mcduck |
Walt Disney's Comics and Stories
Uncle $crooge
Identity Crisis
Planetary
JSA: Strange Adventures
Liberty Meadows
The Norm Magazine
Jim Starlin's Cosmic Guard
Is that eclectic enough?
-> Ray.
P.S. "The views, opinions, and judgments expressed in this message are solely those of the author. The message content has not been reviewed or approved by Thomson or its affiliates."
Jenny Scott |
I just read JSA Strange Adventures and was delighted to discover that Amazing Stories plays a starring role! Amazing Stories founder Hugo Gernsback is a character in the story, as is veteran science-fiction author Jack Williamson, whose first Amazing Stories story was published in 1928. Williamson wrote a dramatic, interplanetary "1,000 Words" story for our November issue (#605), which is due out next month. The circle is now complete!
Jenny
mcduck |
I just read JSA Strange Adventures and was delighted to discover that Amazing Stories plays a starring role!
There has already been a full-page article about "JSA: Strange Adventures" in the magazine: look again at page 33 of #604.
It might not be a bad idea to explore the possibility of placing an advertisement for the revived magazine in a future issue of Strange Adventures; the majority of the comic's readers may not realize that Amazing Stories exists in the present day.
-> Ray.
P.S. "The views, opinions, and judgments expressed in this message are solely those of the author. The message content has not been reviewed or approved by Thomson or its affiliates."
Jenny Scott |
There has already been a full-page article about "JSA: Strange Adventures" in the magazine: look again at page 33 of #604....
Heh. Apparently, the time between when we edit a sidebar like that one ("Waiting in the Wings") and when the issue comes out is longer than my memory! Good catch.
Now if only they'd time travel to 2004 and put current editor-in-chief, Dave Gross, in the story. . . .
Jenny
mcduck |
Now if only they'd time travel to 2004 and put current editor-in-chief, Dave Gross, in the story. . . .
Do you really want to see him hangin' with Jakeem Thunder?
I'd say that we're better off in the golden age for this story.-> Ray.
P.S. "The views, opinions, and judgments expressed in this message are solely those of the author. The message content has not been reviewed or approved by Thomson or its affiliates."
Vic Wertz Chief Technical Officer |
I buy a couple dozen titles each month. The ones that get pulled from the pile first are Strangers in Paradise, which sadly doesn't really fit into our Amazing Stories vision, and then the next most likely title is, well... anything by Brian Michael Bendis. Especially Powers (though I only buy the Powers trades, since they usually have some neat bonus stuff in them).
-Vic.
.
Robert Head |
...veteran science-fiction author Jack Williamson, whose first Amazing Stories story was published in 1928. Williamson wrote a dramatic, interplanetary "1,000 Words" story for our November issue (#605), which is due out next month. The circle is now complete!
Jenny
How many authors who published in 1928 are still alive? Wow!
Zherog Contributor |
Rob Stewart |
I read a lot of comics each month and I would read more if I could afford them.
Fables
Amazing Spiderman
Ultimate Spiderman
Ultimate X-Men
Ultimate Fantasic Four
Ultimate Elektra
Ultimate Nightmare
Astonishing X-Men - Joss Whedon tells a great X-Men Story
Avergers
Identity Crisis
The Outsiders
Teen Titans
Conan
Wanted
She-Hulk
Supreme Power
Bite Club
Marvel Knights Spiderman
Challengers of the Unknown
Looking forward to:
The Return of Hal Jorden
Strange by Stracynski
Any Astro City
Stracynski finishing
Elric
Hawaiian Dick: The Last Resort #1
Mike McArtor Contributor |
I read a lot of comics each month and I would read more if I could afford them.
I haven't read comics in far too long, although going through my collection last night reminded me that I want to find a local comic shop. Anyway, I used to read anything X-Men, but that drained my pocketbook and dayplanner at an astonishing rate. I'm thinking once I find a comic book shop, I'll be looking at getting back into Ultimate X-Men. There are other X-books that I'd also like to pick up, if they're still around, but I'm not going to embarrass myself by mentioning a title no longer in print. ;)
Tell me about this Astonishing X-Men...
Jenny Scott |
I haven't read comics in far too long, although going through my collection last night reminded me that I want to find a local comic shop.
Not to play favorites, but try The Dreaming Comics and Games, on the Ave (5226 University Way NE, Seattle). Owner is a really nice guy I used to work with. Their number is (206) 525-9394; I don't think they have a website.
Jenny
Oliver von Spreckelsen |
Mature reads...
Y - The Last Man
100 Bulletts
Bone
Stranger In Paradise
Artesia
Fallen Angel
Supreme Power
Identity Crisis
Gotham Central
Sleeper
Ex Machina
Good reads
Teen Titans
Green Arrow
Exiles
The Pulse
Birds Of Prey
Invincible
Superman/Batman
Outsiders
Fantastic Four
Have fun...
Mike McArtor Contributor |
Not to play favorites, but try The Dreaming Comics and Games, on the Ave (5226 University Way NE, Seattle). Owner is a really nice guy I used to work with. Their number is (206) 525-9394; I don't think they have a website.
Jenny
Thanks Jenny!
By coincidence, Rob also mentioned that place, and since it's relatively close to where I live...I'll be going there in the not-too-distant future. They have been warned! ;D
David Gehring |
I would have to go with the following in no particular order:
1) Amazing Spider-man ( MJS is just a great writer )
2) Astonishing X-men ( ditto for Whedon )
3) Conan ( Dark Horse is doing wonders with my favorite barbarian)
4) Uncanny X-men ( Claremont and Davis are doing great X work )
5) Superman/Batman ( Should be named World's Finest )
6) Astro City ( whenever it comes out )
7) JSA ( Johns is just one of the best writers out there )
8) Flash ( see #7)
9) Teen Titans ( see #7 and excellent artwork by McKone)
10) Legion of Super Heroes ( Waid and Kitson have a hit here )
Stebehil |
Well, to add something more exotic:
There is a graphic novel from france, the german title would translate as: "Chronicles of the Black Moon", originally from the publisher Dargaud in France, written by Francois Marcela Froideval. (who, by the way, co-authored the original Oriental Adventures rulebook for AD&D)
(Publishers site: http://lalunenoire.dargaud.com/)
The series (currently 10 german parts) is self-described as "a mixture between Conan and Elric stories" or something similar.
It is definitly worth getting, but I´n not aware if there is a english translation.
Cold Steel |
1. Anything from Devil's Due comics(Homeland,Exile, both starring Drizz't Urd'len;and Dragonlance:the legend of Huma)
2. X-factor
By X-Factor i mean the one thats coming out this month based on the second team not the essential X-Factor#1(which was really The rehashed original X-Men(cyclops,marvel girl(alive again i see),angel,iceman and the beast) which was such a waste of paper, it almost made me give up comics until the Govt' version of X-factor2 came(this was before onslaught which was the final nail on marvel's coffin).
James Keegan |
1. Hellboy (especially the collected graphic novels)
2. BPRD
3. Powers
Those are the monthlies. Graphic novels:
1. 100% by Paul Pope
2. The Marquis by Guy Davis
3. Watchmen by Alan Moore
4. Black Hole by Charles Burnes
5. Jimmy Corrigan by Chris Ware
6. Bighead, Clumsy, Unlikely, Any Easy Intimacy by Jeffrey Brown
7. Blankets by Craig Thompson
There are a lot of other books that I'm leaving off, but those are the ones I like the most. Lately, I tend to find the indie/autobio stuff to be really interesting.
JuanNavarro |
The Order of the Stick is a must read for D&D fans. You can find it at http://www.giantitp.com/cgi-bin/GiantITP/ootscript
Helll yeah! Love that comic! Every time we're about to play D&D I think we take like an hour talking about that strip! Oy, it's good!
My comic picks:1. X-men (All of them!)
2. New Avengers
3. RUnaways (the digest are great!)
4. Young Avengers
5. Green Lantern
6. Loveless ( best western comic out there!)
7. Usagi Yojimbo (Awesome)
8. TMNT (new Mirage Series)
9. 52 ( digging it!)
10. Punisher (Garth Ennis is the best thing to happen to that book)
I also dig a lot of webcomics:
ONE
http://www.webcomicsnation.com/cinemacomics/one_season_1
The Second Revolution is about to begin. Can ONE person really change the world? PG-13 RATED
then there's Uncle WHite comics:
http://uncle-white.livejournal.com/
and of course, my comic, VIGIL isn't too shabby either...
http://www.graphicsmash.com/comics/vigil.php
Shameless....I know.
JuanNavarro |
1. Hellboy (especially the collected graphic novels)
2. BPRD
3. PowersThose are the monthlies. Graphic novels:
1. 100% by Paul Pope
2. The Marquis by Guy Davis
3. Watchmen by Alan Moore
4. Black Hole by Charles Burnes
5. Jimmy Corrigan by Chris Ware
6. Bighead, Clumsy, Unlikely, Any Easy Intimacy by Jeffrey Brown
7. Blankets by Craig Thompson
There are a lot of other books that I'm leaving off, but those are the ones I like the most. Lately, I tend to find the indie/autobio stuff to be really interesting.
Thumbs up on your whole list!
R-type |
I get most the X-titles every month because I'm a faithful Marvel zombie who has collected certain titles for two thirds of my life and cant give up now!
I often grab anything that grabs my attention on the rack and have a longbox full of one-offs, single issues and 'crap' I dont know why I own.
So I end up spending silly amounts of cash on comics in a month!
X-Factor is the most looked forward to lately.
I also get anything by BKV, Grant Morrison and Neil Gaiman.
Runnaways, Young Avengers, Y the Last Man and The Walking Dead are like: ice-cold from-the-fridge milk-chocolate-peices slowly melting in the mouth, in between sips of hot tea for the soul.
Not enjoying Civil War much.
Check this out: http://wolfskin.ws/
I think I like it!
Michael_Proteau |
All good threads, like dead superheroes eventually come back.
My must read list:
Rex Mundi (Dark Horse)
Conan (Dark Horse)
Red Sonja (Dynamite)
New Avengers/Mighty Avengers (Marvel)
all things Brubaker (Criminal, Daredevil, Captain America, Iron Fist, Uncanny X-Men)
Kurt Busiek's Astro City (Wildstorm)
Astonishing X-Men (Marvel)
Ms. Marvel (Marvel)
Fall of Cthullhu
Savage Tales
and in trades
Powers
Fables
Y the Last Man
I am also picking up Justice League, Justice SOciety, and Brave and the Bold, but they are on iffy ground as to whether I will continue.
-M
The Eldritch Mr. Shiny |
- Hellboy
- Wake
- The Light Brigade
- Squee's Big Giant Book of Unspeakable Horror
- Billy Hazelnuts
- A Graphic Trubute to September 11th (parts 1 and 2)
- The.Bag.On.Line.Adventures/The Amory Wars/Good Apollo I'm Burning Star 4/The Second Stage Turbine Blade/Whatever the f&!~ Claudio Sanchez is doing these days besides making music.
- Anything other than stated above by Jhonen Vasquez. The guy's amazing.
kahoolin |
I only read TPBs as I like the feel of a book rather than a flimsy little comic. My list of titles that I have collected some/most/all of includes:
-Sandman
-Fables
-Y: The Last Man
-Battle Angel Alita (my all time favourite)
-Lone Wolf & Cub
-Blade of the Immortal
-Shi
-Elfquest
-Usagi Yojimbo
-The new Dark Horse Conans (Tower of the Elephant etc)
-Slaine
-Knights of the Dinner Table
-And as many of the old TMNT's as I can get my hands on.
Torpedo |
The best books I'm reading right now* are (in no particular order):
Nova
New Avengers
Astonishing X-Men
JSA
Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight
Star Wars: Dark Times
Immortal Iron Fist
*check the date of this post. I reserve the right to change these opinions when the creative teams change and / or the storylines go south.
Out of those, Immortal Iron Fist is the best. It is everything a comic book should be. Fantastical adventure? check. Pulse-pounding action? check. Good guys that are good and bad guys that are bad? check. Supporting cast? check. solid storylines and art that not only pleases the eye but flows from panel to panel? check. So do yourself a favor and check it out!
I'm amazed that New Avengers is on the list. After the debacle of Avengers: Disassembled I was wary of Bendis doing "Earth's Mightiest Super Heroes". But I bought #26 to see Hawkeye and I kept going to see the post Civil War line-up (which contains a few of my faves). Now I'm onboard. I still think Disassembled and Civil War were the proverbial suck, but I'm glad something good has come from it.
Saying of which, Nova has exploded out of the pages of Annihilation and upholds that series' high standard.
Astonishing X-Men is an X-book that makes sense and Whedon nails the characters. Obviously the same can be said of Buffy.
Star Wars: Dark Times is beautifully illustrated and takes place in the 19 years between the trilogies. Good stuff.
JSA gives me what I want out of super hero books, namely respect for the past while striving confidently into the future. None of the stuff I hated about nineties comics, 'we've got to be deadlier than the villains' crap. Nope, here's a team that knows the right way and the wrong way and is determined that future generations learn the right way. Fair Play indeed!
Honorable mention goes to the current storyline in Daredevil. It's interesting to see the Gladiator back after so long. Hopefully the creative team makes it a memorable event.
kahoolin |
kahoolin wrote:One of mine also. :)-Battle Angel Alita (my all time favourite)
Did you know James Cameron is making it into a film? It's going to be the most expensive film ever made, shot in 3D with all the cyborgs (including Alita) being Gollum-style CGIs.
I don't know how I feel about it, at first I was pretty unhappy that something so personal to me was going to be the mother of all blockbuster trilogies, but I'm getting used to the idea. He did do Terminator after all. But then again he also ripped Yukito Kishiro off badly with Dark Angel, so I'm not sure if I'm hopeful...
Here is the IMDB page for Cameron's Battle Angel.