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Thursday, May 17, 2018
Review: THE MAN FROM THE GREAT NORTH
THE MAN FROM THE GREAT NORTH
IDW PUBLISHING/EuroComics – @IDWPublishing
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
CARTOONIST: Hugo Pratt
TRANSLATION: Dean Mullaney, Simone Castaldi, and Ariane Levesque Looker
COLORS: Annie Frognier and Patrizia Zanotti
EDITOR: Dean Mullaney
ISBN: 978-1-68405-058-1; hardcover – 8 1/2” x 11” (October 2017)
104pp, Color, $24.99 U.S., $33.99 CAN (November 21, 2017)
Hugo Pratt (1927 to 1995) was an Italian comic book creator and artist. Some consider him to be among the first literary and artistic comic book creators, and his best known work is his Corto Maltese series, which he produced from 1967 to 1988.
IDW Publishing is currently publishing new English-language editions of Pratt's graphic albums and comics. One of those is a full-color graphic novel, The Man From the Great North. It was initially entitled Jésuite Joe and was serialized in the French comics magazines, Pilote. Jésuite Joe was then collected as a graphic album in 1980 in France (by Dargaud). In Italy, it was published as L'uomo del grande nord (The Man From the Great North) and was one of four graphic novels that Hugo Pratt contributed to Italian publisher Edizioni Cepim's “One Man, One Adventure” series.
IDW's The Man From the Great North is the first English-language version of Jésuite Joe (according to the publisher). IDW's edition includes Pratt's original 48-page version of Jésuite Joe and also 21 pages of storyboard material that Pratt produced for a 1991 French film based on the graphic novel and directed by Olivier Austen. The storyboards are integrated into the original graphic novel to produce an expanded version of the Jésuite Joe graphic novel.
IDW's The Man From the Great North also has five pages of watercolors studies and five spot illustrations that Pratt produced for Jésuite Joe. Pratt also produced 19 pages of a second Jésuite Joe story that he never finished, and that is reprinted in this book.
The story focuses on Jesuit Joe, who is a “Métis,” an ethnic group in Canada and part of the United States that is descended from indigenous North Americans (Native Americans) and European settlers. In Joe's case, he is of French-Canadian (father) and Mohawk (mother) descent.
The Man From the Great North's story takes place in 1912 in Canada (the “Great North”), and for most of the story, Joe is dressed in the uniform of a Royal North West Mounted Police (RNWMP), specifically a corporal's uniform. Joe finds the uniform in a cabin shortly before he kills two men who hat shot into the cabin. Next, he encounters a Cree medicine man in the middle of some kind of ceremony involving a baby stolen from white settlers, and Joe kills him.
Thus, begins Jesuit Joe's spree of killing and violence that includes a Catholic priest, family, Indians, and the man who is tracking him, Sergeant Fox, among others. All the while, Jesuit Joe is looking for something... something ephemeral... or absolute.
In his essay, “Whatever became of Jesuit Joe?”, Gianni Brunoro writes that Hugo Pratt “...was interested in telling stories about ideas.” Brunoro writes that Jesuit Joe may have been “an ideologically completed story,” so for Pratt, there was nothing to which he should return. Something else worth noting: in his forward to Jésuite Joe, written in 1991, Pratt talks about writers who influenced this creation, including Jack London and Zane Gray.
For me, Jesuit Joe seems like an idea, a story about a guy going through the wilderness of the “Great North,” killing people at just about every stop because that is what he does. His motivation is inscrutable, unless a reader wants to admit that Joe does things simply because he wants to do those things. He is simultaneously ephemeral, a force of nature, and a personification of death. One can see that this story and character seem like ideas inspired by the works of Jack London.
The story in The Man From the Great North is impressionistic and is told in illustrations that are abstract when they are not treading the ground of realist art. The influence of the great American cartoonist, Milton Caniff, is evident on The Man From the Great North, as it is on Pratt's Corto Maltese series. The storyboard pages are loose and seem immediate and relevant, but do not show the influence of any particular artist or writer. They seem like pure Pratt.
This story, with its wraith-like character who wanders a sometimes dream-like wilderness landscape, seems to me to be about inspiring the reader's imagination. Pratt seems to tell us to follow Joe and make of it what our imaginations will. I find that this story does indeed arouse my imagination, and I cannot help but be intrigued and emotionally involved in it. The violence (murder, kidnapping, assault, rape, etc.) moves me. I feel something... and some things I should not admit...
There will be no more Jesuit Joe by Hugo Pratt. I want more because this story moves me. There is no beginning, middle, and end in a traditional way; in fact, The Man From the Great North seems like a small section of a larger story. Like Pratt's other work, this is a work of graphic fiction and graphic storytelling that grabs the reader in ways that larger, more developed comics do not. That is the reason why Pratt is always worth reading, but concerning Jesuit Joe, this is the end.
9 out of 10
[This book includes a forward by Hugo Pratt, and an essay, “Whatever became of Jesuit Joe?” by Gianni Brunoro.]
EuroComics.us
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"
The text is copyright © 2018 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
-------------------------------
Labels:
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Wednesday, May 16, 2018
Review: KAGUYA-SAMA: Love is War Volume 2
KAGUYA-SAMA: LOVE IS WAR, VOL. 2
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia
MANGAKA: Aka Akasaka
TRANSLATION: Emi Louie-Nishikawa
ENGLISH ADAPTATION: Annette Roman
LETTERS: Stephen Dutro
EDITOR: Annette Roman
ISBN: 978-1-9747-0031-8; paperback (May 2018); Rated “T” for “Teen”
228pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK
Kaguya-sama: Love is War is a manga from creator Aka Akasaka. The series was first serialized in the Japanese manga magazine, Miracle Jump, before moving to Young Jump. Kaguya-sama: Love is War focuses on two high school geniuses who fall in love, but refuse to admit it. VIZ Media is publishing the series in English as a series of graphic novels.
In Kaguya-sama: Love is War, Kaguya Shinomiya is a well-bred lady and an heir. She is Student Council Vice-President at Shuchin Academy, a school for the children of the rich and famous and for future leaders. Miyuki Shirogane is the strong, silent type who has a singular focus on his studies. He is President of the Student Council. Kaguya and Miyuki are two geniuses, each in love with the other. But love is war, so which will confess love to the other when the one who confesses his... or her love first loses.
When Kaguya-sama: Love is War, Vol. 2 (Chapters 11 to 20) opens, Miyuki has finally obtained a smart phone. As he enters his information in his new device, he wonders if he should ask Kaguya for her phone number. But could she mistake a request for such information as a declaration of love? We can't have that! Then, Kaguya and Miyuki accidentally switch drinking cups. Is drinking from another person's cup like kissing him... or her? And will such a kiss be a declaration of love?!
Plus, it's the battle of the cat ears.
[This volume includes bonus manga and an essay, “When reading Kaguya-sama: Love is War, Vol. 2...” by Aka Akasaka.]
The Kaguya-sama: Love is War manga is an episodic manga like Hayate the Combat Butler, which means that each chapter is essentially an episode and focuses on a new situation. Kaguya-sama's situations are comedic, so it would be fair and accurate to call it a situation comedy or sitcom.
My VIZ Media rep sent me a copy of Kaguya-sama: Love is War Graphic Novel Volume 2. I was sure I received a press release about this manga before the first volume was published, but the series did not register with me until I received a review copy of Vol. 2. I must say that I really enjoyed this manga. It is funny to watch these two genius slash idiots struggling against common sense and the fact that they really want to date each other. I do think that this series will have to evolve over time, as has Hayate the Combat Butler.
For now, however, just being funny is good enough. Fans of sitcom-type manga will want to read the Shonen Jump title, Kaguya-sama: Love is War.
A-
7.5 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 blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
-----------------------------
VIZ MEDIA – @VIZMedia
MANGAKA: Aka Akasaka
TRANSLATION: Emi Louie-Nishikawa
ENGLISH ADAPTATION: Annette Roman
LETTERS: Stephen Dutro
EDITOR: Annette Roman
ISBN: 978-1-9747-0031-8; paperback (May 2018); Rated “T” for “Teen”
228pp, B&W, $9.99 U.S., $12.99 CAN, £6.99 UK
Kaguya-sama: Love is War is a manga from creator Aka Akasaka. The series was first serialized in the Japanese manga magazine, Miracle Jump, before moving to Young Jump. Kaguya-sama: Love is War focuses on two high school geniuses who fall in love, but refuse to admit it. VIZ Media is publishing the series in English as a series of graphic novels.
In Kaguya-sama: Love is War, Kaguya Shinomiya is a well-bred lady and an heir. She is Student Council Vice-President at Shuchin Academy, a school for the children of the rich and famous and for future leaders. Miyuki Shirogane is the strong, silent type who has a singular focus on his studies. He is President of the Student Council. Kaguya and Miyuki are two geniuses, each in love with the other. But love is war, so which will confess love to the other when the one who confesses his... or her love first loses.
When Kaguya-sama: Love is War, Vol. 2 (Chapters 11 to 20) opens, Miyuki has finally obtained a smart phone. As he enters his information in his new device, he wonders if he should ask Kaguya for her phone number. But could she mistake a request for such information as a declaration of love? We can't have that! Then, Kaguya and Miyuki accidentally switch drinking cups. Is drinking from another person's cup like kissing him... or her? And will such a kiss be a declaration of love?!
Plus, it's the battle of the cat ears.
[This volume includes bonus manga and an essay, “When reading Kaguya-sama: Love is War, Vol. 2...” by Aka Akasaka.]
The Kaguya-sama: Love is War manga is an episodic manga like Hayate the Combat Butler, which means that each chapter is essentially an episode and focuses on a new situation. Kaguya-sama's situations are comedic, so it would be fair and accurate to call it a situation comedy or sitcom.
My VIZ Media rep sent me a copy of Kaguya-sama: Love is War Graphic Novel Volume 2. I was sure I received a press release about this manga before the first volume was published, but the series did not register with me until I received a review copy of Vol. 2. I must say that I really enjoyed this manga. It is funny to watch these two genius slash idiots struggling against common sense and the fact that they really want to date each other. I do think that this series will have to evolve over time, as has Hayate the Combat Butler.
For now, however, just being funny is good enough. Fans of sitcom-type manga will want to read the Shonen Jump title, Kaguya-sama: Love is War.
A-
7.5 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 blog or site for reprint and syndication rights and fees.
-----------------------------
Labels:
Aka Akasaka,
Annette Roman,
Emi Louie-Nishikawa,
manga,
Review,
Shonen Jump,
VIZ Media
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Review: YOUNGBLOOD #1
YOUNGBLOOD No. 1 (2017)
IMAGE COMICS – @ImageComics
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
STORY: Chad Bowers
ART: Jim Towe
COLORS: Juan Manuel Rodriguez
LETTERS: Rus Wooton
COVER: Jim Towe with Brad Anderson
VARIANT COVERS: Rob Liefeld; David Finch; Chris Daughtry
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (March 2017)
Rated T+ / Teen Plus
Youngblood created by Rob Liefeld
Youngblood Reborn – Chapter One: “What Happened to Man-Up?”
Youngblood is a superhero comic book series created by writer-artist Rob Liefeld. Debuting in 1992, Youngblood was the first comic book series published by Image Comics. Youngblood #1 (cover dated: April 1992) was the highest selling independent comic book at the time of its first publication.
The series has been discontinued and revived a number of times, and on this, the 25th anniversary of Image Comics, we have the new Youngblood. It is written by Chad Bowers; drawn by Jim Towe; colored by Juan Manuel Rodriquez, and lettered by Rus Wooton.
Youngblood #1 (“What Happened to Man-Up?”) begins with a young woman named Petra Gomez, and she is looking for her missing friend, Horatio, who is also the budding superhero, Man-Up. Petra is also a budding superhero, who is known as “Gunner,” although she may be the new “Vogue.” Her search and superhero activity will bring her into the circle of a few original members of the famous and infamous superhero team, Youngblood, perhaps, sooner than she wished.
Rob Liefeld took over two years and a half years to publish the original 11-issue run on Youngblood (#1-10 and a #0 issue). I did not stick around that long, as I could not stomach Youngblood after four issues because it was such a terrible comic book. I was absolutely crazy for writer Alan Moore and artist Steve Skroce's aborted run on a revamped Youngblood, published in early 1998.
Chad Bowers and Jim Towe's new Youngblood falls in the huge space that is between the quality of the Liefeld and the Moore/Skroce Youngblood series. It is not as bad as Liefeld's run, nor is it anywhere near as good as the Moore/Skroce run. Towe is good at storytelling, but his compositions lack polish and professionalism because he should not ink his own pencils, which is what he does on this first issue. Towe could use a veteran inker, which would vastly improve the visual quality of the art.
Chad Bowers story is not great or really good for that matter. However, Bowers' writing is not anywhere near the worst of Youngblood storytelling, and actually interests me enough that I will seek out at least one more issue. Truthfully, if Bowers and Towe are up to it, they could produced a quality, long-running Youngblood series. These two creators have potential, but Rob Liefeld and (I imagine) sales/finances may ultimately decide the fate of this latest Youngblood series.
[This comic book includes the bonus story, “As It Should Be” - story by Rob Liefeld; art by Liefeld (pencils) and Shelby Robertson (inks); colors by Juan Manuel Rodriguez; and letters by Rus Wooton.]
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You'
The text is copyright © 2017 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication and reprint rights and fees.
--------------------------------------
IMAGE COMICS – @ImageComics
[This review was originally posted on Patreon.]
STORY: Chad Bowers
ART: Jim Towe
COLORS: Juan Manuel Rodriguez
LETTERS: Rus Wooton
COVER: Jim Towe with Brad Anderson
VARIANT COVERS: Rob Liefeld; David Finch; Chris Daughtry
28pp, Color, $3.99 U.S. (March 2017)
Rated T+ / Teen Plus
Youngblood created by Rob Liefeld
Youngblood Reborn – Chapter One: “What Happened to Man-Up?”
Youngblood is a superhero comic book series created by writer-artist Rob Liefeld. Debuting in 1992, Youngblood was the first comic book series published by Image Comics. Youngblood #1 (cover dated: April 1992) was the highest selling independent comic book at the time of its first publication.
The series has been discontinued and revived a number of times, and on this, the 25th anniversary of Image Comics, we have the new Youngblood. It is written by Chad Bowers; drawn by Jim Towe; colored by Juan Manuel Rodriquez, and lettered by Rus Wooton.
Youngblood #1 (“What Happened to Man-Up?”) begins with a young woman named Petra Gomez, and she is looking for her missing friend, Horatio, who is also the budding superhero, Man-Up. Petra is also a budding superhero, who is known as “Gunner,” although she may be the new “Vogue.” Her search and superhero activity will bring her into the circle of a few original members of the famous and infamous superhero team, Youngblood, perhaps, sooner than she wished.
Rob Liefeld took over two years and a half years to publish the original 11-issue run on Youngblood (#1-10 and a #0 issue). I did not stick around that long, as I could not stomach Youngblood after four issues because it was such a terrible comic book. I was absolutely crazy for writer Alan Moore and artist Steve Skroce's aborted run on a revamped Youngblood, published in early 1998.
Chad Bowers and Jim Towe's new Youngblood falls in the huge space that is between the quality of the Liefeld and the Moore/Skroce Youngblood series. It is not as bad as Liefeld's run, nor is it anywhere near as good as the Moore/Skroce run. Towe is good at storytelling, but his compositions lack polish and professionalism because he should not ink his own pencils, which is what he does on this first issue. Towe could use a veteran inker, which would vastly improve the visual quality of the art.
Chad Bowers story is not great or really good for that matter. However, Bowers' writing is not anywhere near the worst of Youngblood storytelling, and actually interests me enough that I will seek out at least one more issue. Truthfully, if Bowers and Towe are up to it, they could produced a quality, long-running Youngblood series. These two creators have potential, but Rob Liefeld and (I imagine) sales/finances may ultimately decide the fate of this latest Youngblood series.
[This comic book includes the bonus story, “As It Should Be” - story by Rob Liefeld; art by Liefeld (pencils) and Shelby Robertson (inks); colors by Juan Manuel Rodriguez; and letters by Rus Wooton.]
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You'
The text is copyright © 2017 Leroy Douresseaux. All Rights Reserved. Contact this blog for syndication and reprint rights and fees.
--------------------------------------
Labels:
Brad Anderson,
David Finch,
Image Comics,
Review,
Rob Liefeld
Monday, May 14, 2018
BOOM! Studios from Diamond Distributors for May 16, 2018
BOOM! STUDIOS
MAR181297 DODGE CITY #3 $3.99
MAR181269 FENCE #6 $3.99
MAR181304 GARFIELD 2018 VACATION TIME BLUES #1 $7.99
MAR181284 LUCY DREAMING #3 $3.99
MAR188255 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #26 SG (2ND PTG) (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR181241 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #27 MAIN SG (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR181242 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #27 SUBSCRIPTION GIBSON VAR SG $3.99
JAN181321 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS & ZORDS POSTER SC (C: 1-1-2) $19.99
JAN181332 PERSEPHONE ORIGINAL GN HC (MR) (C: 0-1-2) $19.99
JAN181327 RUGRATS TP VOL 01 (C: 0-1-2) $14.99
MAR181305 STEVEN UNIVERSE ONGOING #16 (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR181306 STEVEN UNIVERSE ONGOING #16 SUBSCRIPTION OMAC VAR (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
JAN181351 UNSOUND TP (C: 0-1-2) $19.99
MAR181297 DODGE CITY #3 $3.99
MAR181269 FENCE #6 $3.99
MAR181304 GARFIELD 2018 VACATION TIME BLUES #1 $7.99
MAR181284 LUCY DREAMING #3 $3.99
MAR188255 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #26 SG (2ND PTG) (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR181241 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #27 MAIN SG (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR181242 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS #27 SUBSCRIPTION GIBSON VAR SG $3.99
JAN181321 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS & ZORDS POSTER SC (C: 1-1-2) $19.99
JAN181332 PERSEPHONE ORIGINAL GN HC (MR) (C: 0-1-2) $19.99
JAN181327 RUGRATS TP VOL 01 (C: 0-1-2) $14.99
MAR181305 STEVEN UNIVERSE ONGOING #16 (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR181306 STEVEN UNIVERSE ONGOING #16 SUBSCRIPTION OMAC VAR (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
JAN181351 UNSOUND TP (C: 0-1-2) $19.99
Labels:
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Dark Horse Comics from Diamond Distributors for May 16, 2018
DARK HORSE COMICS
MAR180014 ETHER COPPER GOLEMS #1 (OF 5) $3.99
MAR180015 ETHER COPPER GOLEMS #1 (OF 5) VAR POPE CVR $3.99
JAN180154 I AM A HERO OMNIBUS TP VOL 06 (C: 1-1-2) $19.99
JAN180129 JAM NOVEL SC (NEW EDITION) (C: 0-1-2) $12.99
JAN180131 MOGWORLD NOVEL SC (NEW EDITION) (C: 0-1-2) $12.99
MAR180034 NEIL GAIMAN AMERICAN GODS MY AINSEL #3 MAIN CVR (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR180035 NEIL GAIMAN AMERICAN GODS MY AINSEL #3 VAR DAVID MACK CVR (C $3.99
DEC170050 ORIGINALS ESSENTIAL ED HC (MR) (C: 0-1-2) $29.99
MAR180068 USAGI YOJIMBO #3 (OF 7) THE HIDDEN $3.99
MAR180014 ETHER COPPER GOLEMS #1 (OF 5) $3.99
MAR180015 ETHER COPPER GOLEMS #1 (OF 5) VAR POPE CVR $3.99
JAN180154 I AM A HERO OMNIBUS TP VOL 06 (C: 1-1-2) $19.99
JAN180129 JAM NOVEL SC (NEW EDITION) (C: 0-1-2) $12.99
JAN180131 MOGWORLD NOVEL SC (NEW EDITION) (C: 0-1-2) $12.99
MAR180034 NEIL GAIMAN AMERICAN GODS MY AINSEL #3 MAIN CVR (C: 1-0-0) $3.99
MAR180035 NEIL GAIMAN AMERICAN GODS MY AINSEL #3 VAR DAVID MACK CVR (C $3.99
DEC170050 ORIGINALS ESSENTIAL ED HC (MR) (C: 0-1-2) $29.99
MAR180068 USAGI YOJIMBO #3 (OF 7) THE HIDDEN $3.99
Labels:
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DC Comics from Diamond Distributors for May 16, 2018
DC COMICS
MAR180246 AQUAMAN #36 $3.99
MAR180247 AQUAMAN #36 VAR ED $3.99
MAR188201 BATMAN #45 2ND PTG $2.99
MAR180256 BATMAN #47 $2.99
MAR180257 BATMAN #47 VAR ED $2.99
FEB180299 BATMAN GHOSTS TP $19.99
MAR180258 BATMAN SINS OF THE FATHER #4 (OF 6) $2.99
MAR180266 BATWOMAN #15 $3.99
MAR180267 BATWOMAN #15 VAR ED $3.99
MAR180269 BOMBSHELLS UNITED #18 $2.99
MAR180270 BRAVE & THE BOLD BATMAN & WONDER WOMAN #4 (OF 6) $3.99
MAR180319 CAVE CARSON HAS AN INTERSTELLAR EYE #3 (MR) $3.99
MAR180241 DAMAGE #5 $2.99
DEC170376 DARK DAYS THE ROAD TO METAL HC $29.99
MAR180359 DEATHBED #4 (OF 6) (MR) $3.99
MAR180328 FUTURE QUEST PRESENTS #10 $3.99
MAR180329 FUTURE QUEST PRESENTS #10 VAR ED $3.99
MAR180283 GREEN LANTERNS #47 $2.99
MAR180284 GREEN LANTERNS #47 VAR ED $2.99
MAR180237 HARLEY LOVES JOKER #2 (OF 2) $3.99
MAR180238 HARLEY LOVES JOKER #2 (OF 2) VAR ED $3.99
MAR180298 INJUSTICE 2 #26 $2.99
MAR180230 JUSTICE LEAGUE NO JUSTICE #2 (OF 4) $3.99
MAR180239 NEW CHALLENGERS #1 (OF 6) $2.99
FEB180287 NIGHTWING REBIRTH DLX COLL HC BOOK 02 $34.99
OCT170378 SUPERGIRL THE SILVER AGE OMNIBUS HC VOL 02 $99.99
FEB180289 SUPERMAN REBORN TP REBIRTH $16.99
MAR180227 SUPERMAN SPECIAL #1 $4.99
FEB180315 TITANS TOTAL CHAOS TP $29.99
FEB180262 WILD STORM #13 $3.99
FEB180263 WILD STORM #13 VAR ED $3.99
MAR180246 AQUAMAN #36 $3.99
MAR180247 AQUAMAN #36 VAR ED $3.99
MAR188201 BATMAN #45 2ND PTG $2.99
MAR180256 BATMAN #47 $2.99
MAR180257 BATMAN #47 VAR ED $2.99
FEB180299 BATMAN GHOSTS TP $19.99
MAR180258 BATMAN SINS OF THE FATHER #4 (OF 6) $2.99
MAR180266 BATWOMAN #15 $3.99
MAR180267 BATWOMAN #15 VAR ED $3.99
MAR180269 BOMBSHELLS UNITED #18 $2.99
MAR180270 BRAVE & THE BOLD BATMAN & WONDER WOMAN #4 (OF 6) $3.99
MAR180319 CAVE CARSON HAS AN INTERSTELLAR EYE #3 (MR) $3.99
MAR180241 DAMAGE #5 $2.99
DEC170376 DARK DAYS THE ROAD TO METAL HC $29.99
MAR180359 DEATHBED #4 (OF 6) (MR) $3.99
MAR180328 FUTURE QUEST PRESENTS #10 $3.99
MAR180329 FUTURE QUEST PRESENTS #10 VAR ED $3.99
MAR180283 GREEN LANTERNS #47 $2.99
MAR180284 GREEN LANTERNS #47 VAR ED $2.99
MAR180237 HARLEY LOVES JOKER #2 (OF 2) $3.99
MAR180238 HARLEY LOVES JOKER #2 (OF 2) VAR ED $3.99
MAR180298 INJUSTICE 2 #26 $2.99
MAR180230 JUSTICE LEAGUE NO JUSTICE #2 (OF 4) $3.99
MAR180239 NEW CHALLENGERS #1 (OF 6) $2.99
FEB180287 NIGHTWING REBIRTH DLX COLL HC BOOK 02 $34.99
OCT170378 SUPERGIRL THE SILVER AGE OMNIBUS HC VOL 02 $99.99
FEB180289 SUPERMAN REBORN TP REBIRTH $16.99
MAR180227 SUPERMAN SPECIAL #1 $4.99
FEB180315 TITANS TOTAL CHAOS TP $29.99
FEB180262 WILD STORM #13 $3.99
FEB180263 WILD STORM #13 VAR ED $3.99
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Dynamite Entertainment from Diamond Distributors for May 16, 2018
D. E.
MAR181432 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR A LEBOWITZ $3.99
MAR181433 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR B DESJARDINS $3.99
MAR181434 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR C MICHAEL ADAMS STARBUCK ACTION FIG $3.99
MAR181435 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR D ROBERTO CASTRO STARBUCK SPLIT $3.99
MAR181467 JAMES BOND THE BODY #5 (OF 6) CVR A CASALANGUIDA $3.99
MAR181532 TUROK TP VOL 01 BLOOD HUNT $19.99
MAR181432 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR A LEBOWITZ $3.99
MAR181433 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR B DESJARDINS $3.99
MAR181434 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR C MICHAEL ADAMS STARBUCK ACTION FIG $3.99
MAR181435 BSG VS BSG #5 (OF 6) CVR D ROBERTO CASTRO STARBUCK SPLIT $3.99
MAR181467 JAMES BOND THE BODY #5 (OF 6) CVR A CASALANGUIDA $3.99
MAR181532 TUROK TP VOL 01 BLOOD HUNT $19.99
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