Showing posts with label Brian Stelfreeze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian Stelfreeze. Show all posts

Friday, June 5, 2020

#IReadsYou Review: DREAMING EAGLES #1

DREAMING EAGLES No. 1 (OF 6)
AFTERSHOCK COMICS – @AfterShockComix

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Garth Ennis
ARTIST: Simon Coleby
COLORS: John Kalisz
LETTERS: Rob Steen
COVER: Francesco Francavilla
VARIANT COVERS: Brian Stelfreeze; Phil Hester
32pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (December 2015)

For mature readers

Dreaming Eagles created by Garth Ennis

“We Cannot Consecrate”


Okay.  So back on September 11, 2015, Comic Book Resources posted an interview that assistant editor, Brett White, conducted with comic book luminary, Garth Ennis, concerning his then-upcoming miniseries, Dreaming Eagles.  Drawn by Simon Coleby, Dreaming Eagles tells the story of the first African-American fighter pilots to join the United States Army Air Force in World War II.  The series also deals with the 1960s Civil Right movement.

The first question that White asked Ennis was related to Mark Waid and J.G. Jones' current miniseries, Strange Fruit.  That comic book blends superhero comics to tell a story of racism during the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927.  Prior to the release of the first issue, there was some criticism by African-Americans leveled at Wade and Jones for telling their story in this manner, especially as privileged White American comic book creators.

So White asked Ennis, “Do you have any concern that you'll face similar scrutiny in writing about the Tuskegee airmen and their experiences?”

Ennis' response is so typically American White male privilege that it is hard to believe that he is originally from Northern Ireland:  “My attitude to that is that it's going to be what it's going to be; it's so far beyond my control that there's no point worrying about it. I'll write the best and most honest story I can, with appropriate attention to detail in terms of historical research. If you think I have no right to tell the story because I'm white, don't read it. If you don't think that and you're interested, give it a try.”

It is not that Black people do not want White people telling stories about Black people and African-American subject matter or featuring Black characters.  The complaint or grievance is that the same opportunity to produce such comic is, in large measure, not afforded to Black comic book creators.  Unless the story would be tailored to one of their characters, neither Marvel nor DC Comics would publish something like Dreaming Eagles produced by an African-American creative team.  In fact, it is unlikely that any of the major independents that publish creator-owned comic books would publish something like Dreaming Eagles by a team of Black creators.

How do I know that?  Well, they haven't...  A few times a year, Image Comics makes a big deal out of announcing its slate of upcoming creator-owned titles, and none are by African-American creative teams.  I think once, out of embarrassment, Image tossed in a token Negro title, which I have yet to see.  So AfterShock Comics is doing the same as the other publishers, and Garth Ennis is officially an American White male, willfully blind to his unearned White privilege.

So, onto the review...

Dreaming Eagles #1 (“We Cannot Consecrate”) opens in 1966, at night, outside “The Silver Pony” (a restaurant in New York City?).  The place is owned by a Black man, WWII veteran, Reggie Atkinson.  Tonight, he is thinking about his son, Lee, who is a budding activist in the 1960s Civil Rights movement.  Father and son don't agree on the movement, but tonight, Atkinson will finally tell Lee about his time as Lt. Reggie Atkinson, one of the first African-American fighter pilots in the United States Army Air Force in WWII.  And those first Black men had to prove a lot of White men wrong about a lot of things.

My diatribe to open this review aside, I like this first issue of Dreaming Eagles, which will be a six-issue miniseries.  The conflict between father and son is nothing new.  The old Black man versus the young brotha' conflict has popped up in much of the fiction and storytelling about the Black struggle for equality and dignity in the United States (most recently in the film, Lee Daniels' The Butler).  What I like is that Garth Ennis is depicting the father-son struggle as not being toxic, but instead, as a matter of perspective and worldview brought on by different life experiences.

Ennis is also blunt and to-the-point in stating the obstacles facing Black men in the U.S. military before and during WWII.  Ennis' storytelling has always been blunt and to-the-point which gives the drama and action in his stories the force of a series of jabs that keeps the readers always on his feet and engaged with the story.

If this comic book were published by DC Comics' Vertigo imprint, which published practically all of Ennis' work for about a decade, Simon Coleby would be the artist and this story would not look different.  He is not a fall-back choice for a name writer looking for as an artist.  Coleby gives each panel just the right amount of drama that is needed, from subdued to momentous.  He does not force a mood to pander to reader expectations, simply because he understands the build up to moments – immediately and for later chapters.

I think that this first issue is rather languid compared to what I expect to come in later issues, but I could be wrong.  My sense of expectation suggests that readers of Garth Ennis' war comics will want to read beyond the first issue.  However, I don't know that people who have enjoyed Ennis' work on comic books like Preacher and The Punisher will care for this.

A-

[This comic book includes a five-page preview of the comic book , Replica #2, by Paul Jenkins and Andy Clarke.]

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.


---------------------------



Tuesday, November 19, 2019

Review: JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: The Rise of Skywalker - Allegiance #1


JOURNEY TO STAR WARS: THE RISE OF SKYWALKER – ALLEGIANCE No. 1
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon. And visit the "Star Wars Central" review page here.]

STORY: Ethan Sacks
ART: Luke Ross
COLORS: Lee Loughridge
LETTERS: VC's Clayton Cowles
EDITOR: Mark Paniccia
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Akira Yoshida a.k.a. C.B. Cebulski
COVER: Marco Checchetto
VARIANT COVER ARTISTS: Brian Stelfreeze; Will Sliney with Guru-eFX
36pp, Color, $4.99 U.S. (December 2019)

Rated T

Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance Part I - “An Old Hope”

Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance is four-issue Star Wars comic book series from Marvel Comics.  Published weekly this month (October 2019), Allegiance takes place before the events depicted in the upcoming film, Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker.  Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance is written by Ethan Sacks; drawn by Luke Ross; colored by Lee Loughridge; and lettered by Clayton Cowles.

Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance #1 (“An Old Hope”) opens in the aftermath of the film, Star Wars: The Last JediThe Resistance is in tatters, and its adversary, the First Order, and its Supreme Leader, Kylo Ren, will stop at nothing to crush what is left.  General Leia Organa, the head of the Resistance, leads the last of the rebels, which includes Rey (Jedi-in-training), Finn, Poe Dameron, Rose Tico, Chewbacca the Wookie, and the droids:  C-3PO, R2-D2, and BB-8.

The story opens on the Mid Rim ice planet, Tah'Nuhna, which the First Order's General Hux uses as a warning to any other worlds that may be considering offering any kind of assistance to the Resistance.  General Organa decides that it is time for her to be proactive with a new mission, for which she takes Rey, Rose, and Tico with her.  On the refueling station, “The Wayward Comet,” Finn, Poe, and BB-8 hope to meet a contact who will point them to a weapons cache that the Resistance can use.  However, they are unaware that they are being watched.  Meanwhile, Leia and her delegation approach “an old hope” with lots of hope and some trepidation...

I wish I could say that Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance #1 temporarily sates my appetite for Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, but it doesn't.  Hell, it doesn't even whet my appetite for the film.

Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance #1 is not a bad comic book; it simply reads like filler material.  It also seems like a movie tie-in that is mostly a cynical money grab.  I will say that writer Ethan Sacks has presented a scenario that does have potential; so there is... hope.  Perhaps, this issue is mostly set-up, and future issues will read more like a complete story and less like... just-another-Star-Wars-thing.

I must note that the art team of Luke Ross (pencils) and Lee Loughridge (colors) turns in some really pretty art.  Clayton Cowles' lettering is sharp, and the back matter is a nice addition to this first issue.

Will my mixed feelings about Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance #1 stop me from reading the second issue?  No.  Like a true Star Wars sucker, I will probably get all four issues!

[This comic book includes a script-to-art-to-colors look at the process of scripting, drawing, and coloring five pages of Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance #1.  There is also a look at Marco Checchetto's cover art for all four issues of Journey to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker – Allegiance.]

6 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2019 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

------------------------



Thursday, July 18, 2019

Review: MILES MORALES: Spider-Man #1

MILES MORALES: SPIDER-MAN No. 1 (2019)
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: Saladin Ahmed
ART: Javier Garrón
COLORS: David Curiel
LETTERS: VC’s Cory Petit
COVER: Brian Stelfreeze
EDITOR: Nick Lowe
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Akira Yoshida
VARIANT COVERS: Marko Djurdjevic (Fantastic Four Villains Variant); Lee Garbett; Adi Granov
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (February 2019)

Rated T

Spider-Man created by Steve Ditko and Stan Lee; Miles Morales created by Brian Michael Bendis and Sara Pichelli

Miles Morales is a Marvel Comics character who is one of the characters known as Spider-Man.  Miles Morales first appeared in the comic book Ultimate Fallout #4 (cover dated: August 2011) and existed in a universe different from the universe where the original Spider-Man lived.  Now, the Afro-Latino teenager, whose full name is Miles Gonzalo Morales, lives and works in the main Marvel Comics universe (the MCU) as Spider-Man.

Miles has a new ongoing comic book series, Miles Morales: Spider-Man (a continuation of the comic book title, Spider-Man).  This is a new direction for Miles Morales with a new creative team.  Miles Morales: Spider-Man is written by Saladin Ahmed; drawn by Javier Garrón; colored by David Curiel; and lettered by Cory Petit.

Miles Morales: Spider-Man #1 opens in the wake of the events depicted in the miniseries, Spider-Geddon.  Miles has recently begun a new school term, and is taking a class in which the instructor demands that Miles and his fellow classmates keep a journal.

Miles is struggling to balance school and his personal life with his activities as Spider-Man.  He is trying to maintain a relationship with Barbara, who is his girlfriend, although both seem to be reluctant to say that outright.  For all his struggles, however, Miles sees that there are those who are struggling more than he is, especially in an anti-immigrant political climate, and it is worse than Miles thinks.

Practically every Miles Morales comic book I ever read was written by Brian Michael Bendis, Miles' co-creator.  I am wary of reading Miles comic books not written by Bendis, but I thoroughly enjoyed the story Bryan Edward Hill wrote about Miles for the Spider-Man Annual #1 (2018).

After reading Miles Morales: Spider-Man #1, I am confident in new Miles writer, Saladin Ahmed.  I did not read Ahmed's Black Bolt series, which received quite a bit of acclaim and claimed a win at the 2018 Will Eisner Awards.  I like that Saladin's story and script are true to the personality Bendis fashioned for Miles, and I also like that Saladin is developing Miles personality and character as he continues to grow-up, going from young teen to older teen.  I am also happy that Ahmed is writing a story that tackles real world issues literally and metaphorically.

Artist Javier Garrón is the right choice to create the art and storytelling.  His compositions are strong, and his page and panel design recall the work of Spider-Man co-creator, the late Steve Ditko.  Ditko balanced the world of Peter Parker-Spider-Man by drawing an ordinary seeming everyday life for Parker.  When Parker became Spider-Man, Ditko added imaginative elements and inventive compositions that made the scenes feature Spider-Man seem to pop off the page.

Garrón's art is in a similar vein, and David Curiel's coloring of the art electrifies everything.  When a classic Spider-Man villain (who has a surprising reason for appearing) shows up, this story crackles and sparks with energy.  In fact, the splash page featuring Miles and that surprise villain is an example of how much power Garrón and Curiel's combined art has.

So I am ready for more Miles Morales: Spider-Man.  For now, at least, the post-Brian Michael Bendis Miles Morales has a bright future.

8 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2019 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for information on reprint or syndication rights and fees.

-----------------------


Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Review: LUKE MCBAIN Volume 1

LUKE MCBAIN VOL. 1
12-GAUGE COMICS – @12gaugecomics

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: David Tischman
ART: Kody Chamberlain – @KodyChamberlain
COLORS: Kody Chamberlain
LETTERS: Ed Dukeshire
EDITOR: Keven Gardner
COVER: Brian Stelfreeze
ISBN: 978-098369372-7; paperback – 6.5 x 0.3 x 10 inches (July 21, 2012)
112pp., Colors, $14.99 U.S.

Trace Adkins is a Grammy-nominated singer and also an actor.  A decade ago, Adkins joined 12-Gauge Comics president, Keven Gardner; comic book writer, David Tischman; and comic book artist-designer, Kody Chamberlain, to bring to life a new comic book hero, Luke McBain.

The character appeared in the 2009-10, four-issue miniseries, Luke McBain.  It was written by David Tischman; drawn and colored by Kody Chamberlain; lettered by Ed Dukeshire, with cover art provided by Brian Stelfreeze.  In 2012, the miniseries was collected in the trade paperback, Luke McBain Vol. 1.  The series focuses on the title character who returns to his small Southern hometown after a long stint in prison and confronts his powerful family.

Luke McBain is set in the small town of Eden, Louisiana, (population 14,983).  Eden is where Luke McBain returns after a 14-year hitch in prison for a crime he did not commit.  Luke's brother, Paul, is running the family business, McBain Timber Mill.  The mill is the town; it controls the town.  People either work there or work in jobs that depend on the business.

By the time Luke returns, Paul has made himself rich.  He has modernized the mill, which means fewer jobs for the town.  With jobs gone, the result has been that local shops have closed.  Closed shops and fewer jobs have made the people of Eden angry and scared.  No one can do anything about that... except Luke, the only one who knows Paul’s secret.  Reunited with his beautiful ex-girlfriend, Callie Flack, Luke McBain does what he has always done, fight for what is right.  The hardest choice Luke McBain will have to make, however, is just how far he will go to stop Paul.

Honestly, I had never heard of Luke McBain, neither the miniseries nor its trade collection.  I recently attended the Lafayette edition of the Louisiana Comic Con 2019 and visited local comic book creator and artist Kody Chamberlain's table.  I wanted to buy something, and I spotted Luke McBain Vol. 1 and bought a copy, which Kody autographed for me.  [When I first bought this comic book, I thought it was a recent publication.]

Luke McBain reminds me of the character, “Robert “Gator” McKlusky,” which the late actor, Burt Reynolds, played in one of my all time favorite films, White Lightning (1973).  Like “Gator,” McBain is the kind of guy who can navigate the contentious social-economic byways of the small Southern town, and he can fight his way past the dangerous hired thugs that seem to populate such places (at least in Southern-set crime fiction).  Like Gator, McBain ain't afraid of the local law, personified in Eden by Eden's Sheriff Chris Morrison.

Although Luke McBain has only appeared in one comic book series thus far, David Tischman, plays him as an emerging figure, as if the best is yet to come.  I think one thing that will surprise readers, as it did me, is how restrained McBain can be, although he never really backs down from a fight.

In the hands of Kody Chamberlain, Luke McBain, story and title character, are a quite storm, a force of nature that blows into a town that could use a sandblasting.  This comic book reminds me of Larry Watson's 1993 novella, Montana 1948, which was published as a hardcover book, in the way it plays with the dark secrets within a family that has two strong-willed and estranged brothers.

Chamberlain makes Luke McBain dark and edgy, like Watson's story, with his highly-stylized, but also photo-realistic illustrative style.  Chamberlain also brings flexibility to Luke McBain.  The concept can come across as a standard Southern crime-action story with a hero that is more type that character.  In the rhythm of the narrative and with his coppery-noir coloring, Chamberlain tells the story in a manner that is offbeat.  The reader does not exactly get the expected story of a guy who returns to his small Southern hometown for some payback.

Luke McBain Vol. 1 isn't a great work of Southern gothic or Southern crime, but Tischman and Chamberlain keep it interesting by never giving us the expected.  Ultimately, the resolution is surprising and satisfying in a way that makes me think Luke McBain has more stories in him.

7 out of 10

[This book also includes a selection of back matter that reprints Brian Stelfreeze's cover art for the series and Kody Chamberlain's character sketches for the series.]

https://www.12gaugecomics.com/luke-mcbain
https://twitter.com/12GaugeComics
ttps://www.facebook.com/12gaugecomics

https://twitter.com/KodyChamberlain
https://www.facebook.com/KodyChamberlainCreative/
https://www.instagram.com/kodychamberlain/

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2019 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site or blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

-------------------------


Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Review: RISE OF THE BLACK PANTHER #1

RISE OF THE BLACK PANTHER No. 1
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

STORY: Evan Narcisse with Ta-Nehisi Coates (consultant)
ART: Paul Renaud
COLORS: Stephane Paitreau
LETTERS: VC's Joe Sabino
COVER: Brian Stelfreeze
VARIANT COVERS: Paul Renaud; Chris Sprouse and Karl Story with Laura Martin; Tyler Kirkham with Arif Prianto
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (March 2018)

Black Panther created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby

Rated “T”

“The King at the End of Everything”

Black Panther is a Marvel Comics superhero created by writer Stan Lee and artist Jack Kirby.  He first appeared in Fantastic Four #52 (cover dated: July 1966).  Black Panther is T'Challa, the king and protector of the (fictional) African nation of Wakanda.  Black Panther was also the first Black superhero is mainstream American comic books.

As we approach the release date of the highly-anticipated theatrical Black Panther film from Disney/Marvel Studios, we will see more Black Panther-related comic books from Marvel Comics.  One of them is the new miniseries,  Rise of the Black Panther.  It is written by Evan Narcisse with Ta-Nehisi Coates, the writer of the ongoing Black Panther comic book, acting as consultant.  Paul Renaud is the artist.  Stēphane Paitreau is the colorist, and Joe Sabino is the letterer.

Rise of the Black Panther #1 (“The King at the End of Everything”) is narrated first by Queen N'Yami, the wife of King T'Chaka and the mother of T'Challa, and then by Queen Ramonda, the second wife of T'Chaka and second mother to T'Challa.  The story opens with during World War II where a famous American hero strikes a bargain and friendship with Azzuri, the Panther King of Wakanda and the father of T'Chaka and grandfather of T'Challa.

Azzuri is determined to keep the existence and the whereabouts of his kingdom, Wakanda, a secret.  Because of its wealth, technology, and especially because of its greatest natural resource, outsiders and outside entities with continue to search for the legendary kingdom – including some of the most evil people on Earth.

One of the things that Rise of the Black Panther has going for it is that Brian Stelfreeze is the series cover artist.  Stelfreeze was the opening series artist on Ta-Nehisi Coates' Black Panther series and is responsible for most of that series' conceptual and graphic design.  Stelfreeze provides a striking painted cover for the Rise of the Black Panther #1, and, far as I can tell, also for the second issue.

Evan Narcisse gathers many of the elements from previous Black Panther comic books and brings them together to form a gripping, suspenseful, and thrilling tale of the history of the Black Panther.  It starts during WWII, the dawn of the American superhero, and also the point in time when Wakanda begins its inevitable track to joining the world.  Narcisse gives the story the feel of a “lost world” story that is part Arthur Conan Doyle and part Golden Age comic book.  If the rest of this series is like the first issue, it will be a thoroughly readable and enjoyable.

The series artist is rising star Paul Renaud, whose art was excellent in the shockingly good Generations: Sam Wilson Captain America & Steve Rogers Captain America #1.  Renaud's storytelling is quite good here, but his stylish art is a revelation.  Renaud and colorist Stēphane Paitreau create a rich tapestry of graphical storytelling that recalls narrative paintings.  Rich in detail, backgrounds, sets, and environment, Renaud's art is fitting for a tale of kings and kings' sons.  Joe Sabino's lettering strikes the perfect tone and and enhances the story.

I was not sure of what I should expect of Rise of the Black Panther #1, but after reading this excellent first issue, I expect a lot of the rest of it.

8.5 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2018 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

-----------------------


Friday, June 15, 2018

Review: Victor LaValle's DESTROYER #1

VICTOR LAVALLE'S DESTROYER No. 1 (OF 6)
BOOM! Studios – @boomstudios

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Victor LaValle – @victorlavalle
ARTIST: Dietrich Smith
COLORS: Joana Lafuente
LETTERS: Jim Campbell
COVER: Micaela Dawn
VARIANT COVER: Brian Stelfreeze
CHARACTER DESIGNS: Dietrich Smith and Dan Mora
28pp, Colors, $3.99 U.S. (May 2017)

Created by Victor LaValle

Victor LaValle's Destroyer is a new comic book created and written by author Victor LaValle (Slapboxing with Jesus).  The series is drawn by Dietrich Smith (who designed the characters with artist Dan Mora).  Joana Lafuente provides colors, and Jim Campbell does lettering, with covers drawn by Micaela Dawn.

Destroyer takes as it inspiration the Gothic novel, Frankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (first published in 1818).  In this sequel/descendant tale, a woman who can call Victor Frankenstein an ancestor uses science to recover life and justice.  Meanwhile, Frankenstein's original creation has returned to the world.

Victor LaValle's Destroyer #1 opens in Antarctica, where the creature created by Frankenstein violently reintroduces himself to humanity.  He is found by the crew of the ocean-going vessel, Robert Walton, but both the captain and his new passenger seem aware that each has dark motives towards the other.  Meanwhile, Professor Josephine Baker uses her scientific gifts and Frankenstein's alchemy to pierce the veil of death.

On a recent trip to the “local” comic book shop.  I came across Victor LaValle's Destroyer #1 on the shelf, my eyes drawn to Micaela Dawn's striking cover art.  Noticing that the cover's subject matter was a young Black male, I told myself that if this comic book's author was a Black man, I would purchase it and review it.  The small photographic image of Victor LaValle printed twice in this comic book certainly looked like that of Black man, so I picked up Destroyer #1

I make no apologies for deciding to read Victor LaValle's Destroyer #1 only if the writer were African-American.  I don't owe anybody anything.  I have been patronizing and praising a legion of White male comic book writers from all over the world (but especially North America and Europe) for decades.  Now, more than ever I want to enjoy comic books created by Black people/descendants of Africans brought to America.

Truth is, though, Victor LaValle's Destroyer #1 would be a fantastic comic book if a Red Martian wrote it.  Destroyer #1 is so dark and ominous that it is like an omens and portents generator.  The story is so honest in its brutality, but it is sweetly sly about its darker motivations.  Sometimes, it takes something to remind us that the horror of police shootings of Black men really is more horrifying that it is horrible.  I think that mixing the death of Black child with existential threat of Frankenstein is a sheer genius on LaValle's part.

I love the art that Dietrich Smith (who is also African-American) produces for this comic book.  It is powerful graphic storytelling that has a spirit which reminds me of the art produced for classic DC Comics/Vertigo titles like Sandman and Preacher.  I think Dietrich is a troublemaker like LaValle.  Let's put both of them on Jeff Sessions watch list.

Seriously, I am almost too afraid to read the second issue because this one made me feel uneasy.  But when a first issue is this good, I gotta open that crypt of the next issue.

A

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2017 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

-------------------------


Monday, January 8, 2018

Marvel Comics from Diamond Distributors for January 10, 2018

MARVEL COMICS

SEP178147    AVENGERS #675 LAUNCH PARTY POSTERS (BUNDLE OF 25) (Net)    $PI
OCT170809    AVENGERS LH #675 LEG    $4.99
NOV171011    CABLE #153 LEG    $3.99
OCT171023    CABLE NEMESIS CONTRACT TP    $34.99
NOV170966    DAREDEVIL #597 LEG    $3.99
OCT171022    DEADPOOL BY POSEHN & DUGGAN TP VOL 01 COMPLETE COLLECTION    $34.99
NOV171012    DESPICABLE DEADPOOL #292 LEG    $3.99
OCT171010    DOCTOR STRANGE TP VOL 05 SECRET EMPIRE    $17.99
NOV170987    GWENPOOL #24 LEG    $3.99
OCT171020    INCREDIBLE HULK EPIC COLLECTION TP FALL OF PANTHEON    $39.99
OCT170997    MARVELS BLACK PANTHER PRELUDE TP    $15.99
JUL171204    MMW DAREDEVIL HC VOL 12    $75.00
JUL171205    MMW DAREDEVIL HC VOL 12 DM VAR ED 254    $75.00
NOV170989    MS MARVEL #26 LEG    $3.99
NOV170921    OLD MAN HAWKEYE #1 (OF 12) LEG    $3.99
NOV171090    OLD MAN HAWKEYE BY CHECCHETTO POSTER    $8.99
OCT178516    OLD MAN LOGAN #31 2ND PTG STEWART VAR LEG    $3.99
NOV171004    OLD MAN LOGAN #33 LEG    $3.99
NOV170893    PHOENIX RESURRECTION RETURN JEAN GREY #3 (OF 5) HUGO CONNECT    $3.99
NOV170895    PHOENIX RESURRECTION RETURN JEAN GREY #3 (OF 5) LEE JEAN GRE    $3.99
NOV170892    PHOENIX RESURRECTION RETURN JEAN GREY #3 (OF 5) LEG    $3.99
NOV170970    PUNISHER #220 LEG    $3.99
NOV171091    RISE OF THE BLACK PANTHER BY STELFREEZE POSTER    $8.99
NOV171022    RUNAWAYS #5    $3.99
NOV170992    SECRET WARRIORS #12 LEG    $3.99
NOV170948    SHE-HULK #161 LEG    $3.99
OCT171009    SHE-HULK TP VOL 02 LET THEM EAT CAKE    $15.99
NOV170962    SPIDER-MAN DEADPOOL #26 LEG    $3.99
NOV171035    STAR WARS DARTH VADER #10    $3.99
OCT171013    THOR BY WALTER SIMONSON TP VOL 02 NEW PTG    $24.99
NOV170975    UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #28 LEG    $3.99
NOV170952    VENOM #160 LEG    $3.99
OCT170993    VISION HC    $39.99
NOV170998    X-MEN BLUE #19 LEG    $3.99
NOV170995    X-MEN GOLD ANNUAL #1 LEG    $4.99
NOV171092    X-MEN RED BY CHAREST POSTER    $8.99

Friday, December 8, 2017

Review: BLACK PANTHER #166

BLACK PANTHER No. 166
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Ta-Nehisi Coates
PENCILS: Leonard Kirk
INKS:  Leonard Kirk and Marc Deering
COLORS: Laura Martin
LETTERS: VC's Joe Sabino
COVER: Brian Stelfreeze
VARIANT COVERS: Jenny Frison; Ryan Sook; Chip Zdarsky; Mike McKone with Rachelle Rosenberg; Wes Craig with Tamra Bonvillain (based on the the Incredible Hulk #340 cover by Todd McFarlane and Bob Wiacek)
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (December 2017)

Black Panther created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby

Rated “T”

“Avengers of the New World” Part 7

Black Panther is a Marvel Comics superhero.  He was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby and first appeared in Fantastic Four #52 (cover dated: July 1966).  Black Panther was T'Challa, the king and protector of the (fictional) African nation of Wakanda.  Black Panther was also the first Black superhero is mainstream American comic books.

Ta-Nehisi Coates is an American writer and journalist.  This African-American commentator is also a national correspondent for The Atlantic, where he writes about cultural, political, and social issues, particularly as they regard to Black people in America.  Coates' second book, Between the World and Me (released in July 2015), won the 2015 National Book Award for Nonfiction.  In 2015, he was the recipient of a “Genius Grant” from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

Black Panther and Ta-Nehisi Coates (with artist and designer Brian Stelfreeze) came together last year in a relaunch of the Black Panther comic book series.  Marvel Comics is in the middle of a new publishing initiative, “Legacy,” and that changes the issue numbering for Black Panther (and for a number of Marvel Comics' titles).  Coates now produces Black Panther with artists Leonard Kirk (pencils and inks) and Marc Deering (inks); colorist Laura Martin; and letterer Joe Sabino.

Black Panther #166 is the seventh chapter of the “Avengers of the New World” story arc.  The gods of Wakanda, “the Orisha,” have gone missing.  In their absence, mystical portals have been opening and releasing deadly creatures, monsters, and mutants.  A figure known as Ras the Exhorter tells the people of Wakanda that the Orisha are dead and leads them to believe in a new god, “Sefako.”  As Black Panther leads his allies to rescue Asira, an old friend, an old enemy steps forward to claim the prize he has sought since the time when T'Challa's father, T'Chaka was both the king and the Black Panther.

In his legendary 1980s run on DC Comics' Swamp Thing, Alan Moore created a personality for the title character and built a world of supporting characters, bit players, and an intriguing fictional mythology that allowed Moore to explore Swamp Thing's character and motivations.  The result was once-in-a-generation comic book storytelling.  Luckily, Alan Moore influenced generations of comic book writers who came after him.

Taking what the Black Panther writers and artists created before him, Ta-Nehisi Coates is building, issue by issue, a world of the Black Panther that is part of, but is also separate and distinct from the rest of the “Marvel Universe.”  Coates is doing what Alan Moore did with Swamp Thing – create a fictional comic book world that is wealthy with possibilities and does not really need the main universe.  As evident in Black Panther #166, Coates is still in the building process.  There is always some new element or page of Wakanda's history that comes to the fore.  For various reasons, some obvious, the American comic book world has not caught on to Black Panther the way it did Alan Moore's Swamp Thing.  And it should.

Coates collaborators have been stellar since the beginning of this series.  New series artist Leonard Kirk's art makes for quiet but powerful graphical storytelling – explosive in scenes when Klaw unleashes his power and powerfully dramatic when the story delves into the past.  As usual, colorist Laura Martin knows how to color every panel and every sequence in a way that propels the drama of the story.  Joe Sabino's matter-of-fact lettering does not call attention to itself, but, as it recedes into the background, it pulls you down, down, down into this exciting story.

I can't wait for the next issue.

[This comic book includes a three-page character overview written by Robbie Thompson; drawn by Wilfredo Torres; colored by Dan Brown; and lettered by Joe Sabino.]

A
9.5 out of 10

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2017 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

-------------------

Monday, September 11, 2017

Marvel Comics from Diamond Distributors for September 13, 2017

MARVEL COMICS

JUL171152    ALL NEW WOLVERINE #24    $3.99
JUL171075    AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #32    $3.99
JUN171068    AVENGERS BY BENDIS COMPLETE COLLECTION TP VOL 01    $39.99
JUL171077    BEN REILLY SCARLET SPIDER #7    $3.99
JUL171240    BLACK PANTHER BY STELFREEZE POSTER    $8.99
JUN171050    COLOR YOUR OWN STAR WARS DARTH VADER    $9.99
JUL171032    DEADPOOL #36 SE    $3.99
JUN171059    DEADPOOL WORLDS GREATEST TP VOL 09 DEADPOOL IN SPACE    $15.99
JUL171100    DEFENDERS #5    $3.99
JUL171107    DOCTOR STRANGE SORCERERS SUPREME #12    $3.99
JUN171057    ELEKTRA TP ALWAYS BET ON RED    $15.99
JUN171052    FIGMENT TP    $19.99
JUL171003    GENERATIONS CAPT MARVEL & CAPT MAR-VELL #1    $4.99
JUL171004    GENERATIONS CAPT MARVEL & CAPT MAR-VELL #1 SCHOONOVER VAR    $4.99
JUN178824    GENERATIONS WOLVERINE & ALL-NEW WOLVERINE #1 2ND PTG MATTINA    $4.99
JUN171054    GUARDIANS OF GALAXY NEW GUARD TP VOL 03 CIVIL WAR II    $19.99
JUL171119    GWENPOOL #20    $3.99
JUL171046    HULK #10    $3.99
JUL171238    INCREDIBLE HULK BY LAND POSTER    $8.99
JUL171239    INVINCIBLE IRON MAN BY GRANOV POSTER    $8.99
JUN171056    KINGPIN TP BORN AGAINST    $15.99
JUL171236    LEGACY BY ALEX ROSS POSTER    $8.99
JUL170999    LEGACY BY JOE QUESADA OVERSIZED VINYL POSTER    $34.99
JUL171189    MARVEL UNIVERSE GUARDIANS OF GALAXY #22    $2.99
JUL171237    MIGHTY THOR BY DAUTERMAN POSTER    $8.99
MAR171141    MMW MARVEL TWO IN ONE HC VOL 02    $75.00
MAR171142    MMW MARVEL TWO IN ONE HC VOL 02 DM VAR ED 249    $75.00
JUN171060    MOSAIC TP VOL 02 DOWN BELOW    $15.99
JUL171094    MS MARVEL #22    $3.99
JUL171150    OLD MAN LOGAN #28    $3.99
JUL171133    ROCKET #5    $3.99
JUL171016    RUNAWAYS #1    $3.99
JUL171024    SECRET EMPIRE OMEGA #1 MICHAEL CHO VAR SE    $4.99
JUL171027    SECRET EMPIRE OMEGA #1 NO MORE HYDRA VAR SE    $4.99
JUL171023    SECRET EMPIRE OMEGA #1 SE    $4.99
JUL171028    SECRET WARRIORS #6 SE    $3.99
JUL171176    STAR WARS #36    $3.99
JUN178075    STAR WARS DARTH VADER #3 2ND PTG COIPEL VAR    $3.99
JUN178823    STAR WARS DARTH VADER #4 2ND PTG CAMUNCOLI VAR    $3.99
JUL171179    STAR WARS DOCTOR APHRA #12    $3.99
JUN178825    TOTALLY AWESOME HULK #21 2ND PTG STONEHOUSE VAR    $3.99
JUL171110    UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #24    $3.99
JUL171039    UNCANNY AVENGERS #27    $3.99
JUL171056    VENOMVERSE #2 (OF 5)    $3.99
JUL171059    VENOMVERSE #2 (OF 5) CRAIN CONNECTING VAR    $3.99
JUL171057    VENOMVERSE #2 (OF 5) TORQUE POISON VAR    $3.99
JUL171123    VISION DIRECTORS CUT #4 (OF 6)    $6.99
JUN178826    WEAPON X #6 2ND PTG SKAN VAR    $3.99
JUL171159    WEAPON X #8    $3.99
JUL171134    X-MEN BLUE #11    $3.99
JUL171241    X-MEN BLUE & GOLD BY ARTHUR ADAMS POSTER    $8.99
JUL171120    ZOMBIES ASSEMBLE 2 #2 (OF 4)    $4.99
JUL171121    ZOMBIES ASSEMBLE 2 #2 (OF 4) SILVA VAR    $4.99

Monday, August 21, 2017

Image Comics from Diamond Distributors for August 23, 2017

IMAGE COMICS

JUN170728    BEAUTY TP VOL 03 (MR)    $16.99
APR170795    DYING AND THE DEAD #5 (RES)    $3.99
JUN170751    ETERNAL EMPIRE #4    $3.99
JUN170653    FEW TP (MR)    $19.99
JUN178446    GENERATION GONE #1 2ND PTG    $4.99
JUN170753    GENERATION GONE #2 (MR)    $3.99
MAY178626    GENERATION GONE #2 CVR B HICKMAN CVR MONTH (MR)    $3.99
JUN170754    GRRL SCOUTS MAGIC SOCKS #4 (OF 6) CVR A MAHFOOD (MR)    $3.99
JUN170755    GRRL SCOUTS MAGIC SOCKS #4 (OF 6) CVR B YS (MR)    $3.99
JUN170668    HARD PLACE #1 (OF 5) CVR A STELFREEZE (MR)    $3.99
JUN170669    HARD PLACE #1 (OF 5) CVR B RUMMEL (MR)    $3.99
JUN170762    LAZARUS X PLUS 66 #2 (OF 6) (MR)    $3.99
JUN170775    MOONSTRUCK #2    $3.99
JUN170781    PLASTIC #5 (OF 5) CVR A ROBINSON (MR)    $3.99
JUN170782    PLASTIC #5 (OF 5) CVR B HILLYARD (MR)    $3.99
JUN170786    REDNECK #5 (MR)    $3.99
MAY170705    RENATO JONES SEASON TWO #3 (OF 5) (MR)    $3.99
JUN178447    SHIRTLESS BEAR-FIGHTER #2 (OF 5) 2ND PTG    $3.99
JUN170800    SHIRTLESS BEAR-FIGHTER #3 CVR A ROBINSON (MR)    $3.99
JUN170801    SHIRTLESS BEAR-FIGHTER #3 CVR B VELLA (MR)    $3.99
JUN170802    SHIRTLESS BEAR-FIGHTER #3 CVR C CHABOT (MR)    $3.99
JUN178448    SNOTGIRL #6 2ND PTG    $2.99
FEB170710    SNOWFALL TP (MR)    $19.99
JUN170714    TIM SEELEY ACTION FIGURE COLLECTION TP VOL 01    $12.99
JUN170812    UNDERWINTER #6 CVR A FAWKES (MR)    $3.99
JUN170813    UNDERWINTER #6 CVR B QUARTET VAR (MR)    $3.99

Saturday, August 5, 2017

Review: BLACK PANTHER: World of Wakanda #1

BLACK PANTHER: WORLD OF WAKANDA No. 1 (2017)
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Roxane Gay (with Ta-Nehisi Coates consultant)
ART: Alitha E. Martinez
COLORS: Rachel Rosenberg
LETTERS: VC's Joe Sabino
MISC. ART: Brian Stelfreeze
COVER: Afua Richardson
VARIANT COVER: Brian Stelfreeze; John Tyler Christopher; Natacha Bustos; Khoi Pham with Frank D'Armata; Skottie Young; Alitha E. Martinez with Rachelle Rosenberg
36pp, Color, $4.99 U.S. (January 2017)

Black Panther created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby

Rated “T”

“Dawn of the Midnight Angels” Part 1

A sure sign that Marvel Comics is already preparing for the February 2018 release of the Black Panther film from Marvel Studios is that Marvel doesn't think that one Black Panther comic book is enough.  We already have writer Ta-Nehisi Coates' ambitious Black Panther 12-issue series.

Now, we get Black Panther: World of Wakanda, which will explore Wakanda, the African kingdom which Black Panther/T'Challa rules.  The writer of World of Wakanda's main story is author and feminist, Roxane Gay (Bad Feminist).  The story is drawn by Alitha E. Martinez, who was part of the original art team of the Marvel Knight imprint's Black Panther Volume 2 (1998), which was written by Christopher Priest.  Rachel Rosenberg colors, and Joe Sabino letters.

Black Panther: World of Wakanda #1 (“Dawn of the Midnight Angels” Part 1) focuses on the “Dora Milaje” (“Adored Ones”), the female personal bodyguards of Black Panther and the royal family.  We see the first meeting between Captain Aneka and Ayo, the young woman who would become her lover and partner in revolution.

I would describe this opening chapter of “Dawn of the Midnight Angels” as not great, but good.  The characters and the character drama is intriguing, but the Sub-Mariner part of it bores me.  I think writer Roxane Gay is on to something with the dynamics between the leads.  The art by Alitha E. Martinez is a mixed bag – good storytelling but average quality on the composition.  That aside, I highly recommend this title to Black Panther fans.

“The People for the People”

STORY: Yona Harvey and Ta-Nehisi Coates
ART: Afua Richardson
COLORS: Tamra Bonvillain
LETTERS: VC's Joe Sabino

“The People for the People” is an origin story featuring another female character who is a thorn in Black Panther's side.  That would be Zenzi, leader of The People, the group currently trying to topple the Wakandan monarchy.  Written by Yona Harvey and Ta-Nehisi Coates, the story attempts to dispel some of the mystery around Zenzi, and this first chapter definitely makes her a character worth discovering.  The art by rising star Afua Richardson personifies how her stylish graphics and compositions add zest and energy and intrigue into the stories Richardson draws.  Encore

A-

Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"


The text is copyright © 2016 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.

-------------------------



Thursday, January 12, 2017

Review: Ta-Nehisi Coates and Brian Stelfreeze's BLACK PANTHER #1

BLACK PANTHER #1 (2016)
MARVEL COMICS – @Marvel

[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]

WRITER: Ta-Nehisi Coates
ART: Brian Stelfreeze
COLORS: Laura Martin
LETTERS: VC's Joe Sabino
COVER: Brian Stelfreeze
VARIANT COVER: Brian Stelfreeze; Olivier Coipel; Felipe Smith; Alex Ross; Skottie Young; Sanford Greene; Ryan Sook; Disney Interactive
36pp, Color, $4.99 U.S. (June 2016)

Black Panther created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby

Rated “T”

“A Nation Under Our Feet” Part 1

Ta-Nehisi Coates is an American writer and journalist.  This African-American commentator is also a national correspondent for The Atlantic, where he writes about cultural, political, and social issues, particularly as they regard to Black people in America.  Coates' second book, Between the World and Me (released in July 2015), won the 2015 National Book Award for Nonfiction.  In 2015, he was the recipient of a “Genius Grant” from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

Brian Stelfreeze is an African-American comic book creator who has been writing, penciling, inking, coloring, and/or painting comic books for over three decades..  In the 1980s, he first gained notice for his stylized covers, particularly for his unique graphic interpretation of Batman.  Stelfreeze was the initial series artist on the DC Comics' Batman title, Batman: Shadow of the Bat, and also produced over 50 covers for that series.  Stelfreeze is one of the original members of Atlanta's Gaijin Studios.

Ta-Nehisi Coates is the writer and Brian Stelfreeze is the artist of the new Black Panther comic book series from Marvel Comics.  The other creative talent on the series include Laura Martin as color artist and Joe Sabino as letterer.

In the world of Black Panther, T'Challa is the warrior-priest-king of Wakanda, and he bears the ceremonial title of that position, Black Panther.  To the world outside Wakanda, Black Panther is a superhero, specifically an Avenger, and of late, a member of the Ultimates.  However, Wakanda has fallen on hard times during Black Panther's time away being a superhero.

Black Panther #1 (“A Nation Under Our Feet” Part 1) opens at “The Great Mound.”  Here, Black Panther is in the heat of a pitched battle with vibranium miners.  In “The Golden City,” capital of Wakanda, harsh justice is handed out.  At the Nigandan border region, an army gathers.  Sure, Wakanda has undergone a flood that killed thousands, a supervillain-led coup, and an invasion from beyond the stars, but there is more bad to come.

I have been an admirer of Ta-Nehisi Coates for the past few years, ever since I first saw him during an television appearance (on MSNBC, I think).  Since then, I have seen him speak on independent news series, “Democracy Now,” and I have read some of his work at The Atlantic's website.  Upon hearing that he was going to write a 12-issue run of Black Panther for Marvel Comics, I was excited, but I did not know what I could really expect; after all, Coates had no previous comic book writing experience.

That turns out to be a good thing.  His clean storytelling builds on the work of previous Black Panther writers, Christopher Priest and Reginald Hudlin.  He mines what for me has always been an obvious source of conflict-laden storytelling – how does a man be both a superhero and the king of a country with resources highly coveted by dangerous interests.  And, you know, I have to give Coates credit for writing a script that insists on giving readers the names of every important character with a speaking role in the first issue.  I am tired of reading vague, introductory first chapters and first issues in which the only characters that are recognizable are the ones wearing familiar costumes.

I have not followed Brian Stelfreeze very much, but I have admired some of his work.  One could make an argument that he is the star here.  His stylish art and vivid, energetic graphical storytelling are a delight.  His character, costume, and graphic design for this series is surprising, simply because I did not expect such a fresh approach that also retains classical Black Panther tropes.  Laura Martin's colors over Stelfreeze's stellar art create some of the most striking visuals that can be found in comic books at this moment.  Letter Joe Sabino and designer Manny Mederos also deserve a shout-out for making this Black Panther one of the best Marvel first issues that I have read in the last few years.

I cannot wait for the second issue of this new Black Panther.  It is more than I expected, although now I expect a lot.

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.

------------------------

Monday, December 26, 2016

Marvel Comics from Diamond Diamonds for December 28, 2016

MARVEL COMICS
OCT168630    AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #21 2ND PTG ALEX ROSS VAR    $3.99
OCT168094    AMAZING SPIDER-MAN RENEW YOUR VOWS #1 2ND PTG STEGMAN VAR NO    $4.99
OCT168095    AVENGERS #1.1 2ND PTG KITSON VAR NOW    $3.99
OCT161020    AVENGERS ENDLESS WARTIME TP    $19.99
OCT168631    BLACK PANTHER #8 2ND PTG STELFREEZE VAR    $3.99
OCT160913    BLACK PANTHER #9    $3.99
OCT160914    BLACK PANTHER #9 RIVERA CONNECTING E VAR    $3.99
OCT168096    BLACK PANTHER WORLD OF WAKANDA #1 2ND PTG RICHARDSON VAR NOW    $4.99
OCT160951    BLACK WIDOW #9    $3.99
OCT168097    CAPTAIN AMERICA STEVE ROGERS #7 2ND PTG HANS VAR NOW    $3.99
OCT160879    CAPTAIN AMERICA STEVE ROGERS #8    $3.99
OCT160895    CARNAGE #15    $3.99
SEP161000    CIVIL WAR II #8 (OF 8)    $4.99
SEP161003    CIVIL WAR II #8 (OF 8) C VAR    $4.99
SEP161004    CIVIL WAR II #8 (OF 8) CASSADAY VAR    $4.99
SEP161001    CIVIL WAR II #8 (OF 8) CHO VAR    $4.99
SEP161002    CIVIL WAR II #8 (OF 8) NOTO VAR    $4.99
OCT168099    CLONE CONSPIRACY #2 (OF 5) 2ND PTG DELLOTTO VAR    $3.99
OCT160967    DEADPOOL TOO SOON #3 (OF 4)    $4.99
OCT160921    DOCTOR STRANGE SORCERERS SUPREME #3    $3.99
OCT160971    ENCHANTED TIKI ROOM #3 (OF 5)    $3.99
OCT160974    ENCHANTED TIKI ROOM #3 (OF 5) CHRISTOPHER ACTION FIGURE VAR    $3.99
OCT160973    ENCHANTED TIKI ROOM #3 (OF 5) GRANDT CONNECTION VAR    $3.99
OCT160719    EXTRAORDINARY X-MEN #17 IVX    $3.99
OCT160933    GHOST RIDER #2    $3.99
OCT160881    GREAT LAKES AVENGERS #3    $3.99
SEP161102    GUIDE MARVEL UNIV AGENTS SHIELD SEASON 3 CARTER SEASON 2    $3.99
OCT161033    HEROES POWER WOMEN MARVEL ALL NEW MARVEL TREASURY ED TP    $15.99
OCT160788    HULK #1 NOW    $3.99
OCT168632    INFAMOUS IRON MAN #2 2ND PTG MALEEV VAR    $3.99
OCT160853    INFAMOUS IRON MAN #3    $3.99
OCT168098    INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #1 2ND PTG CASELLI VAR NOW    $3.99
OCT161021    INVINCIBLE IRON MAN TP VOL 01 REBOOT    $17.99
OCT168633    JESSICA JONES #2 2ND PTG MACK VAR    $3.99
OCT160993    MARVEL UNIVERSE ULT SPIDER-MAN VS SINISTER SIX #6    $2.99
OCT160970    MAX RIDE FINAL FLIGHT #4 (OF 5)    $3.99
OCT160873    MIGHTY THOR #14    $3.99
OCT160944    MOON GIRL AND DEVIL DINOSAUR #14    $3.99
OCT161012    MOON GIRL AND DEVIL DINOSAUR TP VOL 02 COSMIC COOTIES    $17.99
AUG161006    NEW AVENGERS AIM TP VOL 03 CIVIL WAR II    $19.99
OCT161019    NIGHTHAWK TP HATE MAKES HATE    $17.99
OCT161013    NOVA HUMAN ROCKET TP VOL 02 AFTERBURN    $15.99
OCT160848    PROWLER #3 CC    $3.99
OCT160824    ROCKET RACCOON #1 NOW    $3.99
OCT160888    SPIDER-MAN #11    $3.99
OCT160887    SPIDER-MAN DEADPOOL #12    $3.99
OCT160891    SPIDER-WOMAN #14    $3.99
OCT161007    SPIDER-WOMAN TP VOL 02 SHIFTING GEARS CIVIL WAR II    $15.99
OCT161010    SPIDEY TP VOL 02 AFTER SCHOOL SPECIAL    $17.99
OCT160988    STAR WARS #26    $3.99
OCT161017    STAR WARS LEGENDS EPIC COLLECTION TP VOL 01 CLONE WARS    $39.99
OCT168634    THANOS #1 2ND PTG DEODATO VAR NOW    $3.99
OCT160936    THUNDERBOLTS #8    $3.99
OCT161014    THUNDERBOLTS TP VOL 01 THERE IS NO HIGH ROAD    $17.99
AUG161005    TOTALLY AWESOME HULK TP VOL 02 CIVIL WAR II    $17.99
OCT168807    ULTIMATES 2 #1 2ND PTG FOREMAN VAR NOW    $3.99
OCT160886    UNCANNY AVENGERS #18    $3.99
OCT160898    UNCANNY INHUMANS #17    $3.99
OCT168806    VENOM #1 2ND PTG SANDOVAL VAR NOW    $3.99
OCT160959    X-MEN 92 #10    $4.99