUAL #1 $4.99
DEC140972 THOR EPIC COLLECTION TP TO WAKE MANGOG $34.99
DEC140859 UNCANNY AVENGERS #2 $3.99
DEC140843 WOLVERINES #8 $3.99
DEC140875 ALL NEW CAPTAIN AMERICA FEAR HIM #4 $3.99
DEC140914 ALL NEW INVADERS #15 $3.99
DEC140829 ALL NEW X-MEN #38 BV $3.99
DEC140849 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #15 SV $3.99
DEC140936 AMAZING X-MEN #17 $3.99
DEC140945 AVENGERS AND X-MEN AXIS HC $49.99
DEC140952 AVENGERS TIME RUNS OUT PREM HC VOL 02 $24.99
DEC140988 BLACK PANTHER TP WHO IS BLACK PANTHER NEW PTG $24.99
DEC140906 DAREDEVIL #13 $3.99
DEC140971 DARK TOWER TP DRAWING OF THREE PRISONER (MR) $19.99
DEC140803 DARTH VADER #2 $3.99
DEC140930 DEADPOOL #42 $3.99
DEC140979 DEATH OF WOLVERINE TP LOGAN LEGACY $17.99
DEC140865 FANTASTIC FOUR #643 $3.99
DEC140892 INHUMAN #12 $3.99
DEC140939 KICK-ASS 3 TP (MR) $24.99
DEC140812 MARVEL UNIVERSE ULT SPIDER-MAN WEB WARRIORS #4 $2.99
DEC140940 MEN OF WRATH BY AARON AND GARNEY #5 (MR) $3.50
DEC140854 NEW AVENGERS #30 TRO $3.99
DEC140956 NEW AVENGERS TP VOL 03 OTHER WORLDS $19.99
DEC140852 SECRET AVENGERS #13 $3.99
DEC140869 SHIELD #3 $3.99
DEC140832 SPIDER-GWEN #1 $3.99
DEC140844 SPIDER-MAN 2099 #9 $3.99
DEC140924 SPIDER-MAN AND X-MEN #3 $3.99
DEC140885 SUPERIOR IRON MAN #5 $3.99
DEC140896 THOR ANNUAL #1 $4.99
DEC140972 THOR EPIC COLLECTION TP TO WAKE MANGOG $34.99
DEC140859 UNCANNY AVENGERS #2 $3.99
DEC140843 WOLVERINES #8 $3.99
Labels:
Avengers,
Black Panther,
Captain America,
comics news,
Diamond Distributors,
Jason Latour,
John Romita Jr,
Kick Ass,
Mark Millar,
Marvel,
Spider-Man,
Star Wars,
Thor,
Ultimate,
Wolverine
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