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What comic books have you read today?11515

Beaten by boat oars Studley_Dudley private msg quote post Address this user
Galaxies has been better than the main Transformers series. It allows for the focus to be on one or a few characters doing different thinga than the usual Autobot vs Decepticon fluff. #24 of the main series just set up another mini called Escape. Go figure, so that's been added to the pull list.



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Captain Accident the420bandito private msg quote post Address this user
did anyone read this yet? Seems like there was some hype around it. Just curious if I should try issue #1


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Captain Accident the420bandito private msg quote post Address this user
Quote:
Originally Posted by Studley_Dudley







Undiscovered Country is a fun book. I enjoyed the 1st tpb. and of course Something is Killing the Children. Good stuff!
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CBCS Boomhauer HeinzDad private msg quote post Address this user
Quote:
Originally Posted by the420bandito
did anyone read this yet? Seems like there was some hype around it. Just curious if I should try issue #1


READ
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Masculinity takes a holiday. EbayMafia private msg quote post Address this user
I finished the Mark Waid LSH TPB Teenage Revolution as well as part 2 "Death of a Dream". Mark Waids writing style has a cleverness, wit and polish to it that seems to be a perfect fit for LSH. Stories about the entire Legion can become a little disjointed as the large group often separates for various missions. Waid holds it together really well. I've moved on to LSH TPB Legion Lost...it's definitely good, but in my opinion it's a big step down from the Waid work.
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If the viagra is working you should be well over a 9.8. xkonk private msg quote post Address this user
@the420bandito it has potential. I'll get one or two more to see where it goes. I had a similar feeling with We Only Find Them When They're Dead. After two issues I was on the fence because I was worried it was going to be one kind of story and not the one I wanted (trying not to spoil anything), but then the third issue paid off. So now I'll be reading at least a few more.
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Masculinity takes a holiday. EbayMafia private msg quote post Address this user
Looking for suggestions, of these books any suggestions on which to read and which to avoid? These were free from MCS with my Monday Holiday sale purchase. I think for the cost of shipping I could have got like 100 free items, but I didn't have all day to chose, so I settled on these 5.






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I live in RI and Rhode Islanders eat chili with beans. esaravo private msg quote post Address this user
@EbaySeller - If that's the 400+ page Howard the Duck collection - that's an awesome book!
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Beaten by boat oars Studley_Dudley private msg quote post Address this user
@EbaySeller I read Years of Future Past. It was a decent read. Creative tried to capture the feel of the original Days storyline and make it tie in with the Secret Wars Battleworld cash grab/storyline. I enjoyed DKIII but I also don't know if it is everyone's cup of tea.
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Collector 00slim private msg quote post Address this user
Quote:
Originally Posted by Studley_Dudley
@EbaySeller I read Years of Future Past. It was a decent read. Creative tried to capture the feel of the original Days storyline and make it tie in with the Secret Wars Battleworld cash grab/storyline. I enjoyed DKIII but I also don't know if it is everyone's cup of tea.


I thought DKIII was brilliant. I heard it got very mixed reviews. It was certainly dark, but very well done.
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If the viagra is working you should be well over a 9.8. xkonk private msg quote post Address this user
Not a comic but comic inspired: my wife and I both read a book called Hench. It's new, I assume, because it's a limited time rental from the library. I enjoyed reading it but I have more mixed feelings about the message.
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Please continue to ignore anything I post. southerncross private msg quote post Address this user



Read this last night. And at the same time was running the movie on my Kindle. Excellent way to end the day after buying a tree and decorating it and putting up the lights around the parents house. 👍
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Collector Jabberwookie private msg quote post Address this user



Just read Batman/ Catwoman and really enjoyed it.

Seems to be a mix of past/present/ future. The art is beautiful!

Highly recommend.

King in Black was good, too. I can’t wait to see how it ends.
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COLLECTOR dielinfinite private msg quote post Address this user
I’ve been slowly working my way through the Aliens vs Predator Omnibus (had to take a break to reglue the spine of the book) but I did finish the original Aliens vs Predator series.

It’s very fun and well-paced series. It’s very much about the humans caught in the middle more so than the titular monsters but it is very well-done.

The set up is pretty well-known by now but it makes perfect sense; the Predators seed planets with Alien eggs to hunt the drones. This time they seed a human-inhabited planet and are overwhelmed. There are no Colonial Marines nor does it devote a whole lot of time to the predators’ hunting craft but still manages to balance its three main factions fairly well.

You can see where the Aliens vs Predator movie drew a lot of its inspiration though it did make a lot of questionable changes (though not nearly as questionable as the ones the director would make for his Resident Evil films).

Definitely worth a read if you’re a fan of either franchise


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I live in RI and Rhode Islanders eat chili with beans. esaravo private msg quote post Address this user
A big thank you to my good CBCS friend Mark for hooking me up with a copy of We Live #1. It's a doom and gloom science fiction look at the future (with a potential ray of hope), but I enjoyed the story and the artwork. I liked it enough that I ventured out into the wild today and picked up issue #2. Not as good as the first issue (IMO), and a super quick read. Was it enough to make me seek out #3?





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CBCS Boomhauer HeinzDad private msg quote post Address this user
Ed, did you scan the QR code on the first page before you read them?
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I live in RI and Rhode Islanders eat chili with beans. esaravo private msg quote post Address this user
No, was I supposed to?
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I live in RI and Rhode Islanders eat chili with beans. esaravo private msg quote post Address this user
Another quick read, but this one is from 1987 (I should be doing schoolwork, but comics are too much fun).








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CBCS Boomhauer HeinzDad private msg quote post Address this user
I don’t think you are “supposed” to, but it provides a song that go with the page it’s on.
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Beaten by boat oars Studley_Dudley private msg quote post Address this user
@dielinfinite did the comic come first or the novels? I think these are the novelizations of the comic. Not sure.


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Masculinity takes a holiday. EbayMafia private msg quote post Address this user
All this Turtles talk got me to dig out my batch of Flaming Carrot comics. I had forgotten that the Mystery Men movie came from Flaming Carrot. I also had forgotten that the giant Carrot is just a mask that the insane hero chooses to wear. The subtle minimalist artwork has an amazing way of expressing emotions through body postures and slight facial expressions. The fun and clever nonsense inside the books is pretty well represented by the dialogue in these 2 covers:



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Suck it up, buttercup!! KatKomics private msg quote post Address this user
Quote:
Originally Posted by EbaySeller
All this Turtles talk got me to dig out my batch of Flaming Carrot comics. I had forgotten that the Mystery Men movie came from Flaming Carrot. I also had forgotten that the giant Carrot is just a mask that the insane hero chooses to wear. The subtle minimalist artwork has an amazing way of expressing emotions through body postures and slight facial expressions. The fun and clever nonsense inside the books is pretty well represented by the dialogue in these 2 covers:





YESSSS!! UTTT!! love me some Carrot!!! And double yes to Mystery Men.....much better than most of the DC offerings!!


Maybe my favorite statue?!

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COLLECTOR dielinfinite private msg quote post Address this user
Quote:
Originally Posted by Studley_Dudley
@dielinfinite did the comic come first or the novels? I think these are the novelizations of the comic. Not sure.




The comics came first by about 4 years. Prey is an adaptation of the original Aliens Vs Predator mini series. Hunter’s Planet is actually a (mostly) original novel (it has one chapter that adapts a previous comic)
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Masculinity takes a holiday. EbayMafia private msg quote post Address this user
@KatKomics It's the ability to express with such subtlety that keeps impressing me. On your statue notice that two eye slits and the forward shoulders tell you all that you need to know. On #19 just the way he's holding the gun, like a badass hero returning from a shootout. Or the look on the face of Mr. Death on #2. Brilliant work from a guy who claims he is not an artist.
I also remembered that these are not comics you consume in 5 minutes. Each issue can be a good 20-30 minute read.
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PEDIGREED... Again! martymann private msg quote post Address this user
Sorting through the boxes...had to stop and re-read this one.




mm
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The Fifth Golden Girl sborock private msg quote post Address this user
@KatKomics Love that FC statue!!!!
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Collector willieCPA4646 private msg quote post Address this user
Captain America #23 and #24 (Coates / Quinn). Almost caught up - I'll try to read issue #25 tonight.
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Collector Redmisty4me private msg quote post Address this user
Quote:
Originally Posted by michaelekrupp
Been spending some time with my February 1958 Harvey volume. Some really great issues that month! For example, Hot Stuff #3, which boasts an amazing Warren Kremer cover and also the debut of Stumbo the Giant.




There seems to be some debate among collectors about Stumbo’s first appearance. Some collectors will point to Hot Stuff #2, where a Stumbo-esque giant appeared as a foil for hot stuff. A similar Stumbo prototype also appeared as a villain in Casper previously. Obviously Harvey had been toying with the idea of a giant type character for a while, but there is zero doubt that the first appearance of Stumbo as the character we know and love was in Hot Stuff #3.

Virtually all of the Harvey enthusiasts that I know proclaim Stumbo to be among their absolute favorite characters, but he really didn’t seem to play too well among Harvey’s core audience at the time. He was eventually given his own title, but it lasted only 8 issues before being cancelled, in spite of Hot Stuff appearing in every issue. I guess the little tykes that formed Harvey’s base just couldn’t appreciate Kramer’s masterful artwork on this feature. Only a master of perspective drawing can pull off a series where characters are larger or smaller than their environment. Kremer’s work will never receive the respect that it deserves, largely because of which company he worked for. He may be the most underrated artist in comics. Kremer was Harvey’s Kirby in that his style became the “house style”, which other artists were encouraged to draw in.

And speaking of Kirby, he also freelanced for Harvey during this period, both in the romance titles and on some adventure covers including this masterpiece for Harvey Hits #6:




This issue features a great story about a criminal who is released from prison after forty years only to find that the Phantom is still out there waiting for him! I am surprised Harvey didn’t do more with the Phantom. He appeared semi-regularly in Harvey Hits, but that was it. Given their propensity to max out their other licensed properties, I wonder if they didn’t have a different deal with the license for the Phantom and were limited in how often they could publish him.

Harvey comics are so underrated! Especially that late ‘50s period where they really began to hit their stride.


Genius.

I keep wondering if Harveys have missed the window of larger appreciation as a company that pretty much ceased operation on a noticeable scale a couple of generations ago.

Good to know they're still appreciated, even if the audience for Kremer isn't on the scale of the Kirby Legions.
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Collector doog private msg quote post Address this user
Read this one, the cover story has an incredible twist about a “guy” making a robot mate.




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Collector Fads89 private msg quote post Address this user
I just reread Kingdom Come (another Mark Waid/Alex Ross masterpiece)!
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