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Comics for 14 December 2011

27 SECOND SET #4 (OF 4)
68 JUNGLE JIM ONE SHOT
7 WARRIORS #2 (OF 3) (MR)

ABSOLUTE PROMETHEA HC VOL 03
AIRBOY PRESENTS AIR VIXENS #1
ALL NEW BATMAN THE BRAVE AND THE BOLD #14
AMERICAN VAMPIRE #21 (MR)
ARCHIE CYBER ADVENTURES TP
ARKHAM CITY STAFF T/S
ATOMIC ROBO GHOST OF STATION X #4 (OF 6)
AVENGERS 1959 #4 (OF 5)
AVENGERS ACADEMY #23
AVENGERS X-SANCTION #1 (OF 4)

BALTIMORE CURSE BELLS #5
BATGIRL #4
BATMAN AND ROBIN #4
BATMAN ARKHAM CITY SER 1
BATTLE SCARS #2 (OF 6)
BATWOMAN #4
BLACK PANTHER MOST DANGEROUS MAN ALIVE #526
BLUE ESTATE #8 (MR)
BONNIE LASS #4 (OF 4)
BTVS SEASON 9 FREEFALL #4

CARNAGE USA #1 (OF 5)
CLIVE BARKER OMNIBUS TP

DANGER GIRL ARMY OF DARKNESS #4
DAOMU #8 (MR)
DARK TOWER GUNSLINGER WAY STATION #1 (OF 5)
DC COMICS PRESENTS BATMAN THE SECRET CITY #1
DC UNIVERSE ONLINE LEGENDS #19
DEADPOOL MAX TP NUTJOB (MR)
DEATHSTROKE #4
DEMON KNIGHTS #4
DOCTOR WHO ONGOING VOL 2 #12

ESSENTIAL RAWHIDE KID TP VOL 01
EVERLAST HC

FABLES TP VOL 16 SUPER TEAM (MR)
FANTASTIC FOUR DIGI SPIDER BLK T/S
FARSCAPE TP VOL 06 COMPULSIONS
FEAR ITSELF FEARLESS #1 (OF 12) 2ND PTG
FLASH GORDON COMIC BOOK ARCHIVES HC VOL 05
FRANKENSTEIN AGENT OF SHADE #4

GARTH ENNIS COMPLETE BATTLEFIELDS TP V1 (MR)
GEARHEARTS STEAMPUNK GLAMOR REVUE #1
GHOST RIDER #7
GODZILLA LEGENDS #2 (OF 5)
GREEN HORNET TP VOL 03 IDOLS
GREEN HORNET YEAR ONE TP V2 BIGGEST OF ALL GAM
GREEN LANTERN #4
GREEN LANTERN SER 5 FIGURES
GRIFTER #4
GRIMM FAIRY TALES THE LIBRARY #3

HAWKEN #2 (OF 6)
HITMAN TP VOL 05 TOMMYS HEROES (RES)

IRON MAN 2.0 #11

JINGLE BELLE GIFT WRAPPED SPECIAL ONE SHOT
JOHN CARTER OF MARS WORLD OF MARS #3 (OF 5)
JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #632

KIRBY GENESIS SILVER STAR #2
KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE #181
KULL THE CAT & THE SKULL #3 (OF 4)

LEGION LOST #4
LOCKE & KEY CLOCKWORKS #3 (OF 6)

MAGDALENA #10
MAGNETO NOT A HERO #2 (OF 4)
MARVEL HOLIDAY SPECIAL 2011
MEMOIR #5 (OF 6)
MISTER TERRIFIC #4
MMW NICK FURY AGENT OF SHIELD HC V3
MOUSE GUARD BLACK AXE #3 (OF 6)
MY GREATEST ADVENTURE #3 (OF 6)

NEW AVENGERS #19
NIGHTLY NEWS ANNIVERSARY ED HC

OMEGA PARADOX #1
OPERATION BROKEN WINGS 1936 #2 (OF 3) (MR)
ORCHID #3

PC CAST HOUSE OF NIGHT #2 (OF 5)
PIGS #4 (MR)

RAY #1 (OF 4)
RED SONJA #60
RESURRECTION MAN #4
ROCKETEER ADVENTURES HC V1 DM EX ED
ROGER LANGRIDGES SNARKED #3

SAME DIFFERENCE SPECIAL ED HC
SAMURAIS BLOOD #6 (OF 6)
SECRET HISTORY BOOK 17 (MR)
SECRET WARRIORS TP VOL 05 NIGHT
SECRET WARS 2 TP
SECRET WARS TP NEW PTG
SEVERED #5 (OF 7) (MR)
SHADE #3 (OF 12)
SHIELD #4 (OF 6)
SHOWCASE PRESENTS BATMAN TP VOL 05
SHOWCASE PRESENTS WONDER WOMAN TP VOL 04
SNAKE EYES ONGOING (IDW) #8
SPIDER-MAN BY MARK MILLAR ULT. COLLECTION TP
SPIDER-MAN THROUGH DECADES TP
SPONGEBOB COMICS #6
STAND NIGHT HAS COME #5 (OF 6)
STAR TREK LEGION OF SUPERHEROES #3 (OF 6)
STAR WARS AGENT O/T EMPIRE IRON ECLIPSE #1 (OF 5)
STAR WARS EPISODE I ADVENTURES TP
STAR WARS EPISODE I THE PHANTOM MENACE TP
STITCHED #2 (MR)
SUICIDE SQUAD #4
SUPER DINOSAUR DLX COLORING BOOK
SUPERBOY #4

TALES OF THE BATMAN DON NEWTON HC VOL 01
THE OCCULTIST #2 (OF 3)
THE STRAIN #1 (OF 11)
THEATER #3
TUROK SON OF STONE AZTLAN TP VOL 01

ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN #4
UNCANNY X-FORCE #18
UNWRITTEN #32 (MR)

VERONICA #210
VERTIGO FIRST BLOOD #1 (MR)

WALKING DEAD #92 (MR)
WALKING DEAD TP VOL 15 (MR)
WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #50 (MR)
WAR GODDESS #4 (MR)
WAREHOUSE 13 #3
WARLORD OF MARS #13
WHITE LANTERN 1/4 SCALE POWER BATTERY & RING
WITCH DOCTOR TP VOL 01
WITCHBLADE #150
WOLVERINE AND X-MEN #1 2ND PTG
WOLVERINE BEST THERE IS #12

ZORRO RIDES AGAIN #6 (OF 12)

This list is a copy of the list posted at memphiscomics.com. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.

Read more…

12134027688?profile=originalClose your eyes---well, no, don’t close your eyes, because then you won’t be able to read this---but imagine that it’s almost exactly forty-six years ago.  It’s mid-January of 1966 and you’re a contestant on NBC’s quiz show, Jeopardy!

 

After you and your fellow players are introduced by Don Pardo and greeted by the genial Art Fleming, the game gets down to business.  You’re doing O.K., too.  You bombed out in the dreaded “Opera” category, but you made it back with “Famous Landmarks” and “Potent Potables”.  When it’s your turn to select the next clue, you look at the categories and decide, “’Fictional Journalists’ for $30.”

 

“And the answer is . . . ,” says Art.

 

12134131064?profile=original 

 

 Smiling, you instantly ring in.  Confidently, you respond, “Who is Perry White?”  Of course.

 

Now, the clue-writers on Jeopardy! were really good and did their homework, and you’re stunned when that annoying “double buzz” signals that you’re wrong.  Art says, “Oh, sorry,” and your winnings drop by $30.  Neither of the other two contestants takes a shot at it, and while you’re standing there, open mouthed, Fleming states the correct response.

 

“Who is Van Benson?”

 

 

 

 

Bet you forgot about him, didn’t you?

 

For those of you who missed the Silver Age, you’re probably sitting there echoing Art Fleming, only with a different inflexion---“Who is Van Benson?”  Well, aren’t you glad that’s what I’m here to tell you.

 

12134131471?profile=originalIt all began with Superman’s Girl Friend, Lois Lane # 62 (Jan., 1966).  Traditionally, comics are post-dated by a couple of months; that issue actually hit the stands in the second week of November, 1965.  At first glance, the only thing unusual about Lois Lane # 62 was that, instead of the usual three unrelated stories of Lois Lane, the readers were given one long tale, advertised on the cover as “a 3-part novel, complete in this issue!”

 

The story is titled “Lois Lane’s Anti-Superman Campaign”, and the first indication of what’s to come occurs on page one, when Perry White collapses at his desk from overwork.  At the hospital, his doctor orders him to take a month’s vacation.  During his absence, Perry White appoints Clark Kent to serve as acting editor of the Daily Planet.

 

It’s actually a nice moment.  Kent didn’t wrangle for the job, nor did he try to avoid it, which is what he usually does in similar circumstances, for reasons related to his Superman identity.   This time around, that had nothing to do with it.  White put Kent in the big chair because, while Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen spent the day at the hospital fretting over Perry’s condition, Clark went back to the office and wrote up the story about the editor’s collapse.  It’s a rare Silver-Age occasion to see Clark Kent legitimately acting as a newsman.

 

Not much is made of Clark’s promotion, however, except for an early scene of Lois sucking up to the new boss by sending him a congratulatory wreath and purchasing a new nameplate for his desk.  The chief purpose is to get Perry White off-stage for most of the story.

 

The plot quickly shifts to its main thread.  One of the state’s U.S. senatorial seats is up in the current election, and the incumbent, Barton Schlumm, has a reputation as a do-nothing, “thumb-twiddling loafer”. Clark assigns Lois to cover a press conference held by Schlumm’s opposing party, which she writes off as a boring assignment---until the party spokesman announces that it has accepted Superman as a candidate for the Senate seat.  Lois pooh-poohs it as a publicity stunt, and then chokes on it when the Man of Steel swoops in and makes a rousing speech for his candidacy.

 

12134131897?profile=originalIf Lois had been a veteran reader of DC mags, she would have immediately suspected that there was probably a sneaky-albeit-noble reason behind Superman running for office.  But since she wasn’t, the pretty newshen is indignant at the Man of Steel using his super-hero image to win the senator’s seat.  And she becomes outraged when, over the next few days, he blatantly uses every super-feat as a campaign opportunity.  In fact, she’s so put out that she decides to toss her hat into the ring, as well.

 

Lois campaigns hard, but when you’re running against the most popular hero in the world, the result is pretty much what you’d guess.  In the primary election for the party nomination, Lois gets only one vote.  The rest go to Superman.  So overwhelming is the Action Ace’s victory that even his eventual opponent, Senator Schlumm, withdraws from the race.

 

 

 

Just as Lois’ dreams of “Miss Lane Goes to Washington” go poof, who should turn up but that mischievous fifth-dimensional imp, Mr. Mxyzptlk.  Seeing it as a great way to get Supie’s goat, Mr. M offers to be Lois’ campaign manager.  She agrees, and Mxy goes to work, using his magic to increase Lois’ favour with the public.  As the election draws near, she’s a strong write-in candidate.  In fact, she’s running dead even with Superman in the polls.

 

Don’t bother wondering who wins, though.  On the day of the election, the unthinkable happens.  (Unthinkable, mainly because it would have been discovered long before this in real-world politics.)  Both Superman and Lois are disqualified from running by Constitutional requirements.  The Man of Steel is out because of residency issues.  (The cited technicality is shaky and wouldn’t hold up, but, hey, go with it; you didn’t really think Superman was going to be a senator.)  And Lois is under the age of thirty, the minimum age required for U.S. senators.

 

12134133482?profile=originalThat’s just fine with the Man of Steel.  His candidacy was only a ploy to keep Mxyzptlk preöccupied until he could figure out a way to send the imp back to the fifth dimension.  As it turns out, Lois takes care of that by tricking him into saying “Kltpzyxm” from a coded message.

 

Since both candidates in the race are ineligible to win, the state governor declares the election invalid.  In the meantime, he will appoint someone to fill the vacant seat interim, until a special election can be held.  The governor’s choice---Perry White, well rested and back from his vacation!

 

Perry has some appointing to do of his own.  At the office farewell party, he introduces Lois, Jimmy, Clark, and the rest of the staff to Van Benson, the new acting editor of the Daily Planet.  Again, Lois is a little peeved that she doesn’t get the job, but she can’t argue with Benson’s credentials---he’s the former head of a national news service and a Pulitzer Prize winner, to boot.  The tale ends with her wondering how her life will change with Benson running things.

 

 

 

Now, DC fans of the day could be forgiven for presuming that Benson’s time with the Planet wouldn’t last beyond the next issue of Lois Lane, and then he’d be gone as quickly as he came.  The editor of the Superman family of magazines, Mort Weisinger, typically ensured that the details of the Superman mythos were consistent.  If something was established in the Man of Steel’s life within the pages of his own comic, then it was the same in Action Comics or World’s Finest Comics.

 

But Lois Lane had always been something of a bastard child.  It was a second-tier title in Weisinger’s stable, and outside of sharing the some of the same cast with the headliners, very little that took place in Lois’s magazine carried over into the others.  Even Jimmy Olsen, another second-stringer, was more tied into the Superman mainstream, thanks to Jimmy’s involvement with the Legion of Super-Heroes and Robin, the Boy Wonder.  Lois, however, seemed to exist in a private world inside her own title.

 

But Mort must have been paying particular attention to Lois Lane # 62.

 

 

 

 

12134135083?profile=originalThe Lois Lane title did not publish in December, so the next issue---# 63 (Feb., 1966)---went on sale in the first week of January, 1966.  Though not advertised on the cover this time, the story within, “The Satanic Schemes of S.K.U.L.”, was also a “3-part novel”, and it took up right where the previous issue left off.

 

At newly appointed Senator White’s farewell party, Van Benson makes the rounds, glad-handing the Planet employees.  On the surface, he appears to be quite a bit different than Perry.  Benson is urbane, personable, and handsome (although he apparently ducked into the men’s room in between issues to rub a little Grecian Formula into his hair).  Where Perry has a bit of a middle-age spread, the youthful Benson is fit and trim, and he prefers a pipe to White’s smelly stogies.  Lois, in particular, is taken with him. 

 

“It might be fun,” she thinks, “taking orders from a dream-boat like that!”

 

After Superman arrives and flies Perry to Washington, Benson shows that he has one trait very much in common with his predecessor.  The “dream-boat” turns into Simon Legree’s meaner brother.  He shuts down the party and starts cracking the whip while the window curtains are still flapping from Superman’s slipstream.

 

Throughout the day, Benson finds fault with virtually everything that crosses his desk, raising standards and beating excellence over his reporters' heads.  Lois and Jimmy Olsen begin to miss their old slave-driver, Perry White.  Some of the other staffers are probably sticking pins in their Van Benson voodoo dolls.

 

12134135698?profile=originalQuitting time finally arrives, and because this was back in the “good old days” of American business, when the boss could hit on a female employee without fear of being slapped with a sexual harassment suit, Benson asks Lois Lane out to dinner.  And Lois, who despite claiming to be in love with Superman, always seemed to tilt her cap toward any good-looking guy who came her way, says “Sure!”

 

Out on the town, we learn a little more about Van Benson.  He squires Lois to the Kitten Club, Earth-One’s version of the Playboy Club, and she discovers that Van is on a smooch-and-tickle basis with every waitress and hat-check girl in the place.

 

Nevertheless, her jealousy fades away when Benson turns on the charm.  Despite her being smitten, though, Lois’s reporter instincts aren’t completely shut down.  A chance occurrence triggers a passing suspicion in her mind that Van Benson may not be what he seems to be.

 

Hold that thought for a moment.

 

 

 

This is where the intricacies of publishing several monthly books, under different writers, sometimes make a timeline a tricky thing.  Mort Weisinger knew that introducing Van Benson as the new editor of the Daily Planet was too significant a change to not be addressed in his other Superman titles.  That, and he probably didn’t want to deal with a bunch of letters from pesky fans wanting to know why Perry White was still editing the paper in this month’s issue of Superman.

 

12134136889?profile=originalThat meant that Benson would have to show up in his other titles.  The problem was later developments, near the end of the story in Lois Lane # 63, would put too much of a twist on Benson’s rôle as the Planet editor.  For the readers caught up in such things, though, there was a way to square it.

 

Following Lois’ night out at the Kitten Club, several days, perhaps as much as a week, elapse before the big climax at the end of the issue.  Presumably, it is during this time that the other stories in which Van Benson appeared took place.  Mort probably didn’t plan it that way, but it’s the only way it fits.

 

Benson’s first appearance outside of Lois Lane occurred in Jimmy Olsen # 91 (Mar., 1966), on sale the second week of January, 1966.  In “The Dragon Delinquent”, Jimmy infiltrates a teen-age biker gang.  In the opening pages,  Benson has even less tolerance for the cub reporter’s antics than Perry White did and refuses to let him handle anything more significant than covering azalea festivals and society weddings.  Jimmy determines to cover the biker-gang story on his own time, and when he fakes an injury to his hand so he can get away from the office, Benson replies, “Bah!  You’re useless around here anyway, Olsen!  Take a week’s sick leave.  You won’t be missed!”

 

Naturally, he winds up eating those words, after Jimmy breaks up the biker gang and shuts down a foreign spy ring as a bonus.

 

In the last week of January, 1966, the pipe-smoking editor crossed over to Action Comics # 335 (Mar., 1966) for a two-panel cameo in which he rounds up Clark Kent and Lois and Jimmy at the request of Senator White, so they can answer a call from the President of the United States.

 

It wasn’t much, just those two appearances, but it was enough make Van Benson a legitimate, if minor, character in the Superman universe, rather than just being confined to the vacuum of the Lois Lane title.

 

12134138097?profile=original 

 

  

Back to Lois Lane # 63 . . . .

 

As her history of trying to ferret out Superman’s secret identity had proven, Lois Lane never let affection stand in the way of her nosiness.  Despite her infatuation with her new boss, Lois’ flicker of suspicion takes flame.  The next day at work, she snoops around Benson’s office and finds evidence that the newsman is somehow connected to a criminal organisation calling itself S.K.U.L.

 

Even though Benson continues to be a really swell guy to her and seems to be on the ball as an editor, Lois keeps digging.  While Benson is attending a meeting of the Editors’ Association, she breaks into his upscale apartment.  There, she finds and plays a hidden video recording revealing a meeting of the S.K.U.L. inner circle.  She discovers the outfit’s headquarters is on a secret floor above the Kitten Club when the recording shows Benson donning a hooded robe and attending the meeting.

 

And she learns what S.K.U.L. stands for---the Superman Killers’ Underground League.  Its goal is to assassinate Superman and all of his closest friends.

 

 

 

12134139261?profile=originalShowing a rare moment of common sense, Lois decides to tell Superman what she has learnt and let him deal with it.  However, when she asks Clark Kent to get in touch with the Man of Steel for her, he tells her that Superman is away on a space mission.  (Yes, I know---why would Clark tell her that Superman is away when he is, secretly, Superman?  It’s actually a big clue to what’s going on, but it was so played down that many readers probably missed it.)

 

Now, Lois could have sought out Supergirl, or Batman, or told the police or the F.B.I. what was going on, but Lois, being Lois, decides to handle the problem herself.  With a clever stratagem, the plucky girl inserts herself into the next S.K.U. L. meeting, posing as one of its hooded members.  She becomes convinced that Van Benson is actually the head of the evil organisation.

 

Once safely away, Lois turns to Lana Lang for help.  She tells the whole story to her red-headed rival, including her suspicion that the acting editor of the Daily Planet moonlights as an arch criminal.  They decide to go public with the information, hoping that, somehow, somewhere, Superman will hear about it.

 

Before they can do so, however, Superman appears, and Lois blurts out to him everything she knows.  The Man of Steel angrily berates the gals, telling them how they nearly fouled up things up royally.  He does that just before revealing himself to be Van Benson, in disguise.

 

Dum de dum dum!

 

Surprise number two:  before Lois’ and Lana’s sphincters pucker so tight that they cut off the blood flow to their brains, Benson reveals that he is secretly working for the F.B.I., in an undercover effort to bring down the S.K.U.L. organisation.  He tells them that Lois’ snooping has put her in too deep, and the only way out is for her to help him destroy S.K.U.L.

 

The issue ends with Lois and Lana agreeing to help, but the readers are kept wondering if Van Benson is really a newsman or an F.B.I. agent---or a killer!

 

 

 

 

You see what I mean, now, about Benson’s appearances in Jimmy Olsen and Action Comics having to take place before the end of Lois Lane # 63.

 

12134139879?profile=originalAfter all of that build-up, though, the conclusion is disappointingly ænemic, coming in at a mere eight pages stuck in the back of Lois Lane # 64 (Apr., 1966), which showed up on the spinner racks in the second week of February, 1966.  “The Prisoner of S.K.U.L.” was clearly rushed, to get it out of the way of the two-part "Lexo and Lola" Imaginary Story (which was actually quite good, as far as those kinds of tales go).

 

Benson explains to Lois Lane and Lana Lang that two key pieces of information are needed before S.K.U.L. can be destroyed.  While the undercover newsman has posed as the chief lieutenant in the criminal cabal, he has yet to identify the hidden mastermind behind the organisation.  It’s also urgent that they learn the nature of “Weapon X”, the device with which it intends to accomplish its goal of murdering Superman.

 

When Lois asks why the Man of Steel himself isn’t handling the matter, Benson explains, “Because both Superman and the F.B.I. are using the S.K.U.L. threat as a pilot-program for developing techniques whereby F.B.I. men will be able to carry on without Superman’s aid in the event Superman is ever destroyed!”

 

The whole “Superman is away on a space mission” bit was a cover story designed to allay any S.K.U.L. fears of being detected by the Man of Steel and going to ground before Benson could learn the evil group’s secrets.

 

12134141296?profile=originalBenson reveals the time and place of the next S.K.U.L. meeting and instructs Lois to again attend as one of the members.  At the meeting, Benson, once more posing as the S.K.U.L. lieutenant, assigns Lois to assassinate Superman when he appears a couple of days later at a Metropolis Women’s Charity League function.  Afterward, Benson tells Lois when and where she’ll receive the mysterious Weapon X.  She’s to show up at the charity event and use the device on Superman.  And don't worry about it harming the Man of Steel, says Van.  He's got everything under control.

 

Weapon X is handed off to Lois without a hitch, and when Superman appears on stage at the charity function, the gal reporter zaps him with it.  To her horror, the weapon overcomes the Man of Steel and weakens him to the point that he’s easily defeated by concealed S.K.U.L. agents.  As the hooded thugs carry the unconscious hero away to be executed, the real mastermind of S.K.U.L. emerges and gloats over Superman’s impending death.

 

Van Benson appears, taking a place at the mastermind’s side, and a grief-stricken Lois concludes that the double-crossing editor had pretended to be a good guy in order to dupe her into setting Superman up for murder.

 

She’s still kicking herself from guilt when “Benson” reveals himself to be Superman in disguise and captures the villain.  The Man of Steel explains that he had been keeping an eye on Lois all along, and once she had possession of Weapon X, he had used his heat vision to disable it.  He had only pretended to be overcome by it when Lois used it on him.

 

12134143090?profile=originalIt was all part of Benson’s plan to smoke out S.K.U.L.’s big boss.

 

 

 

Later, back in Benson’s office, he and Lois are tying up some loose ends when Perry White walks through the door.  Congress has just recessed, the grizzled newsman explains, so, he’s here to take back his old job.  Just like that, ace pipe-smoker Van Benson's tenure as editor of the Daily Planet was over.

 

“I hope he’ll return here, someday,” wishes Lois.  But he never did.  There hasn’t been so much as a mention of his name in any DC story in the forty-five years since.

 

But I understand that if you drop by the Metropolis Kitten Club, you’ll find a distinguished-looking old man sitting at a corner table.  He’ll be puffing on his pipe, pinching cigarette girls on the derrière, and regaling the patrons with stories about a screwball dame who used to work for him and how she had this whacky idea that Clark Kent was Superman.

Read more…

Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

IDW Publishing pulled off a storytelling coup in early 2011, when they involved a variety of unrelated, licensed books with a common threat (vampires). That worked so well, they’re going to do it again in January 2012 – and they’re upping the ante.

 

12134125252?profile=original“Infestation,” which began in January 2011 and ran for four months, told stories of vampires battling Transformers, infecting the Star Trek universe, getting shot by G.I. Joe and baffling Ghostbusters. The amazing thing about this crossover is that all of these characters are licensed to IDW by different companies, constituting a logistical and legal nightmare. It’s like the characters from Glee showing up in CSI wearing Tron T-Shirts and dating people from Jersey Shore.

 

And yet, it worked so well, IDW is doing it again. This sequel – “Infestation 2,” naturally – springs from the first, in that the way IDW’s home-grown CVO (Covert Vampiric Operations) dealt with the bloodsucking menace opened the door to something worse. And since IDW now has the license for H.P. Lovecraft concepts, stories and characters, that means Cthulhu and the other Old Ones are coming for a visit.

 

For those not up on their Lovecraftian lore, the Old Ones are ancient, evil gods who were driven off somehow in pre-history, but are really eager for a return engagement. Among Lovecraft’s stories about the Old Ones is The Dunwich Horror, which IDW is currently adapting as a four-issue miniseries. IDW also plans a Lovecraft Library; Volume One, Horror out of Arkham is due out this month and includes eight Lovecraft prose stories set in the fictional Arkham, Mass.

 

All of which means trouble for other characters published by IDW, especially some new players who didn’t make the cut in the first Infestation. G.I. Joe is back for another round, but new franchises include Dungeons & Dragons, 30 Days of Night and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The Transformers are back, too, but instead of the modern robots most readers know, Infestation 2: Transformers #1-2 will feature the “Hearts of Steel” versions from the 2006 miniseries of the same name, in which humanity first encountered the Transformers in the 19th century.

 

12134125475?profile=original“You’ll see a lot of fun historical characters, people you never expected to see interacting with Transformers,” said editor Bobby Curnow in a teleconference. “If you’ve ever wanted to see a steampunk version of Optimus Prime fight a giant monster, this is the place.”

 

Other surprises include a one-shot starring Batboy from Weekly World News and a grey alien from Groom Lake, two miniseries written by IDW Publisher Chris Ryall, who also attended the teleconference. Those two characters will be played for laughs in a Feb. 29 one-shot called Infestation Team-Up.

 

Another surprise is a planned appearance by J. Scott Campbell’s Danger Girl, but Ryall and Curnow declined to cite specifics. They did, however, mention a new miniseries starring everybody’s favorite zaftig spy-gals, the four-issue Danger Girl: Revolver coming in January by Andy Hartnell and Chris Madden.

 

Speaking of creators, the two-issue “Infestation 2” miniseries that bookends the event and an Infestation: 30 Days of Night one-shot are written by Duane  Swierczynski, best known for crime fiction and a stint on Marvel’s X-Men. Another top-drawer writer, Chuck Dixon, is writing the two-issue Transformers series. IDW veterans Paul Crilley, Tristan Jones and Mike Raicht pen the Dungeon & Dragons, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and G.I. Joe two-parters, respectively.

 

As for artists, expect to see Guido Guidi (Transformers: Evolutions), Valentine De Landro (X-Factor), David Messina (Star Trek: Countdown), Alex Robinson (Box Office Poison), Stuart Sayger (Shiver in the Dark) and Mark Torres (Zombies vs. Robots).

 

12134125874?profile=originalAnd just for fun, the two TMNT covers combine to form a single image, and each issue will have temporary tattoos representing their respective franchises. “We brought all of our toys out of the toy chest,” Curnow said.

 

Both Curnow and Ryall were quick to point out that one needn’t buy every book to understand the story. Nor are readers required to have read “Infestation” to understand “Infestation 2.”

 

But if you do happen to want to read “Infestation” first, IDW has made that easier with a hardback collecting the entire first event, coming out in January ($34.99). While not necessary to understand the sequel, Curnow said, “if you have been following both events, you’ll get a nice through line.”

 

After all this, could there be an even bigger Infestation down the road? Hard to believe, but Ryall noted that “these things tend to happen in threes.”

 

Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.

 

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Comics for 7 December 2011

ACTION COMICS #4
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #675
ANIMAL MAN #4
AVENGERS WEST COAST AVENGERS HC SINS PAST
AVENGING SPIDER-MAN #2

BAD DOINGS BIG IDEAS A BILL WILLINGHAM DLX HC
BATMAN NO MANS LAND TP VOL 01 NEW EDITION
BATWING #4
BETRAYAL O/T PLANET O/T APES #2 (OF 4)
BLACKEST NIGHT POWER RING SPECTRUM SET
BLOOD RED DRAGON #2
BOYS #61 (MR)
BREED III #7 (OF 7) (MR)
BRIGHTEST DAY TP VOL 01

CAPTAIN AMERICA CORPS TP
CAPTAIN AMERICA ESTRELLA NAVY T/S
CAPTAIN AMERICA MAN OUT OF TIME TP
CHEW #22
CHEW OMNIVORE ED HC VOL 02 (MR)
CLASSIC MARVEL CHARACTERS #3 IRON MAN
COLD WAR #3
CRIMINAL TP VOL 06 LAST OF INNOCENT (MR)
CROSSED PSYCHOPATH #6 (OF 7) (RES) (MR)

DAMAGED #4 (OF 6) (MR)
DC COMICS PRESENTS CAPTAIN ATOM #1
DEADPOOL #47
DEADPOOLMAX X-MAS SPECIAL #1 (MR)
DEFENDERS #1
DETECTIVE COMICS #4
DIABOLIQUE #7

ELRIC THE BALANCE LOST #6
ELRIC THE BALANCE LOST TP VOL 01

FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND #259
FEAR ITSELF FEARLESS #4 (OF 12)
FLY TP VOL 01 (MR)

GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #7 (MR)
GFT DREAM EATER SAGA TP VOL 01
GFT MYTHS & LEGENDS #10
GFT SINBAD SPECIAL
GI JOE COBRA ONGOING TP VOL 01 COBRA CIVIL WAR
GI JOE VOL 2 ONGOING #8
GLAMOURPUSS #22
GREEN ARROW #4
GRIMM FAIRY TALES #66
GUTTERS ABSOLUTE COMPLETE OMNIBUS VOL 01

HACK SLASH #10
HACK SLASH ANNUAL 2011
HAWK AND DOVE #4
HEART #2 (OF 4) (MR)
HELLBLAZER ANNUAL #1 (MR)
HELLRAISER #8 (MR)
HELLRAISER MASTERPIECES #3 (MR)
HP LOVECRAFT THE DUNWICH HORROR #3 (OF 4)
HULK #45
HUNTRESS #3 (OF 6)

INDIE COMICS MAGAZINE #4 (MR)
IRON FIRST FIST OF IRON KELLY GREEN T/S
IRREDEEMABLE #32
IZOMBIE #20 (MR)

JACK KIRBYS FOURTH WORLD OMNIBUS TP VOL 01
JURASSIC PARK DANGEROUS GAMES #4 (OF 5)
JUSTICE LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL #4

LADY DEATH (ONGOING) #12 (MR)
LAST OF THE GREATS #3
LOONEY TUNES #204

MEGA MAN #8
MEN OF WAR #4
MOON KNIGHT #8
MORIARTY #7

OMAC #4

PENGUIN PAIN AND PREJUDICE #3 (OF 5)
PHANTOM COMP SERIES HC VOL 01 GOLD KEY YEARS
PRINCELESS #2
PUNISHER #6

RED LANTERNS #4
REED GUNTHER #6
RINSE #4

SANDMAN TP VOL 07 BRIEF LIVES NEW ED (MR)
SCOOBY DOO WHERE ARE YOU #16
SONIC THE HEDGEHOG SELECT TP VOL 04 ZONE WARS
SPAWN #214
SPECTRUM TP VOL 18
STAN LEE UNIVERSE SC
STAR TREK CLASSICS TP TNG GORN CRISIS
STATIC SHOCK #4
STORMWATCH #4
STRANGE TALENT OF LUTHER STRODE #3 (OF 6) (MR)
SUPERBOY SMALLVILLE ATTACKS TP
SUPERMAN GROUNDED HC VOL 02
SUPERMAN SECRET ORIGIN TP
SUPERNATURAL #3 (OF 6)
SW BOBA FETT BUST BANK
SWAMP THING #2 2ND PTG
SWAMP THING #4
SWEET TOOTH #28 (MR)

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES MICRO SERIES #1 R
THE SPIDER IRON MAN WAR GN (RES)
THOR DEVIANTS SAGA #2 (OF 5)
THOUGHT BUBBLE ANTHOLOGY #1
TOTAL RECALL #4
TRANSFORMERS ONGOING #31
TRUE BLOOD FRENCH QUARTER #4 (OF 6)

ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN MUST HAVE #1
ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN MUST HAVE #1

VALEN OUTCAST #1
VAMPIRELLA ANNUAL #1
VENOM #10
VILLAINS FOR HIRE #1 (OF 4)
VOLTRON #1

WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #49 (MR)

X-23 #18
X-CLUB #1 (OF 5)
X-FACTOR #228
X-MEN #22 XREGB
X-MEN WITH GREAT POWER TP
X-STATIX OMNIBUS HC

This list is a copy of the list posted at memphiscomics.com. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.

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Comics for 30 November 2011

ANDIE AND THE ALIEN GN
ANGEL & FAITH #4 REBEKAH ISSACS VAR CVR
ANGEL & FAITH #4 STEVE MORRIS CVR
ANGEL THE END HC
ARCHIE #627 (ARCHIE MEETS KISS PT 1)
ARCHIE #627 (ARCHIE MEETS KISS PT 1) VAR CVR
ARON WARNER PARIAH #4 (OF 4)
AVENGELYNE #5 CVR A LIEFELD
AVENGELYNE #5 CVR B GIENI
AVENGELYNE #5 CVR C STINSMAN
AVENGERS ORIGINS THOR #1

BATMAN ODYSSEY VOL 2 #2 (OF 7)
BATMAN ODYSSEY VOL 2 #2 (OF 7) VAR ED
BEAVIS AND BUTTHEAD CORNHOLIO WACKY WOBBLER
BETTY & VERONICA DOUBLE DIGEST #196
BETTY #195
BLUE DRAGON GN
BOMB QUEEN VII #1 (OF 4) (MR)
BPRD BEING HUMAN TP

CAPTAIN AMERICA MAN OUT OF TIME TP
CARTOON NETWORK ACTION PACK #65
CAVEWOMAN COVER GALLERY #4 SP ED NUDE (A)
CHARMED #16
CHIP PKT MANGA TP VOL 01
COBRA ONGOING #7

DAREDEVIL #6
DARKNESS #95 (MR)
DC COMICS PRESENTS BATMAN DONT BLINK #1
DC COMICS PRESENTS SUPERMAN SECRET IDENTITY #2
DC UNIVERSE ONLINE LEGENDS #18
DEADPOOL BUST BANK
DEADPOOL CORPS TP VOL 02 YOU SAY REVOLUTION
DEADPOOL MAX INVOLUNTARY ARMAGEDDON PREM HC (MR)
DECISION 2012 SARAH PALIN #1
DEFOE QUEEN O/T ZOMBIES GN
DOC BIZARRE MD HC
DOCTOR WHO 11TH DOCTOR W/COWBOY HAT AF
DOROTHY AND WIZARD IN OZ #3 (OF
DYNAMITE ART OF ALEX ROSS HC

ERNEST AND REBECCA HC VOL 01 MY BEST FRIEND IS A GERM
FABLES #111 (MR)
FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND #259 TWILIGHT ZONE WRAP CVR
FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND #259 WOLFMAN RICK BAKER CVR
FF #12
FINAL CRISIS MMPB
FIRST LAW OF MAD SCIENCE #1
FLASH GORDON INVASION O/T RED SWORD #6
FLASH GORDON ZEITGEIST #1
FLASH GORDON ZEITGEIST #1 25 COPY NEGATIVE INCV
FLASH GORDON ZEITGEIST #1 50 COPY RETRO INCV
FUTURAMA COMICS #58

GAME OF THRONES #3 (MR)
GAME OF THRONES #3 15 COPY MILLER VIRGIN INCV (MR)
GFT GIRLS OF ZENESCOPE 2012 CALENDAR
GHOST RIDER #6
GI JOE VS COBRA SPECIAL #4 MISSION BRAZIL II
GLAMOURPUSS #22
GOBS #3 (OF 4)
GREEN LANTERN SER 4 BALANCED CASE ASST
GREEN LANTERN THE ANIMATED SERIES #0
GREEN WAKE #7 (MR)
GUMBY SPRING SPECIALS COLL TP (RES)
GUTTERS ABSOLUTE COMPLETE OMNIBUS VOL 01
HALO FALL OF REACH COVENANT PREM HC (MR)
HAUNT #19
HEAVY METAL JANUARY 2012 (MR)
HERC #10
HEROES OF THE DCU BLACKEST NIGHT ARKILLO BUST
HISTORY OF MARVEL UNIVERSE #1

INDIE COMICS MAGAZINE #4 (MR)
INFAMOUS TP
INFINITE HORIZON #6 (OF 6) (RES)

JACK AVARICE IS THE COURIER #5 (OF 5)
JONAH HEX BURY ME IN HELL TP
JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA 100 PROJECT SC

KEVIN SMITH KATO TP VOL 02 LIVING IN AMERICA

LAST ZOMBIE INFERNO #5 (OF 5)
LEGION SECRET ORIGIN #2 (OF 6)

MARVEL PREVIEWS DECEMBER 2011 EXTRAS
MONKEY KING GN VOL 01 BIRTH O/T STONE MONKEY
MORNING GLORIES HC VOL 01
MOUSE GUARD BLACK AXE #3 (OF 6)

NEAR DEATH #3
NINJAGO GN VOL 01 CHALLENGE OF SAMUKAI

OFF HANDBOOK OF MARVEL UNIVERSE A TO Z TP VOL 02

PATRICIA BRIGGS ALPHA & OMEGA CRY WOLF VOL 01 #3
PENDULUM GN (MR)
PILOT SEASON THEORY OF EVERYTHING #1
POLLY & PIRATES TP VOL 01
PREVIEWS #279 DECEMBER 2011 (NET)
PRINCELESS #2
PURGATORY TP

QUEEN SONJA #25

RASL TP VOL 03
RAVANA ROAR O/T DEMON KING GN
RED SKULL #5 (OF 5)
RED SONJA REVENGE OF THE GODS TP
RUST HC VOL 01

SAVAGE DRAGON #176
SHINKU #3 (MR)
SIMPSONS WINTER WINGDING #6
SKULLKICKERS #12
SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #231
SPACEMAN #2 (OF 9) (MR)
SPIDER MAN 27OZ STAINLESS STEEL WATER BOTTLE
SPIDER-MAN MARVEL TEAM UP BY CLAREMONT AND BYRNE TP
STAR TREK 16OZ PLASTIC TRAVEL MUG
STAR TREK ONGOING #2 2ND PTG
STAR TREK ONGOING #3
STAR TREK ONGOING #3 10 COPY INCV
STAR TREK ONGOING #3 20 COPY INCV
STAR WARS CRIMSON EMPIRE III EMPIRE LOST #2 (OF 6)
STAR WARS DARK TIMES OUT O/T WILDERNESS #3 (OF 5)
STRANGE TALENT OF LUTHER STRODE #1 (OF 6) VAR CVR 2ND PTG
SUPER DINOSAUR #6
SUPREME POWER GODS AND SOLDIERS TP
SYBIL THE BACKPACK FAIRY HC VOL 01 NINA
TAROT WITCH OF THE BLACK ROSE #71 (MR)

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #4
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #4 10 COPY INCV
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #4 25 COPY INCV
THE LONE RANGER TP VOL 04 RESOLVE
THOR BY KIERON GILLEN ULTIMATE COLLECTION TP
THUNDER AGENTS TP VOL 01
THUNDER AGENTS VOL 2 #1 (OF 6)
THUNDERBOLTS #166
TINTIN YOUNG READERS ED GN TINTIN IN AMERICA
TINY TITANS #46

ULTIMATE COMICS ULTIMATES #4
UNCANNY X-MEN #2 XREGB
UNCHARTED #1 (OF 6)
VERTIGO RESURRECTED SGT ROCK HELL HARD PLACE #1 (MR)

WARLORD OF MARS FALL OF BARSOOM #4
WARLORD OF MARS FALL OF BARSOOM #4 15 COPY JUSKO B&W INCV
WARLORD OF MARS FALL OF BARSOOM #4 25 COPY FRANCAVILLA INCV
WARRIORS MOVIE ADAPTATION TP
WASTELAND #32 (MR)
WOLVERINE #19 XREGG
WONDER WOMAN CHRONICLES TP VOL 02

X-MEN LEGACY #259 REGENESIS GOLD BRADSHAW VAR XREGG
X-MEN LEGACY #259 XREGG

This list is a copy of the list posted at pittsburghcomics.com. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.

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Deck Log Entry # 133 Happy Thanksgiving 2011!

12134027688?profile=originalFriends, I’ve never taken the time to say this before, but I deeply appreciate the fact that you’re reading this.  It means you’re taking time away from the Big Game on TV, or from nibbling at the bowls of pre-feast snacks, or discussing politics with your oddball uncle, the one who insists that the Commies spiked our drinking water with saltpeter back in the ‘50’s to reduce American population growth.  (O.K., so maybe reading my column isn’t that much of a sacrifice, after all.)

 

But thanks for stopping by, and I’ll try to make it worth your while.

 

To-day, I’m going to talk about a famous department-store chain and its annual holiday parade.

 

Now, if you’re a long and faithful reader of my Deck Log, you’re probably thinking that you’ve heard me talk about this before.  But, no, this isn’t a re-run of my 2009 Turkey Day column.  There’s a new story here.  But to get there, I’m going have to go over some ground that’s going to sound familiar.

 

12134116481?profile=originalTo make it seem like less of an old tale, I’m going to write it from a different angle.  So just bear with me here, while I once again delve into the dustbin of American history.

 

 

 

It was the dawn of the Roaring Twenties, and life was good.   Especially so for the president of what was then the largest chain of department stores in the country.  It was a family business, founded by his father, and three of his brothers served in key positions with the company.  But “El”---to use the family nickname---was in charge of the whole ball of wax, including seven major stores spread from coast to coast, with net sales exceeding one hundred million dollars.

 

It was a time of prosperity in America, and El was certainly prosperous.  In the fall of 1920, with the holiday season looming, he came up with an idea to show his appreciation for the public who had made his stores a rising success.  In those days, when commercial radio was new, movies were still silent, and television was only a concept rattling around in Philo Farnsworth’s noggin, the biggest public attraction was a parade.

 

12134116867?profile=originalBut El didn’t want just any old parade.  He wanted it to be something memorable, a spectacle of entertainment and delight, to show thanks for his good fortune.  And to make sure that everybody had a chance to see it, the parade would be held on Thanksgiving Day, when people had the day off from work.  And it would go right through the centre of town.

 

A gesture like this didn’t come out of the blue.   El was already known as something of a philanthropist.  Every year, he sponsored “Orphans’ Day at the Circus”, in which he treated some ten thousand parentless children to a day at the “Big Top”, with all the peanuts, lollypops, and ice cream they could eat. 

 

“I think you’ll enjoy hearing ten thousand children laughing at once,” he once said.  “If you’ve ever been to a circus, that’s explanation enough.”

 

But let’s not be too quick to hang a halo on him, either.  El was also aware that the sort of grand pageant he had in mind would be a great marketing tool.  It would remind potential customers that the holiday season had arrived and there were lots of gifts to purchase.  Why not buy them at the friendly store, from the generous folks who had put on such a great show?

 

 

 

There were permits to obtain, along with the support of the police and fire departments and the street-maintenance workers.  The company lawyers handled all of that.  As for the parade itself, fifty store employees volunteered to give up their Thanksgiving to march down the length of the city in the chilly autumn weather.  Many of the volunteers were immigrants, and they saw the parade as a chance to display their gratitude for the new lives they had found in this country.  El provided whatever they needed for costuming and meals and transportation.

 

12134118099?profile=originalSo, when the big day came, on Thursday, 25 November 1920, what the parade lacked in size was more than made up for with enthusiasm.  Newspaper and bill advertising had done its job, and the sidewalks were crowded with spectators to see the passing troupe of happy marchers.  They came on bicycles, on stilts, on horseback.  They juggled, played instruments, twirled batons.  Their merriment was infectious, and the crowds stamped their feet and clapped their hands to the music. 

 

There were clowns and cowboys, and many of them were attired in traditional costumes of their native lands.  And to the delight of the children, the whole review was capped off by a horse-drawn wagon carrying Santa Claus and his sleigh.

 

The parade ended at El’s flagship store in the heart of town, where Santa scaled a ladder, obligingly provided by the fire department, up to the eighth-floor home of “Toyland”.  From there, Jolly Old Saint Nick exhorted to the joyous throng that this was the place to do all their Christmas shopping.

 

It was the first Thanksgiving parade ever held in a city, and by any standard, it was a success.  Public sentiment was overwhelmingly positive.  The newspapers praised El and his company for their civic-minded altruism. 

 

And El’s stores saw their highest holiday sales ever.

 

 

 

12134118893?profile=originalSometimes, you know right from the beginning when a tradition is set; this was one of those times.  With each succeeding Thanksgiving, the parade grew more impressive, with floats and balloons and high-school marching bands.  El gladly paid the licensing fees to have Mickey Mouse and Popeye pass down main street.  Stars of cinema and radio, and later, television, served as grand marshals or waved at admiring throngs from the backs of open limousines.

 

It grew to the point where El had to hire a full-time employee whose only responsibility was to produce the parade.

 

It didn’t take long for the idea to catch on.  Within that first decade, other businesses in other big cities were sponsoring their own Thanksgiving Day parades, just as splendid in their pageantry.  But El’s was the first.

 

As El had expected, the annual parade proved to be an endless stream of publicity for his chain of stores.  And they got another boost from the 1947 film Miracle on 34th Street, where the boss got to see himself portrayed on screen.

 

 

 

12134119899?profile=originalEl served as the head of the company until his death, in 1950.  The Thanksgiving tradition he started outlived him.   His nephew succeeded him as company president, but for decades, the parade marched on just as it always had, bringing joy and ushering in the Christmas season for the people of Philadelphia.

 

 

“Philadelphia?!  Don’t you mean New York City, commander?”

 

 

No.  Philadelphia.

 

Oh, I see . . . you thought I was talking about the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.

 

No doubt about it, the most famous Thanksgiving Day parade in America is Macy’s.  The Macy’s parade is virtually synonymous with the holiday.  But, the man responsible for the first Thanksgiving Day parade in America, the fellow who originally came up with the idea, was “El”---for Ellis Gimbel, president of the Gimbels department-store chain.

 

You know, the other guys.

 

 

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From Cheryl and myself, to all of you, our fondest wishes for a Happy Thanksgiving Day, and many more of them.

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By Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

The Flash has always been an important character in DC Comics mythology, and Francis Manapul and Brian Buccellato, co-writers of the super-speedster’s newly re-launched title, plan to keep it that way.

 

12134123054?profile=original“I think he’s a central character,” Buccellato, who is also the Flash colorist, said in an interview. “Through the course of history, The Flash has meant an awful lot to the DC Universe. He’s been a part of a lot of landmarks. And also in terms of powers, the dude can do a lot of things. I think he gets sold short a little bit. Power-wise, I think he’s up there with Superman.”

 

Manapul, who is also the Flash artist, agreed. “The Flash has been there for major turning points in the comic-book industry,” he said. “In terms of how I look at him, I think what I really like about The Flash is the sense of hope and optimism that the character brings.”

 

The Flash has a long legacy, stretching back to 1940, when the first Wizard of Whiz was introduced and appeared in various books for 11 years. The second Scarlet Speedster began in 1956 – launching a superhero revival called the “Silver Age” – but was killed and replaced in 1986 with yet a third (and later fourth) Flash. But in 2008 DC’s Chief Creative Officer Geoff Johns resurrected the second Crimson Comet, a forensic police scientist named Barry Allen, who stars in the current “Flash.” That series is only now approaching its third issue, as it was re-launched with DC’s other 51 “DC Universe” titles in September.

 

Now, the knock against Barry Allen – and why he was “dead” for 22 years – has always been that he’s so perfectly heroic that he’s perfectly boring. But Johns added some angst with the recent Flashpoint miniseries (available in hardback, $22.99), which included a shocking development in the death of Allen’s mother that has added considerably to his personality and motivations. And clearly Manapul and Buccellato don’t think Allen’s true-blue heroism is boring; in fact, they consider it a plus.

 

12134123476?profile=original“What makes him special is that he comes from a time when a hero was a hero because that was the right thing to do,” Manapul said. “It’s the kind of hero that I think a lot of us, when were kids, aspired to. Now with the way the industry is, there are a lot of anti-heroes. It’s cool and it’s popular, but it’s not at the core of what a hero is about. I think [that heroism] is what The Flash represents to me. I think you’ll see throughout the first year that we’re constantly putting that in contrast both in terms of the thematic story as well as visually. He is the brightest thing that you’ll see on the page, and that’s not by accident.”

 

“Flash doesn’t have any other agenda than to be heroic and to do the right thing,” Buccellato added. “He’s very simple in that way and I think it’s refreshing. Because, like Francis said, we’ve had a lot of tortured heroes for a while and it’s nice to see somebody who’s going to stand up just because it’s the right thing to do.”

 

And crack off the bat Manapul and Buccellato have added to The Flash’s bag of tricks with “augmented cognition;” it’s a logical progression that a man who moves faster than the speed of sound would think faster, too.  The pair are using the real science of augmented cognition as a guide, which will have some unexpected ramifications beginning with issue #3. Using realistic science, Manapul said, is one of the “anchors” the co-writers hope will keep this fast-moving book grounded.

 

And, of course, a book written by two artists will be one of the most visual on the stands.

 

12134123901?profile=originalWriting and drawing in conjunction is “very natural,” Manapul said. “I feel like both are so integrated that I find it hard to separate them. … We’re using every aspect to tell our story. We’re using paneling and layout to expand the story. … We’re using color to help us tell the story. We’re using everything.”

 

“It’s not an accident that Flash is the only thing that’s red in the story,” Buccalleto added. “It’s clearly an intentional thing and it helps you understand that he’s the focal point.”

 

And it’s a hopeful one.

 

“What really inspired me as a comic-book reader when I was a kid … was hope,” Manapul concluded. “I want people to come off reading our comics feeling a sense of hope. That’s been our goal from the beginning.”

 

Art:

1. The Flashpoint story put The Flash through an emotional trauma. Courtesy DC Entertainment

 2. Flash was re-launched with this first issue in September. Courtesy DC Entertainment

 3. Flash #3 will reveal more about Flash's "augmented cognition." Courtesy DC Entertainment

 

Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.

Read more…

12134156671?profile=originalI’m not the Silver Age expert on this site.  We have Captain Comics, Commander Benson and Mr. Silver Age for that.  Hey, I wasn’t born until almost halfway through the ‘70s.  But I thought it would be fun to put together a list of the best characters from the ‘50s and ‘60s anyway.  Consider it an outsider’s perspective on which characters were interesting, timeless, noteworthy or at least quirky enough to appeal to a latecomer like me.  Have fun reading.

  1. Adam Strange (DC, 1958): He’s a science fiction action hero in the vein of Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon and John Carter of Mars, yet he’s also comfortable in the superhero milieu of Superman, Green Lantern and the Justice League of America.  The mechanism that transported him back and forth to Rann was a little contrived but it did result in fast-paced adventures and a tragic emotional hook.

  2. 12134157069?profile=originalAlfred E. Neuman (EC, 1954): His dim-witted, slightly mischievous mug had been featured in advertisements for half a century.  Even the catchphrase “What, Me Worry?” had been around for decades.  But in 1954, EC made the character their own.  They gave him a name and turned him into the mascot for MAD.  He’s still grinning today, making fun of Justin Bieber and The Walking Dead.

    12134157486?profile=original
  3. Animal Man (DC, 1965): Maybe I just like the color orange.  Buddy Baker was a late addition to the Silver Age and wasn’t elevated to leading status until Grant Morrison got ahold of him in the 1980s.  Yet the man with the power of any animal is a classic superhero staple.


  4. 12134158058?profile=original12134158090?profile=originalAnt-Man (Marvel, 1962)
  5. Atom II (DC, 1961): I’ve always liked the underdog.  That’s probably why I’ve always had affection for these often-belittled little heroes.  They weren’t the first to shrink down to size but they did bring a scientific sensibility to their superhero adventures.

     
  6. 12134159263?profile=originalBatgirl (DC, 1966): Barbara Gordon could have made two of these lists.  Her reinvention in the 1980s as the information broker Oracle practically constitutes a new character.  Yet I also love her as the light-hearted adventurer Batgirl.  She brought a sense of joy and wonder to her escapades.  Plus, I have a poster of Batgirl hanging above my home computer.

  7. 12134159076?profile=originalBeast (Marvel, 1963): Hank McCoy wasn’t that interesting in his initial incarnation.  He was another in a long line of Jack Kirby creations who demonstrated their intelligence by using big words.  But he came into his own in the 1970s when he was reinvented as an actual beast with real fur and then joined the Avengers with a sense of humor that matched his super intellect.

    Side-bar: The original X-Men were boring.  Oh, a few of them will make this list but that’s mostly because of what was done with them by later creators.  Don’t get me wrong.  I love them all- even the ones that people mock like Angel and Iceman.  They’re like family.  But they’re great by association and they don’t all deserve entries.
     
  8. 12134159290?profile=originalBeast Boy (DC, 1965): He was the rare standout in a world of sidekicks.  He didn’t copy the powers of his adult mentor.  He was the sidekick to an entire team rather than an individual hero.  And he was a natural comedian, treating the entire superhero scene as a big lark.

    12134159890?profile=original
  9. “Big Ethel” Muggs (Archie, 1962): I don’t think there’s anyone in comics quite like Ethel Muggs.  She wasn’t gorgeous.  She was incredibly tall, lanky, and a little buck-toothed.  She didn’t have boys chasing after her, unlike Betty, Veronica or
    the other ladies of Riverdale.  Instead, she was the12134160293?profile=original one trying to get Jughead to go out with her.  She bordered on boy-crazy but even at her most intense, she was relatable as the average-looking girl who has to make her own destiny.
     
  10. 12134161452?profile=originalBizarro (DC, 1958): Me no like Bizarro.  Him no make list of stupid characters.

     
  11. Black Bolt (Marvel, 1965): The silent leader of the otherworldly Inhumans, the Black Bolt is a model of restrained power and nobility.  He’s also a model of artistic restraint.  Jack Kirby’s character designs were often convoluted, but the Black Bolt
    has just enough detail to be distinctive while staying sleek.
    12134160893?profile=original
  12. Black Panther (Marvel, 1966): The first black superhero remains the best.  He’s an African
    monarch and an American immigrant.  He has royal dignity and street credibility.  He rises above clichés.  He can stand shoulder to shoulder with heroes like Captain America or world leaders like Dr. Doom.

     
  13. 12134161871?profile=originalBlack Widow (Marvel, 1964): The Soviet spy who made almost every Marvel superhero fall in love with her at one time or another (not to mention, quite a few comic book fans), she’s an incredibly competent agent, spy, superhero and team leader.

     
  14. Blue Beetle II (Charlton, 1966): Charlton followed the DC blueprint to success: take a Golden Age character, divest him of mystical elements and
    invest him with science and technology instead.  Ted Kord may have inherited a name from Dan Garrett, but he was a gadget-wielding inventor who fought crime with knowledge and wit.  And a pretty cool costume.12134162255?profile=original


  15. Bouncing Boy (DC, 1961): The Legion of Super-12134162289?profile=originalHeroes could have contributed a legion of entries and most of them would have been square-jawed heroic types.  But the charm of the Legion came from their offbeat members like Chuck Taine.  As Bouncing Boy, he was impervious to both physical damage and sadness.

     
  16. Brainiac (DC, 1958): The Silver Age was a great
    era for Superman villains.  Bizarro showed up earlier on this list.  A third villain will make a later appearance.  But Brainiac was arguably the best.  The alien genius was arrogant, callow and extremely dangerous.  I prefer his later robotic look, but in any form he was one of Superman’s most perilous foes.

    12134162487?profile=original
  17. 12134163083?profile=originalBrainiac 5 (DC, 1961): What a brilliant idea!  Brainiac 5 was the descendant of Superman villain Brainiac except this time the super-genius was on the side of the good guys as one of the Legion of Super-Heroes.  However, even though he was one of the good guys, the heroic Brainiac 5 remained arrogant, selfish and snide.

     
  18. Captain Atom (Charlton, 1960): This nuclear-powered space hero created by Steve Ditko, has been a major player in several incarnations for both
    Charlton and DC.

     12134163882?profile=original
  19. 12134164266?profile=originalCaptain Comet (DC, 1951): He’s not a super-hero.  Captain Comet was a science-fiction star with pulp fiction inspiration.  Then again, he is a superhero.  He has a vast array of powers including clairvoyance, telepathy and telekinesis.  Captain Comet expertly strides the two worlds, which is kind of fitting for a character that was introduced in between the Golden and Silver Ages of comics.


  20. 12134164498?profile=originalCaptain Flash (Sterling, 1954): The Captain was one of best new characters to come out of the short-lived superhero revival of 1953-55.  His sleek costume and his radiation-based powers presaged the Silver Age.  Oh, and most of his adventures were drawn by Mike Sekowsky.

     
  21. 12134165274?profile=originalCaptain Marvel (Marvel, 1967): It’s one of the mostly widely used names in comics.  This is the Marvel version.  Mar-Vell was a Kree soldier sent to spy on Earth.  But after observing the planet, Mar-Vell decides to defend its people instead.

  22. Chameleon Boy (DC, 1960): Our third 12134166062?profile=originalLegionnaire, Chameleon Boy was a shape-shifter from the planet Durlan.  Over the years, Chameleon and his home planet became the focus for meaningful stories about xenophobia, isolationism, impersonation and paranoia.  Thankfully, he eventually dropped the “boy” from his name.
  23. The Creeper (DC, 1968): Steve Ditko took villains that he had created for Blue 12134166486?profile=originalBeetle (the Madmen) and reworked them into this antihero for DC.  The Creeper was sometimes good, sometimes bad and always unpredictable.

     
  24. The Crypt-Keeper (EC, 1950): As the host of Tales from the Crypt, the Keeper introduces the stories and teases the readers.  He’s just creepy enough that he’s part of the show, suggesting that even greater horrors await
    those who are about to turn the page.  He’s also a multi-media star having made the leap to television and the movies.


    Side-bar: I’m not sure why 12134166879?profile=originaleverybody thought it was necessary but every horror comic needed a host.  The Crypt-Keeper shared a neighborhood with the Vault-Keeper from The Vault of Horror and the Old Witch from Haunt of Fear, though they frequently crossed from one comic to the other.  DC brought the brothers Cain and Abel in as the hosts of House of Mystery and House of Secrets.  Warren had Uncle Creepy.  And Charlton had a whole battalion of horror hosts, including Doctor Graves, Mr. Bones and Countess Von Bludd.
     
  25. 12134167459?profile=originalCyclops (Marvel, 1963): He’s the straight-laced leader of the X-Men.  He bottles up his emotions for the sake of the team so that he’s sometimes considered a little stuffy.  But he also has one of those powers that everybody wishes for (who hasn’t wanted to shoot beams out of their eyes at some point?) and that’s endlessly imitated (ie. The Incredibles’ Gazerbeam).

     
  26. 12134167670?profile=originalDaredevil (Marvel, 1964): The first time I tried to invent my own superhero for a role-playing game, I came up with a blind hero who “sees” everything with super-senses.  The games-master replied, “So you want to play Daredevil?”  Then he let me know that Stan Lee beat me there by about 30 years.

     
  27. 12134167694?profile=originalDoctor Doom (Marvel, 1962): Honestly, Doctor Doom is not one of my favorite villains.  He’s full of bluster more than actual menace.  But he is the standard for tin-pot dictators from fictional countries.  And it would be weird to put a list together without him.

     
  28. Doctor Solar (Gold Key, 1962): Doctor Solar was an odd fit in the Silver Age.  12134168657?profile=originalHe didn’t wear a costume initially and his skin turned green whenever he used his powers.  But a 1990s revival by Jim Shooter and Valiant Comics demonstrated that the guy in the red pajamas might just be the most powerful hero of them all.

     
  29. 12134169071?profile=originalDoctor Strange (Marvel, 1963): After an accident robbed him of his ability to work as a surgeon, Dr. Stephen Strange found a second career as the master of magic.

     
  30. Dynamo (Tower, 1965): He was the linchpin of the 12134169479?profile=originalT.H.U.N.D.E.R. Agents.  He was their most powerful member and their star.  His powers, including super-strength, came from the Dynamo belt that he wore.  He was also a very loyal, honest, hard-working hero.

     
  31. Elasti-Girl (DC, 1963): She’s the biggest star of the Doom Patrol.  She was the one who held the team together when one of the boys got mopey or 
    threw a tantrum.  She was a surrogate mom to 12134170073?profile=originalBeast-Boy and a friend to everyone.


  32. Enemy Ace (DC, 1965): Every once in a while, you might read a story reminding12134171060?profile=original you that the soldiers on the other side are decent, honorable fellows a lot like the guys on our side.  DC took that concept and turned into one of their most compelling features.  The Enemy Ace fought for the Germans in World War I.  Yet he fought with honor, class and excellence.


    Side-bar: War comics were big business in the ’50s and ‘60s.  DC specialized in them. Marvel dabbled in them.  EC and Warren published noteworthy titles.  And Charlton practically drowned in them.  Many of the titles were anthologies with a new lead for every story.  But several titles focused on specific characters.  In addition to the few, proud men who make this list, we salute Gunner and Sarge, the Haunted Tank, Leatherneck Jack, the Losers, Mademoiselle Marie, Willy Schultz, the Unknown Soldier and all the rest.12134171484?profile=original

     
  33. The Falcon (Marvel, 1969): Don’t call him a sidekick.  The Falcon was Captain America’s partner, a member of the Avengers and a solo hero in his own right.


    12134172086?profile=original
  34. Fighting American (Prize, 1954): Joe Simon and Jack Kirby jumped into the superhero revival with the Fighting American but they couldn’t take themselves- or the character- as seriously the second time around.  The Fighting American quickly became a parody of superhero comics, fighting communists such as Poison Ivan and Hotsky Trotsky.

     
  35. 12134172282?profile=originalThe Flash II (DC, 1956): Here’s another Silver Age hero that I find kind of boring.  Sorry.  But there’s no doubting Barry Allen’s place in history.  As a revamp of a Golden Age character, he paved the way and provided the template for the return of superheroes.

    12134172875?profile=original 
  36. The Fly (Archie, 1959): Another Simon and Kirby creation.

     
  37. Galactus (Marvel, 1966): Galactus is one of great super-villains.  He’s virtually unstoppable.  He
    exposes an ethical quandary- how much responsibility does he have for the lower12134173090?profile=original life forms that live on the planets he eats for sustenance?  And he has a huge, freaking helmet!  Have you seen the size of that thing?


    12134173860?profile=original 
  38. General Zod (DC, 1961): Kneel before Zod.

     
  39. Gorilla Grodd (DC, 1959): Gorillas were pretty popular in the ‘50s so it’s not surprising that at least one of them became a classic foe.  But what makes this gorilla so special is that he has mental faculties that exceed most humans, plus a dash of telepathy on the side.


    Side-Bar: I would have loved to include the Flash’s Rogues.  However,12134174267?profile=original they’re more interesting together than they are individually.  Yet they were introduced one at a time in separate stories (and different years).  So they don’t cut it as individual entries or a truly fit as a group.  Even so, they’re the gang that every group of super-villains aspires to be.

    12134174472?profile=original 

  40. Green Goblin (Marvel, 1964): Spider-Man’s greatest foe.  He’s got a great look, a great set of gadgets (exploding pumpkins and a glider, how cool is that?) and a great laugh.  He’s also got one of the greatest moments in comic book villainy as the one who killed Spider-Man’s girlfriend Gwen Stacy.12134174074?profile=original

     
  41. Green Lantern II (DC, 1959)
  42. Guy Gardner (DC, 1968): They’re arguably the two most popular ring slingers: Hal Jordan and Guy Gardner.  Hal is the buttoned-up, law & order guy, except he also has a fierce independent streak.  That makes him a great test pilot, but also means he runs into friction with authority figures.  Guy is brash and arrogant and a bit of a jerk.  Except he’s also insecure and tenderly romantic.  That makes him one of the most interesting characters to ever light the lantern.

     
  43. 12134175084?profile=originalGyro Gearloose (Dell, 1952): The world of Donald Duck and his Uncle Scrooge kept expanding a12134176061?profile=originalnd adding interesting, new characters.  Most of this expansion happened in the late ‘40s or onscreen (ie. Professor Ludwig Von Drake) but Duckburg’s resident inventor made his debut in Dell Comics and has stuck around ever since.


     
  44. Havok (Marvel, 1969): He’s more than Cyclops’ younger brother.  Alex Summers has a great look, an awesome power and a cool name.  He also has interests outside of the X-Men, like archaeology.  And, like a lot of younger brothers, he has a bit of a chip on his shoulder.

     
  45. Hawkeye (Marvel, 1964): I love guys who stir things up, whether it’s Guy Gardner in the Justice League or Hawkeye in the 12134175682?profile=originalAvengers.  Hawkeye teases his co-workers and agitates those in charge.  Yet he’s also a very effective leader when given the opportunity.12134176483?profile=original


     
  46. Hawkman II (DC, 1961): Another reinvented hero, the second Hawkman is Katar Hol from Thanagar.  The alien origin is interesting though it hasn’t always meshed well with the Egyptology aspects that were left over from the original.  Then again, there are Americans who are experts in Chinese history so why not a Thanagarian expert in Earth history?

     
  47. The Hulk (Marvel, 1962): One of the greatest anti-12134176864?profile=originalheroes ever created, in comics or anywhere else.  Hulk smash!
      
  48. Human Torch II (Marvel, 1961)12134177652?profile=original
  49. Invisible Woman (Marvel, 1961): This brother and sister tandem is the heart of the Fantastic Four.  Sue Storm (now Richards) started out as the weak link on the team but an expansion of her abilities to include invisible force fields turned her into the resident powerhouse.  She’s a great wife, mother, big sister and friend.  She’s the team’s conscience and it’s real leader.  Johnny was supposed to be the breakout star (he was the first to get a solo gig) but he didn’t realize his potential until the recent movies.  He’s the one who reminds us that this is supposed to be fun.  It’s cool to have powers.

     
  50. 12134177866?profile=originalIron Man (Marvel, 1963): Tony Stark is the natural evolution of technology.  The Golden Age gave us robots and heroes with gadgets but Tony truly became the man inside the machine.  Astonishingly, with his womanizing and alcohol addiction, the man inside the machine is sometimes more interesting than the superhero.


    Special Side-Bar: While compiling this list, I tried to be representative of every era and multiple genres.  But, perhaps not surprisingly, the list is heavily represented by the early ‘60s.  That’s mostly because of the Silver Age superhero boom-though not entirely as non-superheroes like Ethel Muggs and Enemy Ace hail from those years as well.  As for comics’ dark decade, four years in the ‘50s make the list only once and one year, 1957, doesn’t make the list at all. 

     

 
 
 
 
 
 
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Comics for 23 November 2011

27 SECOND SET #3 (OF 4)
5 RONIN TP

ALIENS FAST TRACK TO HEAVEN HC
ALL STAR WESTERN #3
ALPHA FLIGHT #6
ANNIHILATORS EARTHFALL #3 (OF 4)
AQUAMAN #3
ASTONISHING X-MEN #44
AVENGERS ORIGINS SCARLET WITCH & QUICKSILVER 1
AVENGERS SOLO #2 (OF 5)

BART SIMPSON COMICS #65
BATGIRL TP VOL 03 THE LESSON
BATMAN THE BLACK MIRROR HC
BATMAN THE DARK KNIGHT #3
BETTY PAGES ANNUAL SC VOL 01 (MR)
BILLY TUCCI A CHILD IS BORN ONE SHOT
BLACKEST NIGHT ACTION FIGURE BOX SET
BLACKHAWKS #3
BPRD HELL ON EARTH RUSSIA #3

CAPTAIN AMERICA AND BUCKY #624
CAVEWOMAN COVER GALLERY #4 (MR)
COMIC BOOK COMICS #6 (OF 6)
CURIOUS CASES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES GN

DAKEN DARK WOLVERINE #17
DARK HORSE PRESENTS #6
DARKWING DUCK DUCKTALES DANGEROUS CURRENCY
DC COMICS PRESENTS LIFE STORY OF THE FLASH #1
DC HEROES WAVE 19 STRIPE AF SET
DEADPOOL MAX 2 #2 (MR)
DIABLO #1 (OF 5)
DMZ #71 (MR)
DOCTOR WHO BRILLIANT BOOK OF DOCTOR WHO 2012
DOCTOR WHO ENCYCLOPEDIA HC NEW ED
DOCTOR WHO ONGOING VOL 2 #11
DOMINION GN (MR)
DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS #13

EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT IRIS VOL 2 #5

FANTASTIC FOUR #600
FLASH #3
FREAKY MONSTERS MAGAZINE #6
FURY OF FIRESTORM THE NUCLEAR MEN #3

GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #6 (MR)
GFT PRESENTS NEVERLAND HOOK #2
GOTHAM CITY SIRENS TP VOL 02 SONG OF THE SIRENS
GREEN LANTERN NEW GUARDIANS #3
GREEN LANTERN OMNIBUS HC VOL 02

HAMILTON & BRACKETT STARK & STAR KINGS HC
HELLBLAZER #285 (MR)
HELLRAISER MASTERPIECES #2 (MR)

I VAMPIRE #3
INCORRUPTIBLE #24
INFINITE #4
INVINCIBLE #85
INVINCIBLE IRON MAN #510
IRON MAN 2.0 #10

JACK AVARICE IS THE COURIER #4 (OF 5)
JESUS HATES ZOMBIES JURASSIC KINDA LIFE GN VOL 02
JUSTICE LEAGUE DARK #3

KAPOW GUINNESS WORLD RECORD SPECIAL #1 (MR)
KICK-ASS 2 #5 (MR)

LAST PHANTOM #10
LIFE WITH ARCHIE #15
LITTLE LULU TP V29 THE CRANKY GIANT AND OTHER
LOCKE & KEY GUIDE TO KNOWN KEYS ONE SHOT
LOVECRAFT LIBRARY HC V1 HORROR OUT OF ARKHAM

MARVEL MINIMATES SERIES 42 ASST
MIGHTY THOR #8
MILK & CHEESE DAIRY PRODUCTS GONE BAD HC
MMW X-MEN TP VOL 04

PARKER MARTINI ED HC
POGO COMP SYNDICATED STRIPS HC V1 WILD WONDER
PREACHER HC BOOK 05 (MR)
PRINCELESS #1

RASL #12 (MR)
RED SONJA #59
RICHELLE MEAD DARK SWAN #4 (OF 4) STORM BORN (
ROBERT JORDAN WHEEL OF TIME EYE O/T WORLD #17
ROCKETEER JETPACK TREASURY ED
ROYAL HISTORIAN OF OZ TP

SAVAGE DRAGON KIDS ARE ALRIGHT TP
SAVAGE HAWKMAN #3
SCALPED #54 (MR)
SECRET AVENGERS #19
SHADE #2 (OF 12)
SHOWCASE PRESENTS GHOSTS TP VOL 01
SIXTH GUN #17
SKAAR KING OF SAVAGE LAND TP
SONIC UNIVERSE #34
SPIDER JUDGE JURY & EXECUTIONER HC
SPIDER-MAN #20
SPIDER-MAN ORIGIN OF HOBGOBLIN TP
STAR WARS KNIGHT ERRANT DELUGE #4 (OF 5)
STAR WARS OMNIBUS TP V2 AT WAR WITH THE EMPIRE
SUPER DINOSAUR TP VOL 01
SUPERMAN #3

TANK GIRL CARIOCA #2 (OF 3) (MR)
TEEN TITANS #3
TEEN WOLF BITE ME #3 (OF 3)
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ULT COLL HC V1
TERRY MOORE HOW TO DRAW #2 EXPRESSIONS

ULTIMATE COMICS CAPTAIN AMERICA TP
ULTIMATE COMICS HAWKEYE #4 (OF 4)
UNCANNY X-FORCE DARK ANGEL SAGA PREM HC BK 1
UNWRITTEN #31.5 (MR)
USAGI YOJIMBO #142

VENGEANCE #5 (OF 6)
VESCELL #4 (MR)
VOODOO #3

WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #47 (MR)
WALT DISNEY DONALD DUCK HC V1 LOST I/T ANDES
WARLORD OF MARS DEJAH THORIS #8
WOLVERINE AND X-MEN #2 XREGG

YELLOW LANTERN 1/4 SCALE POWER BATTERY & RING

This list is a copy of the list posted at memphiscomics.com. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.

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Reviews: 'Marzi,' 'How to Draw Chiller Monsters'

'Marzi' demonstrates life behind Iron Curtain through child's eyes

 

By Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

I doubt very many of us have wondered what it was like to grow up as a little girl in Communist Poland, but after Marzi: A Memoir (DC/Vertigo, $17.99), I doubt many of us will ever forget it.

 

12134113456?profile=originalMarzi is written by Marzena Sowa as an account, as she remembers it, of her coming of age in the 1980s behind the Iron Curtain. That alone is fascinating enough – clearly, life under Communism is and was an experience completely alien to our own. But Sowa also completely captures the perspective of a child, one universal to us all. That viewpoint is held with marvelous consistency throughout, grounding the reader in the shared, while experiencing the unique.

 

Reading Marzi, one is immediately struck by its similarities to Persepolis, a similar tale of another little girl growing up under a repressive regime (Iran). In addition, both Marzi artist Sylvain Savoia and Persepolis creator Marjane Satrapi use a fluid, cartoony style, which serves not only to invite the reader with its gentle charm, but also to serve as a counterpoint to the harsh, serious world in which the protagonists live.

 

But there are strong differences as well. Persepolis, for example, gives us enough of the adult perspective that we understand both the little girl and the forces acting on her. But Marzi eschews the latter almost entirely, allowing us only what she herself witnessed, and how she understood it.

 

That could be a handicap, except that Marzi differs from Persepolis in another way: length. Marzi is a long read, and necessarily so. It’s the accretion of detail that allows us to understand Marzi’s world in ways that she herself didn’t understand until she was an adult.

 

And what a world it is. From the first scene, when her father wrangles a carp on the black market, we understand what a colorless, strange place she inhabits. The fish is a big, big deal, not something Marzi’s family can afford or even find most of the time. But the family is splurging for a celebration – one assumes Christmas, which is not recognized in the officially atheist state – and the carp is kept alive in the bathtub as a pet, until the big day … when they kill it and eat it.

 

This is Marzi’s Bizarro world, and we see it through her eyes.  It’s the skill of the adult Marzena that brings that to us, capturing both the childlike wonder and earnest confusion of those early years. It’s a mesmerizing read.

 

Also:

 

12134113266?profile=originalOccasionally I receive an art-instruction book for review, but I don’t feel I have the expertise to review those, so I usually refrain. However, I’m willing to make an exception for Watson-Guptill’s How to Draw Chiller Monsters, Werewolves, Vampires, and Zombies ($19.99).

 

I took enough art classes in college to know that Chiller is pretty much Drawing 101, with chapters on blocking out figures, perspective, contrast, texture, lighting, composition and so forth. Any of a dozen books on my shelf do the same.

 

However, Chiller has two other things going for it that the others don’t.

 

One is that it focuses on – well, what the title says it does. Which gives it an added oomph, in that you learn how to draw the handsome guy, and then how to draw the handsome guy after he becomes a decomposing, worm-riddled, brain-eating zombie. In the newspaper trade, we call that “value added.”

 

The other advantage Chiller has over the competition is the author, J. David Spurlock. If that name sounds familiar, it’s because Spurlock is founder of Vanguard Publications, which specializes in art books from, and history books about, famous comic-book artists. In the course of that job, Spurlock has forged relationships with many of the biggest names in the field over the decades, and those artists (or their estates) have contributed work as examples to emulate.

 

So, you know, it’s nice to be shown how to draw a vampire by Spurlock, who is an art teacher and illustrator in his own right. But it’s even cooler to be shown how to draw a Gene “Tomb of Dracula” Colan vampire! Other big names found in the book include Dan Adkins, Jack Davis, Steve Ditko, Frank Frazetta, Basil Gogos, Kerry Gammill, Gray Morrow, Jim Steranko, Angelo Torres, Al Williamson, Wally Wood and Bernie Wrightson. Toss in the foreword by heavy-metal musician and horror movie director Rob Zombie, and Chiller is a pretty comprehensive package.

 

Art

1. Marzi: A Memoir is an autobiographical graphic novel about growing up in Communist Poland. Courtesy DC Entertainment.

2. How to Draw Chiller Monsters, Werewolves, Vampires, and Zombies includes art for an all-star cast of comic-book artists. Courtesy Watson-Guptill.

 

Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.

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DC Nation Shorts 2012 On Cartoon Network

Short films featuring DC comics' characters will be shown on the Cartoon Network channel in 2012.  It would be interesting if persons from the indie film and indie comic book industries would be invited to use  the company's characters.to tell stories.  

 

 

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What We Truly Fear

"We have met the enemy and they are us" -- Pogo Possum

 

The latest episode of The Walking Dead had me thinking about the line above, perhaps the most famous quote from Walt Kelly's long-running comic strip, Pogo. It reminded me of a thought that occasionally flits across my frontal lobe about how so many of our iconic monsters seem to represent the threat not just of death, but also -- and maybe moreso -- turning Us into Them. If you squint just right, it seems to suggest that what we're most afraid of is ourselves.

 

Vampires. Werewolves. Zombies. All of them turn Us into Them, turn friend into foe, turn our numbers against us. Yes, death is an element as well -- you have to die to become a vampire or zombie, and being torn to ribbons is the first, immediate danger of lyncanthropy. But, tellingly, you don't die to become a werewolf, and we're still afraid of that. Jekyll/Hyde dispensed with "the other" altogether and kept it in the (homo sapiens) family -- Hyde is the animal (and the enemy) within. If we want to stretch the concept further, we can include Frankenstein's Monster and The Mummy; the former is made up of fellow humans (albeit dead ones) and the latter is a human, or was. You'll note that The Mummy isn't a super-power resurrected animal of any kind. Because it isn't animals we're afraid of, werewolves notwithstanding. No, once again it's US that is the enemy, or potentially so.

 

One aspect of these monsters that's so frightening is that they look familiar, but don't act in a familiar manner. Your former friend is now a zombie, say, and while he looks like your friend (mostly), his behavior and priorities have changed radically. He's joined another team, and become a stranger. He wants to kill you, or worse, make you join his tribe. It's not really a stretch to substitute "John became a flesh-eating zombie" with "John joined a different church/worships a different God." It's the familiar turned un-familiar -- and the threat to make you do the same -- which frightens us. 

 

Maybe it's that last part that is what is most frightening, the transformation of Us into Them. Maybe this is all just a huge metaphor for our fear of betrayal by our friends, of being victimized by other humans, and/or being too weak to live up to our own principles and becoming a betrayer, a monster, ourselves. It seems to me that one of our great fears is that we're not as strong in our faiths, creeds and beliefs as we'd like to believe. Many people grow most angry in a political discussion when the other guy's points begin to make sense.

 

We have actual industries in place to reverse these transformations. We have "de-programmers," for example, that kidnap family members who've joined a cult and essentially brainwash them into being like they used to be. That kinda creeps me out, too, and not just because it suggests how programmable -- how malleable and potentially transformational -- we all are. It's also because virtually all major religions were considered cults when they began, and only lost that tag when they became large enough to be institutional. In other words, from a classification perspective, all religions are cults until they become popular.

 

So who's to say we're right and they're wrong? As an illustrative example, I daresay we'd all be outraged if a de-programmer kidnapped a Southern Baptist and brainwashed him or her into becoming, say, Catholic. But what about an unpopular religion? What about a Hare Krishna? A polygamist Mormon? A Muslim? (It's now the second-most populous religion on Earth, but I bet a lot of Christian parents would gladly pay a de-programmer to "fix" a child who joined Islam -- and probably many of their neighbors, and the police, would look the other way.) What's the cutoff point where we say, "Oh, OK, that religion is all right. But those other ones have got to go."? Food for thought.

 

Another example of an anti-transformational industry, I believe, are the so-called "pray away the gay" groups. Your son or daughter comes out? Changes before your eyes into a "stranger"? Drag them to a religious-oriented programmer, who transforms them back into what you want. Evidently the "transformation" scares some parents, and even some gays, and they want to change it back. The parents long for their world before the transformation, like Rick & Co. in The Walking Dead, and struggle to re-establish it.

 

Speaking of The Walking Dead, creator Robert Kirkman has consistently maintained that the title refers to the surivivors, not the zombies. His intent is to explore what honest, decent people turn into when forced to do terrible things to survive. Ultimately, I assume, he will confront us with the question of who the monsters really are.

 

So there again we have the fear of transformation, of people becoming monsters, twice over. What does this say about us as a species? Does it mean that, despite hopeful fictional future utopias like Star Trek, that deep in our hearts we fear our lesser instincts will win out? Or is it a conservative impluse, of preserving the status quo and never changing? Or is it a fear of the stranger, of the unknown he or she represents? Or is it simply a tribal thing in our lizard brains, where we demand loyalty to our tribe, and what we hate most is those who join the other team? Or is it some sort of species-wide form of self-loathing? Or is it bigotry, a need to define others as something lesser so we can feel superior?  Or is it all of these? Or a combination? Or something else?

 

To tell you the truth, I don't know. I have questions, not answers. What do you guys think?

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You Can’t Change Conventional Wisdom

12134110874?profile=originalI read an article last week on Grantland.com in which editor Bill Simmons tried to challenge the conventional thinking on film star Eddie Murphy.   He argued that Murphy had one of the greatest runs ever for a comedian and that a swoon later in his career doesn’t take that away.  He claimed that Murphy’s later work, while inconsistent, hasn’t been entirely bad (Bowfinger and Dreamgirls stand out as late-career highlights).  He also noted that Murphy has become one of the most bankable actors in family comedies (see The Nutty Professor, Dr. Doolittle, Shrek and even Daddy Day Care).  That may not get him the same kind of critical accolades he once enjoyed but it’s still impressive- especially when you consider that it’s been about 17 years since David Spade quipped “catch a falling star” on Saturday Night Live in response to a photo of Murphy.  

​It was an admirable attempt.  But I don’t think it had much of a chance.  And that was before Murphy’s latest movie, Tower Heist, debuted to lower-than-expected box office and before Murphy pulled out of the Academy Awards in solidarity with his friend, Brett Ratner.  

​It’s really hard- almost impossible- to change conventional wisdom.  It’s broadly accepted, even if it isn’t entirely accurate.  That’s what makes it “conventional” wisdom.  Once that kind of thinking has set in across society, it becomes fossilized.  One well-meaning article- or even two- isn’t going to sway broad-based opinion.  
​Bill Simmons demonstrates this in his own article.  While trying to sway conventional thinking on one entertainer, he buys into the conventional wisdom regarding another.   Simmons makes the statement that the Rolling Stones haven’t made a good album in 30 years.  That’s about right… according to conventional wisdom.  

12134110891?profile=originalThe last good Stones album is supposedly Tattoo You in 1981.  But I remember when Steel Wheels came out in 1989.  It was promptly declared the sign of a Stones’ comeback and their best album since the beginning of the decade.  Voodoo Lounge and Bridges to Babylon received similar, if not universal, accolades.  When A Bigger Bang came out in 2005, it was called the greatest Stones album in 25 years.  But I doubt the critical acclaim for A Bigger Bang did much to change conventional thinking.  I suspect that if the Stones come out with another album, it too will be heralded as their best album since Tattoo You.

Conventional thinking affects comic book characters as well.  This character is the do-gooder. This character is inherently flawed. This character can’t hold their own title.  And so on.  

That’s one of the reasons I’ve admired Geoff Johns’ new Aquaman title.  He’s directly confronting the conventional wisdom.  Aquaman may be a superhero but most people think he’s useless.  That’s partly because of artificial limitations originally placed on the character (he used to lose his powers if he was out of water for an hour).  That’s partly because of the intrinsic limitations of his best-known ability (how often do you need to talk to fish?).  And so Aquaman has been the butt of jokes for decades.  

Geoff Johns has taken those jokes and made them a part of the current series.  They’re not an accurate reflection of Aquaman’s abilities but they are part of the conventional thinking of citizens in the DC Universe.  Various characters have made off-handed comments about Aquaman’s supposed weaknesses.  Some have made jokes at Aquaman’s expense.  Aquaman has dismissed the comments- sometimes casually, sometimes stoically, sometimes coldly.  He’s not out to change the world’s opinion of himself but he’s also not going to put up with being mocked.    

I think it’s admirable.  I realize that some comic book fans disagree.  For them, Aquaman’s reputation has already been rehabilitated.  Peter David orchestrated a new vision for Aquaman- he gave him long hair and a hook while ditching the orange shirt.  He emphasized Aquaman’s other abilities, such as enhanced senses and strength from enduring the ocean depths.  Grant Morrison brought this version of Aquaman into the Justice League, giving even greater exposure to an Aquaman who could kick butt.  

12134111698?profile=originalYet, as much as I enjoyed David and Morrison’s approach to the character, it didn’t change much in the larger picture.  Sure, some comic book fans had a new appreciation for Aquaman.  But they weren’t going to sway the tide of public opinion.  They weren’t going to change the minds of people who laughed at Aquaman jokes on Saturday Night Live.  
Plus, it’s been a decade since David or Morrison worked with the character.  It’s been a decade in which Aquaman “couldn’t hold his own title. “  It’s been a decade in which Aquaman has been depicted as a water elemental and a fantasy character and anything except a powerful, classic superhero.  David did incredible work with the character.  But it didn’t stick.  It didn’t change conventional wisdom.

I doubt Geoff Johns will have much success in that regard either.  It’s hard to swim upstream against decades of conventional thinking.  But maybe it’s not impossible.  David changed the minds of one generation of comic book fans.  Johns might shape the opinions of another.  Plus, Johns’ new Aquaman is part of DC’s high profile “new 52.”  That’s still not SuperFriends level, but it’s more exposure than the character has experienced in decades.  The cumulative effect might eventually change public perception.  

I’m not holding my breath though.  Once public opinion has set in, it’s almost impossible to change.  But I can still enjoy a great Aquaman series.  And I can still appreciate the attempt to showcase him as a real superhero.

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By Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

It doesn’t seem probable, but a new graphic novel with Batman at the center of a classic Christmas story is simply terrific.

 

12134178683?profile=originalLee Bermejo writes and draws Batman: Noël ($22.99, DC Entertainment) which tells of a Batman/Joker battle through the lens of A Christmas Carol. At first blush this sounds like a terrible idea; the schmaltz of Charles Dickens would seem a poor fit for Gotham City. Amazingly, Bermejo makes it fit like a glove.

 

Well, a glove with brass bat-knuckles crunching into the face of a cowardly criminal, that is. On the Batman Grimness Scale – with Adam West’s campy Caped Crusader on one end and Frank Miller’s psychotic Dark Knight Returns on the other – Bermejo’s Batman leans strongly toward “Heartless.” Almost Scrooge-like, you might say.

 

So alert readers will realize immediately that Batman has a lesson to learn, and a voice-over – we don’t know whose voice until the end – tells the familiar tale of Scrooge meeting three spirits that change his perspective. There’s enough variation from the original to leave little doubt who is “Scrooge,” but it’s muddied enough that the Dickens tale remains largely intact. The “spirits” are characters everyone will recognize, and moreover, they work well metaphorically in plain old flesh and blood.

 

Bermejo has graphic novels like Luthor and Joker under his utility belt as an artist. Here, in his authorial debut, he pulls off the nearly impossible, scraping the barnacles off the most oft-told Christmas tale and successfully applying it where it would seem least likely to work.

 

Even if it didn’t, though, I’d still recommend Noël for the art alone. Bermejo has always been exceptional, but in this book we see a plausible leather-and-metal-clad Batman (his suit fairly creaks) and a Gotham rendered so lovingly that it, too, feels real.

 

Points go to colorist Barbara Ciardo too; her frozen, blue-white Gotham sucks the warmth right out of you. She wields the complementary colors just as well, giving a certain Kryptonian an inner glow entirely appropriate for a man fueled by the sun.

 

Batman: Noël hit comic shops Nov. 2 and bookstores Nov. 8. It’s not your typical holiday tale, but Batman isn’t your typical Scrooge.

 

Elsewhere:

 

12134179090?profile=original* I’ve never been the biggest fan of Lewis Trondheim, the French cartoonist best known for his role-playing-game parody series Dungeon. But his latest Little Nothings Vol. 4 (NBM, $14.99) was so entertaining that I’m going to have to re-read his oeuvre with fresh eyes.

 

This collection of one-pagers illustrates Trondheim’s adventures in a trip across the U.S.  It’s a travelog comprised of both the exotic and the mundane, and throughout we are treated to Trondheim’s curmudgeonly reactions. It’s like Andy Rooney commenting on a trip to France, only in reverse.

 

Little Nothings is illustrated in a cartoony style that would feel at home in a children’s book. But Trondheim’s urbane, self-deprecating humor is so dry it would go over the heads of children (and many adults). The French may be enamored of the broad comedy of Jerry Lewis, but you wouldn’t know it from Trondheim’s subtle and sarcastic wit.

 

12134180063?profile=original* Sometimes a comic-book story based on a videogame rises above its obvious limitations. Then you’ve got Bleedout Volume One (Archaia, $14.95).

 

Written by Mike Kennedy, Bleedout contains 10 chapters by 10 different artists that sets up what I presume is the premise of the game, detailing a world run out of oil and how Sunrise City, U.S.A., is now run by a criminal cabal. The 10 chapters explore the different factions and leaders who jointly control Sunrise, narrated by the mysterious Pilot, who wants to kill them all for revenge, and whose back story we piece together over the course of the book.

 

The problem with any graphic novel based on a videogame is that it can’t end – it just sets up the game, which also doesn’t end, so you can play it over and over. And that’s the problem with Bleedout. It’s all set-up, with no payoff.

 

Further, Pilot’s narration is the only voice we hear, so we don’t really “meet” anyone else – all the other characters are simply described, like (cough) players in a game. And the author’s tendency to use lines from Jesus’s betrayal in The Bible to describe Pilot is both pompous and wildly tone-deaf.

 

What redeems Bleedout is the art, which includes luminaries like Ben Templesmith and Howard Chaykin. If you’re looking for an actual story, though, you may need to wait for Volume Two.

 

Photos:

1. Lee Bermejo somehow combines the Dark Knight and Charles Dickens to good effect in Batman: Noel. Courtesy DC Entertainment.

2. Little Nothings Volume 4 gives free expression to Lewis Trondheim's sardonic wit. Courtesy NBM Publishing.

3. Bleedout Volume One, based on a videogame, makes you wish you'd bought the game instead. Courtesy Archaia. 

 

Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.

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Comics for 16 November 2011

68 HARDSHIP ONE SHOT

AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #674
AMERICAN PIN UP HC
ANDREW LOOMIS FIGURE DRAWING FOR ALL ITS HC
ANNE RICE SERVANT OF THE BONES #4 (OF 6)
ARCHIE BEST OF SAMM SCHWARTZ HC VOL 01
ARKHAM HORROR DANCE OF THE DAMNED
ASTRO CITY THE DARK AGE BK 2 BROTHERS IN ARMS
ATOMIC ROBO GHOST OF STATION X #3 (OF 6)
AVENGERS #19
AVENGERS ACADEMY #22
AVENGERS ORIGINS LUKE CAGE #1

BACK ISSUE #52
BATMAN #3
BATMAN A DEATH IN THE FAMILY TP NEW ED
BATMAN AND ROBIN TP VOL 02 BATMAN VS ROBIN
BIRDS OF PREY #3
BLUE BEETLE #3
BLUE ESTATE #7 (MR)
BOB POWELL TERROR HC
BONNIE LASS #3 (OF 4)
BOYS BUTCHER BAKER CANDLESTICKMAKER #5 (MR)

CAPTAIN AMERICA #4
CAPTAIN ATOM #3
CAPTAIN SWING TP (MR)
CARBON GREY ORIGINS #1 (OF 2) (MR)
CATWOMAN #3
CONAN ROAD OF KINGS #10

DARKNESS ACCURSED TP VOL 05
DC COMICS PRESENTS SUPERMAN THE KENTS #1
DC UNIVERSE ONLINE LEGENDS #17
DC UNIVERSE PRESENTS #3
DEADPOOL #46
DEADPOOL TEAM-UP TP VOL 03 BFFS
DEADPOOL TP VOL 07 SPACE ODDITY
DEAN KOONTZ NEVERMORE #5 (OF 6)
DOCTOR WHO A FAIRYTALE LIFE TP
DRAWING DOWN THE MOON SC
DREAM REAVERS #2 (OF 4)
DREAMER TP VOL 02

ELEPHANTMEN #36 (MR)
END OF NATIONS #1 (OF 4) (RES)
EPOCH #3 (OF 5)

FEAR ITSELF FEARLESS #3 (OF 12)
FEAR ITSELF #7 POINT THREE
FLASH THE ROAD TO FLASHPOINT HC
FRACTURE OF THE UNIVERSAL BOY GN (MR)

GENERATION HOPE #13 XREGB
GHOSTBUSTERS ONGOING #3
GI JOE A REAL AMERICAN HERO #172
GLADSTONES SCHOOL FOR WORLD CONQUERORS TP V1
GODZILLA LEGENDS #1 (OF 5)
GREEN LANTERN CORPS #3
GREEN LANTERN WAR OF THE GREEN LANTERNS HC

HAUNT #18
HAWKEN #1 (OF 6)

I AM CAPTAIN AMERICA #1
ILLUSTRATION MAGAZINE #35
INCREDIBLE HULK #2
IZOMBIE #19 (MR)

JACK AVARICE IS THE COURIER #3 (OF 5)
JOHN CARTER A PRINCESS OF MARS #3 (OF 5)
JUGHEAD #210
JUSTICE LEAGUE #3

KEVIN SMITH BIONIC MAN #4
KEY OF Z #2 (OF 4) (MR)
KIRBY GENESIS CAPTAIN VICTORY #1
KNIGHTS OF THE DINNER TABLE #180

LADY DEATH ORIGINS TP VOL 02
LEGENDS O/T DARK KNIGHT MARSHALL ROGERS HC
LEGION OF MONSTERS #2 (OF 4)

MASS EFFECT INVASION #2 (OF 4)
MMW GOLDEN AGE ALL WINNERS HC VOL 04
MORNING GLORIES #14 (MR)
MUDMAN #1
MY GREATEST ADVENTURE #2 (OF 6)

NEW MUTANTS #34 XREGB
NIGHTWING #3
NORTHLANDERS #46 (MR)

PLANET OF THE APES #8
POWER MAN AND IRON FIST COMEDY OF DEATH TP
PUNISHER #5

QUEEN SONJA #24

RED HOOD AND THE OUTLAWS #3

SANDMAN TP V1 PRELUDES & NOCTURNES NEW ED
SERGIO ARAGONES FUNNIES #5
SEVERED #4 (OF 7) (MR)
SIMPSONS COMICS #184
SIX GUNS #2 (OF 5)
SKULLKICKERS TP V2 FIVE FUNERALS & A BUCKET O
SNAKE EYES (ONGOING) TP VOL 01
SNAKE EYES ONGOING (IDW) #7
SPEED RACER CIRCLE OF VENGEANCE #1 (OF 4)
SPIDER SATANS SEVEN SWORDSMEN GN VOL 01
SPIDER-MAN TORMENT TP NEW PTG
STAND NIGHT HAS COME #4 (OF 6)
STAR TREK 100 PAGE SPECTACULAR
STAR WARS INVASION REVELATIONS #5 (OF 5)
SUPERGIRL #3

TEEN TITANS TEAM BUILDING TP
THOR WORLD EATERS TP
THUNDERBOLTS #165
TRANSFORMERS ONGOING #30
TRANSFORMERS TIMELINES #6 STUNTI CON JOB

ULTIMATE COMICS DOOMSDAY TP
ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #3 2ND PTG
ULTIMATE COMICS X-MEN #3

VALVE PRESENTS SACRIFICE & OTHER STEAM POWER
VENOM #9

WALKING DEAD #91 (MR)
WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #46 (MR)
WAR GODDESS #3 (MR)
WHO IS JAKE ELLIS TP VOL 01
WOLVERINE BEST THERE IS #11
WOLVERINE PUNISHER GHOST RIDER OFF INDEX MU #4
WONDER WOMAN #3

X-23 #17
X-FACTOR #227
X-MEN #21 XREGB
X-MEN REGENESIS #1 2ND PTG CYCLOPS VAR
X-MEN REGENESIS #1 2ND PTG WOLVERINE VAR
X-MEN SCHISM #1 (OF 5) X PTG VA
X-MEN SCHISM #4 (OF 5) X PTG VAR
XENOHOLICS #2 (MR)

YOUNG JUSTICE #10

ZATANNA TP VOL 02 SHADES OF THE PAST
ZORRO RIDES AGAIN #5 (OF 12)

This posting is a copy of the list Comics & Collectibles posted on Facebook. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.

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By Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

Occasionally someone executes a standard storytelling device with such dazzling skill that it reminds you why that device became standard in the first place. Rebecca Guay is that someone, with A Flight of Angels (DC/Vertigo, $24.99).

 

12134155253?profile=originalAn award-winning fantasy artist, Guay has set up an anthology of five stories on a single theme, with the narrators gathered together in a framing device that amounts to a sixth story. This is an approach to anthologies at least as old as The Canterbury Tales, so it is well-trod ground – a minus if it feels clichéd, which this does not. And it’s a plus when you consider how quickly the reader will grasp the ground rules.

 

The framing story begins with a wounded, unconscious angel falling into a forest in Faerie. Various characters – faeries, a pixie, a hag, a hobgoblin, a trickster, etc. – gather to determine what to do: Heal it, or kill it?


They hold a tribunal, where five characters spin tales on who or what they imagine this angel to be. Each of these stories is written by a master of fantasy, including Holly Black (The Spiderwick Chronicles), Louise Hawes (Vanishing Point), Alisa Kwitney (The Dreaming), Todd Mitchell (The Traitor King) and Bill Willingham (Fables). Each quickly establishes a fully-fleshed, entertaining world of magical rules and mythical characters, wherein they place a complete story, with beginning, middle and end.  Of course, each story has something to do with angels, but otherwise no two are alike.

 

To drive this home, Guay uses five different artistic techniques on the five different stories. Even to a novice they are all obviously by the same artist, but just as obviously Guay chooses a different media or style to reflect the tone of the story. The result is a breathtaking artistic tour de force.

 

Nor does Guay short-shrift the framing device, which is written by Black. Here the artist opts for a duotone wash that reflects the story’s location – the ethereal land of Faerie – and is a clever, subliminal shorthand to remind the reader of transitions into and out of the five stories, which are in full color. Further, the framing device is a fully-realized story in itself, as we learn the origins of Faerie (it goes back to Lucifer’s rebellion), the relationships among the characters (including a bitter faerie lord and the faerie girl who dumped him), character development (a naïve, unworldly faun who becomes less so by the end) and a shocking conclusion.

 

This is a book that is simultaneously as old as campfire tales and as fresh and full of possibility as the dawn. It’s the sort of book that makes me proud to be a comics fan.

 

Elsewhere:

 

12134155865?profile=originalSomebody else who likes comics is the U.S. government! It discovered as long ago as the 1940s that comics were a good way to disseminate information, even to those who would never take the time to read a manual – and it’s been publishing them ever since.

 

Earlier this year, Abrams ComicArts did the world a favor by assembling a collection of government comics created by comics legend Will Eisner (P.S. Magazine: The Best of Preventive Maintenance Monthly). Now they’ve added Government Issue: Comics for the People, 1940s-2000s ($29.95), an overview of the zillions of other comics the government has produced. And it is a gold mine of the serious, the silly and the truly strange stuff the government thinks we ought to know.

 

Want to know how to duck and cover during a nuclear war? How to properly salute? How Social Security disability works? How to clean and operate an M-16? How to know you have syphilis? If so, Uncles Sam’s got a comic book for you, and you can find it in Government Issue!

 

Some of these comics are incredibly cheesy, which is worth a laugh. But some are by top-flight cartoonists who lend their characters to the cause, such as Al Capp’s “Li’l Abner Joins the Navy!”,  “Dennis the Menace Takes a Poke at Poison!” and the Peanuts crew explaining amblyopia (“Security Is an Eye Patch”). You’ll also run across big-name artists like Milton Caniff (Terry and the Pirates”), Joe Kubert (Sgt. Rock) and Kurt Schaffenberger (Lois Lane).

 

The comics are selected by Richard Graham, an associated professor and media services librarian at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, with a foreword by Sid Jacobson, co-creator of the 9/11 Report: A Graphic Adaptation. The comics are separated by category, but united in their importance to pop-culture history – and, too often, their painful sincerity.

 

Art:

1. Vertigo's A Flight of Angels is an anthology of fantasy stories. Courtesy DC Entertainment Inc.

2. Government Issue is an overview of the comics Uncle Sam has produced over the last seven decades. Courtesy Abrams ComicArts. 

 

Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com.

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Comics for 9 November 2011

30 DAYS OF NIGHT ONGOING #2

ALL NEW BATMAN THE BRAVE AND THE BOLD #13
ARTIFACTS #11 (OF 13)
AVENGERS ORIGINS VISION #1
AVENGING SPIDER-MAN #1

BALTIMORE CURSE BELLS #4
BATGIRL #3
BATMAN #1 2ND PTG
BATMAN AND ROBIN #3
BATMAN STREETS OF GOTHAM TP VOL 02 LEVIATHAN
BATTLE SCARS #1 (OF 6)
BATWOMAN #3
BLACK PANTHER MOST DANGEROUS MAN ALIVE #525
BOYS TP VOL 09 BIG RIDE
BTVS SEASON 9 FREEFALL #3

CHRONICLES OF WORMWOOD LAST BATTLE TP (MR)
CRAWL TO ME #4 (OF 4)

DARKWING DUCK #18
DC COMICS PRESENTS BATMAN BAD #1
DCU ONLINE LEGENDS TP VOL 01
DEATHSTROKE #3
DEMON KNIGHTS #3
DOLLHOUSE EPITAPHS #5 (OF 5)
DUCKTALES #6
DUNGEONS & DRAGONS DRIZZT #3 (OF 5)

ESSENTIAL SGT FURY TP VOL 01
EXTRAORDINARY ADVENTURES ADELE BLANC SEC HC V2

FANTASTIC FOUR BY JOHN BYRNE OMNIBUS HC VOL 01
FEAR ITSELF #7 POINT TWO
FEMME FATALES MINIMATES SERIES 1 BOX SET
FRANKENSTEIN AGENT OF SHADE #3

GARTH ENNIS JENNIFER BLOOD #6 (MR)
GFT PRESENTS NEVERLAND HOOK #1
GHOST RIDER #5
GODZILLA GANGSTERS AND GOLIATHS TP
GOON TP VOL 05 WICKED INCLINATIONS 2ND ED
GREEN LANTERN #3
GRIFTER #3
GRIMM FAIRY TALES #65 (MR)

HELLRAISER #7 (MR)
HELLRAISER MASTERPIECES #1 (MR)
HP LOVECRAFT THE DUNWICH HORROR #2 (OF 4)
HUNTRESS #2 (OF 6)

INCREDIBLE HULKS HEART OF MONSTER TP

JACK AVARICE IS THE COURIER #2 (OF 5)
JOHN CARTER OF MARS WORLD OF MARS #2 (OF 5)
JOURNEY INTO MYSTERY #631
JURASSIC PARK DANGEROUS GAMES #3 (OF 5)

KILL SHAKESPEARE TP VOL 02
KIRBY GENESIS SILVER STAR #1
KNIGHTINGAIL #1
KULL THE CAT & THE SKULL #2 (OF 4)

LAST PHANTOM ANNUAL
LEGION LOST #3
LILY RENEE ESCAPE ARTIST GN

MAGNETO NOT A HERO #1 (OF 4)
MEGA MAN #7
MEGA MAN GIGAMIX TP VOL 03 (OF 3)
MISSION TP
MISTER TERRIFIC #3

NEW AVENGERS #18

OPERATION BROKEN WINGS 1936 #1 (OF 3) (MR)
ORCHID #2
OZ WONDERFUL WIZARD OF OZ TP

PC CAST HOUSE OF NIGHT #1 (OF 5)
PENGUIN PAIN AND PREJUDICE #2 (OF 5)
PIGS #3 (MR)
POINT ONE #1
PUNISHERMAX #19 (MR)
PUNISHERMAX BULLSEYE TP (MR)

RACHEL RISING #3
RED SONJA #58
REED GUNTHER TP VOL 01
RESURRECTION MAN #3
RETURN O/T MONSTERS BLACK BAT VS DRACULA
RETURN O/T MONSTERS DOMINO LADY VS MUMMY
RETURN O/T MONSTERS SPIDER VS WEREWOLF
RETURN TO PERDITION HC (RES) (MR)
ROBERT JORDAN WHEEL OF TIME EYE O/T WORLD #16

SAGA OF THE SWAMP THING HC BOOK 06 (MR)
SALEMS DAUGHTER HAUNTING #3
SILVER AGE OF COMICS SC
SIMON & KIRBY HC LIBRARY CRIME
SNOWED IN ONE SHOT
SPACE WARPED #5 (OF 6)
SPIDER-MAN MATTERS OF LIFE AND DEATH TP
STAR TREK LEGION OF SUPERHEROES #2 (OF 6)
STAR WARS DARTH VADER & THE LOST COMMAND HC
SUICIDE SQUAD #3
SUPERBOY #3
SUPERMAN LAST STAND OF NEW KRYPTON TP VOL 01

TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #2 3RD
TERMINATOR ROBOCOP KILL HUMAN #4 (OF 4)
THE OCCULTIST #1 (OF 3)
THOR IRON MAN GOD COMPLEX TP

ULTIMATE COMICS SPIDER-MAN #4
UNCANNY X-FORCE #17
UNWRITTEN #31 (MR)

VERTIGO RESURRECTED MY FAITH IN FRANKIE #1 (MR)

WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #45 (MR)
WITCHBLADE #149
WOLVERINE #18 XREGG
WULF #4

X-MEN LEGACY #258

YOUNG JUSTICE AQUALAD 6-IN AF

ZOMBIES THAT ATE THE WORLD HC (MR) This list is a copy of the list that Comics & Collectibles of Memphis posted on their Facebook page. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.
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By Andrew A. Smith

Scripps Howard News Service

 

They say crime doesn’t pay, but Crime Does Not Pay sure did. Now, thanks to Dark Horse, we can see what made this particular comic book so successful – and notorious.

 

Crime Does Not Pay began in 1942 at small Lev Gleason publications, co-edited by Bob Wood and Charles Biro, who contributed stories and art as well. It was the first “true crime” comic book, which is to say it purported to relate actual crimes committed by actual criminals, occasionally famous ones like Lucky Luciano and Baby Face Nelson. Of course, reality often took a back seat to fiction when the story called for it, or out of sheer sloppiness. It was a comic book, not a history book!

 

12134141095?profile=originalBut fiction or not, Crime Does Not Pay sold like gangbusters, with reports of anywhere from one to four million copies a month at its peak, even when there were dozens of imitators on the stands. The secret was its sheer luridness; covers showed bullets flying, brains exploding, faces pushed into burning stoves, you name it. Given the title, there was always some sort of coda at the end explaining how the criminal was killed or imprisoned, but nobody was fooled that this was a Sunday school lesson, given how the preceding pages would glorify the criminal’s short, fast life full of sex, violence and money. Plus, the word “CRIME” was huge on the cover, with “Does Not Pay” almost an afterthought.

 

The gusto with which Biro and Wood delivered the goods made Crime a target for censors, and it was a favorite example of such notables as Fredric Wertham, author of the anti-comics screed Seduction of the Innocent. The outrage against comic books like Crime culminated in 1954 with the infamous Comics Code, which nearly killed the industry and definitely put a bullet through the “true crime” genre. Within a year, Crime Does Not Pay and its ilk were out of business.

 

In a strange coda, co-editor Wood murdered his girlfriend in a style reminiscent of a Crime Does Not Pay story (he bludgeoned her to death with a clothes iron in a hotel room during a long drinking binge). After serving time, Wood was himself murdered, probably over gambling debts.

 

Which, in a roundabout way, brings us to Blackjacked and Pistol-Whipped: A Crime Does Not Pay Primer (Dark Horse, $19.99). This collection of Crime Does Not Pay tales is the first such I’ve seen, and the cover – a recreation of the style of the day by Pete Poplaski – depicts Wood’s horrific act of violence. The interior contains an introduction by 100 Bullets writer Brian Azzarello; a lengthy foreword by comics publisher, historian and editor Denis Kitchen; and 24 representative stories from Crime Does Not Pay at its most lurid.

 

12134141692?profile=originalThese stories are utterly absent any redeeming value, which is probably why they’re so incredibly entertaining. They are the guiltiest of guilty pleasures. But another factor is the talent – not only were the stories short and punchy, but the art was often by the likes of Dan Barry (Flash Gordon), Carmine Infantino (The Flash), Fred Guardineer (Zatara the Magician) and George Tuska (Iron Man).  

 

And the influence of Crime Does Not Pay lives on, although not in obvious ways. The apex of violence found in 1940s comic books doesn’t hold a candle to what you can see on TV and in the movies today, so we’ll likely never see another successful “true crime” comic book. But supposedly Crime inspired Harvey Kurtzman’s critically acclaimed war comics from EC Comics in the early 1950s, a high-water mark creators are still trying to top. And the host of Crime – Mr. Crime, a ghostly, ghastly figure in a sheet with “CRIME” emblazoned on a top hat – preceded and probably inspired the three punny “ghoulunatics” who hosted EC’s horror comics, which in turn served as models for the legion of horror hosts that have followed.

 

Which is not to say Crime Does Not Pay was itself wholly original. Mr. Crime was a rip-off of “Mr. Coffee-Nerves,” the corporate mascot of Postum coffee substitute. And the name “Crime Does Not Pay” was lifted from a series of MGM movie shorts which were turned into a long-running radio show.

 

But who cares? Kids bought Crime for the crime, and the rest didn’t matter. Even in today’s more jaded times, the guilt-free exuberance the creators poured into every bullet and blood spatter is infectious. This Crime pays, with hours of fun.

 

Art:

1. Blackjacked and Pistol-Whipped is a guilty pleasure from the 1950s. Courtesy Dark Horse Books

2. A Blackjacked interior page from Crime Does Not Pay #41 (September, 1945). Courtesy Dark Horse Books.

 

 Contact Andrew A. Smith of the Memphis Commercial Appeal at capncomics@aol.com

 


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Comics for 2 November 2011

100 SEXIEST WOMEN IN COMICS SC 30 DAYS OF NIGHT NIGHT AGAIN TP 7 WARRIORS #1 (OF 3) (MR) ABSOLUTE SANDMAN HC VOL 05 (MR) ACTION COMICS #3 ALTER EGO #105 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #673 AMERICAN VAMPIRE #20 (MR) ANDREW LOOMIS DRAWING HEAD & HANDS HC ANIMAL MAN #3 ANITA BLAKE CIRCUS DAMNED SCOUNDREL #2 (OF 5) ASTERIX OMNIBUS SC VOL 01 NEW PTG ASTERIX OMNIBUS SC VOL 02 NEW PTG AVENGERS 1959 #3 (OF 5) AVENGERS ACADEMY #21 AVENGERS ORIGINS ANT-MAN AND WASP #1 BATMAN GRASP BY WILLIAMS T/S BATMAN NOEL DELUXE EDITION HC BATWING #3 BETRAYAL O/T PLANET O/T APES #1 (OF 4) BLOOD RED DRAGON #1 BOYS #60 (MR) CHARISMAGIC #3 CLASSIC GI JOE TP VOL 13 COLD WAR #2 CRITTER #4 (OF 4) CROSSED PSYCHOPATH #5 (OF 7) (RES) (MR) DAREDEVIL #4 2ND PTG DARK SHADOWS #1 DARKWING DUCK CAMPAIGN CARNAGE TP DETECTIVE COMICS #3 DUKE NUKEM GLORIOUS BASTARD #4 (OF 4) ELRIC THE BALANCE LOST #5 FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND RETRO #71 FEAR AGENT #32 OUT OF STEP (PT 5 OF 5) FEAR ITSELF #7 POINT ONE FEAR ITSELF FEARLESS #2 (OF 12) FLIGHT OF ANGELS HC (MR) GFT MYTHS & LEGENDS #9 GI JOE VOL 2 ONGOING #7 GIANT SIZED ELEPHANTMEN #1 GOON #36 GREEN ARROW #3 GREEN HORNET #19 HACK SLASH #9 HACK SLASH EVA MONSTERS BALL #4 (MR) HAWK AND DOVE #3 HEART #1 (OF 4) (MR) HELLBOY HOUSE OF THE LIVING DEAD HC HULK #44 INFINITE HC (NET) INFINITE VACATION #3 (OF 5) INVINCIBLE #84 IRREDEEMABLE #31 JACK AVARICE IS THE COURIER #1 (OF 5) JOE THE BARBARIAN DELUXE ED HC (MR) JUSTICE LEAGUE INTERNATIONAL #3 KULT #4 (OF 4) LADY DEATH (ONGOING) #11 (MR) LAST OF THE GREATS #2 LEAGUE EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN OMNIBUS HC LEGEND OF OZ THE WICKED WEST #1 MARKSMEN #4 (OF 6) MEN OF WAR #3 MIGHTY THOR #6 MMW FANTASTIC FOUR HC VOL 13 MOON KNIGHT #7 MORIARTY #6 MYSTIC #4 (OF 4) NEW MUTANTS #33 XREGB NEXT ISSUE PROJECT #3 (CRACK COMICS #63) NIGHT O/T LIVING DEAD DEATH VALLEY #5 (OF 5) (MR) NORDGUARD GN VOL 01 ACROSS THIN ICE OMAC #3 ONE #6 (OF 10) OUR LOVE IS REAL ONE SHOT (MR) PATRICIA BRIGGS ALPHA & OMEGA CRY WOLF V1 #2 PEANUTS #0 PREVIEWS #278 NOVEMBER 2011 QUEEN SONJA #23 RED LANTERNS #3 RINSE #3 ROGER LANGRIDGES SNARKED #2 ROTTEN TP VOL 02 REVIVAL O/T FITTEST ROUTE DES MAISONS ROUGES #6 (OF 6) SAVAGE DRAGON #175 SCOOBY DOO WHERE ARE YOU #15 SHAME ITSELF #1 SIX GUNS #1 (OF 5) SOMEDAY FUNNIES HC SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #230 SOULFIRE VOL 3 #5 SPAWN #213 STAN LEE TRAVELER #12 STAR TREK ONGOING #2 STATIC SHOCK #3 STORMWATCH #3 STRANGE TALENT OF LUTHER STRODE #2 (OF 6) (MR) SUPERMAN RETURN OF DOOMSDAY TP SUPERNATURAL #2 (OF 6) SWAMP THING #3 SWEET TOOTH #27 (MR) TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES ONGOING #1 3RD THOR DEVIANTS SAGA #1 (OF 5) TRANSFORMERS ONGOING #29 TRANSFORMERS TP VOL 05 CHAOS THEORY TRUE BLOOD FRENCH QUARTER #3 (OF 6) UNCANNY X-MEN #1 XREGB USAGI YOJIMBO #141 VILLAINS FOR HIRE POINT ONE #1 (OF 5) WALKING DEAD WEEKLY #44 (MR) WARLORD OF MARS #12 WITCH DOCTOR #4 (OF 4) X-23 #16 X-MEN #20 XREGB I've copied this list from the posting at memphiscomics.com. Arrivals at your LCS may vary.
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Meta-Textual Musings

 

12134142288?profile=originalThere’s a saying in the comic book world that every fan wishes they were a comic book writer.  Supposedly, the axiom is exponentially true for comic book columnists.  Those who write about comics wish they wrote comics themselves.  However, lately, I’ve gotten the impression that the reverse is also true.  I think that a lot of comic book writers secretly wish that they that had my job.  (By job, I mean the thing I do on my day off for fun and for free.) 

            Comic book writers wish they could comment on the comic book industry.  They entertain fans by writing stories but they don’t have the opportunity to offer perspective on the industry as a whole.  They can’t talk about trends.  They can’t criticize clichés.  They can’t speculate on the future.  When it comes to the bigger picture, comic book writers don’t always have a voice.

            Some writers, and former writers, are able to double as columnists.  Peter David maintains his “But I Digress” column for Comics Buyers’ Guide.  Jason Aaron and Ron Marz write columns for Comic Book Resources (“Where the Hell Am I” and “Shelf Life” respectively).  Grant Morrison outdid every comic book pundit with his non-fiction book Supergods.  That’s only a small sample. 

            Yet a lot of writers don’t have that kind of outlet.  Therefore, in a time-honored tradition, several writers have taken to writing about comics in comics.  This can be done well.  It can be done humorously or self-reflectively.  This can also be done poorly.  It can disrupt the narrative or upset the feel of the book. 

            Bill Willingham’s Fables is, unfortunately, an example of botched commentary.  “Fables” has always been something separate.  It’s not a superhero title and it’s not part of a shared superhero universe.  As such, it was a wonderful alternative for both superhero and non-superhero fans alike.  But, this year, Fables tried to be something it wasn’t: a superhero book.12134143475?profile=original

            After failing to defeat Mr. Dark on numerous occasions, Pinocchio had the idea that the only way the good Fables could beat him was to form a superhero team.  So Pinocchio ran his fellow Fables through a series of superhero auditions.  They devised costumes and codenames.   Pinocchio argued with Ozma for the inclusion of certain Fables based on their ability to fulfill comic book conventions.  Ozma, unaware of those conventions, criticized them and exposed their pointlessness.  The ongoing arguments became a running commentary on superhero clichés and comic books in general. 

            Theoretically, it could have worked.  Regrettably, it didn’t.  Although it wasn’t out of character for the perpetually childish Pinocchio to be a comic book fan, it was a completely new addition to the character.  It felt like an insertion, imposed on the character for the sake of this particular story.  It was also completely new for there to be any reference to superheroes or comics at all.  Willingham failed to establish that this world even had comic books, let alone the well-defined superhero genre of our world.  The tone was therefore inconsistent with the title up to that point.  It wouldn’t have been nearly as out of place in the sister title, Jack of Fables, which routinely commented on the conventions of literature and myth.  But there was no precedent for it in Fables.

Yet the biggest problem was that the whole idea of the superhero team turned out to be irrelevant.  Mr. Dark was defeated, but not by the superhero team.  They didn’t even get into action before they were disbanded.  Perhaps that was Willingham’s intentional comment on the uselessness of superheroes.  Whatever the reason, it was also a failure of Story-Telling 101.  Willingham introduced a huge digression that had no eventual impact on the story or on the characters in it.

        12134144062?profile=original    Happily, Robert Kirkman’s Invincible is an example of how this can be done well.  Like “Fables,” “Invincible” has always been something separate.  Invincible is an independent superhero.  Although he’s had a few spin-offs (Atom Eve, Guarding the Globe) and guest-stars (Tech Jacket, Savage Dragon), Invincible is primarily a self-contained story.  This year, Kirkman took a brief moment to comment on the state of comic books and superheroes.

            Invincible had spent almost a year in space fighting the Viltrumite Empire.  With the war over, Invincible returned home.  However, after his long absence, Mark Grayson (aka Invincible) had to put a lot of the pieces of his life back into place.  He reconnected with his girlfriend.  He visited old friends.  He checked in on his former college roommate.  And he stopped by his local comic book shop to pick up a pretty full pull list.  While there, Mark talked to other comic book fans about what was going on and what he had missed.

           
This little bit of commentary fit right in with Invincible.  Kirkman had long-established that comics were a part of this world and a part of Mark’s life.  Mark’s father wrote superhero novels in his secret identity.  Mark was a big comic book fan- he even had a poster in his room of his favorite hero, Science Dog.  Kirkman had also previously bent the wall between superhero fiction and superhero commentary.  He had Invincible fight his fictional hero, Science Dog, before revealing that this S.D. was a shape-shifter or something like that.  So it was in character for Mark Grayson to have an opinion on comic books and well within the established tone of the book.

            12134144465?profile=originalKirkman was also wise to keep his hand partially hidden.  As readers, we might think that Mark or the other characters were acting as a mouthpiece for the writer.  But Kirkman left just enough room for us to acknowledge that Kirkman’s opinions were maybe not the same as his characters.  In that way, Kirkman was able to have his cake and eat it too.  He wrote about comic books in a comic book in a way that was consistent with the established setting of that title.  

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