Seven Days of Dull: Graeme's reviews of 1/11 books.

Well, that may have been one of the more underwhelming weeks in recent memory when it comes to what shipped in the world of comic bookery (Unless you’re a 2000AD fan – in which case you’d be in Thrill Power heaven, what with Prog 2006, the new Dredd collection... Borag Thungg, Earthlet Cash), especially with the non-appearance of Hellblazer despite what DC’s website claimed. As a result, Lester and Hibbs decided that it was time to give me a random selection of things to read that normally I’d ignore on my way to the Grant Morrison Worship Aisle. So blame them for the selection of this week’s review subjects. ARES #1: It’s all very competently done, and the art is nice and all, but still. There’s something that makes the whole thing a rather Crap affair, and that’s probably down to the dull generic quality of the plot. How many times has this “dangerous soldier has settled down only to be brought back into action when his child is kidnapped” plot been done? Mike Oeming, Marvel’s current go-to guy when it comes to God tales, sticks to what’s expected without invention or humor here (Intentional humor, at least; I was amused at the “I had sworn off being the god of war, which is why I kept this fully-stocked armory hidden in my house” scene). Certain parts of the story don’t seem fully thought out - If neither Ares nor his son’s social security numbers are real, shouldn’t someone have noticed by this point? His son’s school, maybe? - nor subtle (The numerous scenes of warfare on TVs and elsewhere), and the dialogue is to the point and unmemorable. Ares is apparently going to be the next big player in the Marvel Universe, so this mini-series isn’t really about the story as much as it is reintroducing the character to the audience before sticking him in New Avengers or whatever, and in that case, it does its job. It’s just that it doesn’t seem to want to do anything else.

CABLE AND DEADPOOL #24: Jeff Lester’s guilty pleasure, apparently, and part of me can see why. I’ve never even been vaguely tempted to pick up this book before, mostly because Cable as a character makes me have terrible flashbacks to when I was buying Peter David’s X-Factor and it had that X-Cutioner’s Song crossover. Oh, the pain. Especially when it comes to remembering those X-Force issues. That said, I’ve always had a sneaking liking for Fabian Niceza for some reason, and there’re some lines in here that back that up, mostly coming from Deadpool (although Nick Fury appears at the end with the line “I want talk, I’ll call Oprah. I want some @ss kicked, I call… Captain America!” Old school superspies should talk like that all the time). Plotwise and artwise, the book feels like nothing as much as the kind of mid-90s Marvel book that spawned both title characters: The plot seems to revolve around mysteriously named organizations and artifacts that don’t get explained, and Patrick Zircher draws a Spider-Man that not only does whatever a spider can but also can dislocate his legs to get a dramatic pose. But that’s probably just down to knowing what the audience wants, and there’s a tongue-in-cheek quality to everything that makes it easier to swallow, and forget afterwards. It’s not going to change the world, but it’s Okay at what it does.

EXILES #75: Remember when 75th issues were big deals? They’d be double-sized or something, and it’d be the end of some long-running storyline that provided some level of dramatic payoff to the long-term fanbase while also giving new readers some bang for their buck and fooling them into thinking that it’d be worth picking up the next issue as well. Sadly, Exiles doesn’t seem to remember that at all, as their 75th issue just seems to be the latest episode in a long-running storyline that’s aimed entirely at longtime fans of defunct imprints from ten years ago. Fresh from their visit to the New Universe – which I was very tempted to try, purely because I have fond memories of the carcrash of Green Lantern and Jim Shooter’s midlife crisis that was Star Brand – the Exiles end up in Marvel’s 2099 universe, where they’re apparently chasing an X-Men villain who died 20 years ago, and it’s about as good or bad as it sounds, depending on your level of investment in these characters. If ever there was a comic that was aimed entirely at the core fanboy audience, it was this one, right down to the Chris Claremont-esque dialogue (“How can you remember what love feels like… and still be such a monster?!”). If this were a DC book, I’d probably be all over it, but I’ve never really been a Marvel geek, so it’s just Eh to me.

SON OF M #2: I admit it, I missed Son of M #1, if “missed” happens to have a new definition along the lines of “saw it in the store and decided that I didn’t really need to read the adventures of Quicksilver being depressed because he doesn’t have any powers anymore.” Luckily for me, I managed to get #2 and have all my preconceptions blown away and replaced by the concrete knowledge that I had been entirely right the first time, after all. In either an ironic twist or clever metatextual conceit, the story is slow as hell, and the art an awkward but not entirely unattractive Arthur Ranson-esque European thing… I’m not sure if this is the kind of thing that the House of M fans would really want from their spin-offs, but perhaps I’m underestimating them. Crap, anyway. When the most interesting thing in the book is Tom Brevoort’s own personal revamp of Bullpen Bulletins – “[W]e in the Brevoort editorial office want to make it your one-stop location for information and insight into what’s coming up in our little line of books,” Brevoort explains, adding in the next line, “The rest of the Marvel editors? Fuck them! This is all about my books.”* – with a Who’s Who of Marvel at the bottom of the page that includes Mark Gruenwald as “Patron Saint of Marveldom,” which manages to be both touching and grave-robbing at the same time, then you know you’re in trouble.

(* - Okay, he doesn’t come out and say those exact words, but still.)

ULTIMATE EXTINCTION #1: Yet another continuing storyline that I haven’t been following. But here’s the shock: It didn’t matter. By halfway through the first issue, I felt like I’d caught up on everything I needed to know, and wanted to know what happens next. Yes, Warren Ellis is on autopilot a bit here, but just like Jarvis Cocker, he’s a professional, bringing in Ultimate versions of unexpected characters – Misty Knight, and is that bald woman Moondragon? – and giving the whole thing an underplayed foreboding atmosphere miles away from things like House of M or Infinite Crisis. Brandon Peterson’s art is a glorious thing, too, offering up a realism that’s not entirely hooked on photo-reference like other Ultimate artists called Greg Land. Here was me thinking that I didn’t dig those Ultimate books so much, but now I’m wondering whether the other trades in this series would be worth looking out for… A surprise Very Good.

VERONICA #167: Guest-starring “the Singing Sensations from Down Under,” the Veronicas, and with a “new single free inside,” according to the cover. This copy, sadly, didn’t have any kind of single anywhere to be found. I suspect that Brian Hibbs is keeping them all for himself. The cover for this comic in general kind of freaks me out: It’s got Veronica – the cartoon one – and the Veronicas, the band, and behind them, Archie grinning like a creep, “Wow! Three Veronicas? It must be my birthday!” Oh, Archie. I didn’t need to hear that. For those who don’t pay attention to news about Archie comics or Singing Sensations from Down Under, the Veronicas, who are a real life band named after the title character of this comic, were sued at some point by Archie Comics for infringing copyright, before the case was settled out of court. Apparently, part of that settlement involved ruining the band’s chances for success by getting them involved in really shitty comics like this, as well as getting to call them Singing Sensations from Down Under, as if Archie’s front cover blubs were written by someone from the ‘60s.

(The indica for the book says that “the individual characters’ names and likenessess are the exclusive trademark of Archie Comic Publications, Inc.” I wonder if that’s an oversight, or if the Veronicas now belong to Archie after the settlement?)

In my younger days, I was a secret fan of Archie books, which seemed harmless and old-fashioned, but kind of sweet nonetheless. Maybe it’s just nostalgia talking, but I remember those stories having plots, unlike the three stories in this issue (First story: Veronica helps the Veronicas get to a concert… And they get there! Second story: Veronica and Midge say that they like to go skating and snowmobiling… And do neither! Third story: Veronica says she’s going shopping… But she’s actually helping disadvantaged kids to learn!). I’d really like to think that this comic seemed so dull because I’m just not the audience that it’s meant for, but… nah. This really is just lazy work. Surely everyone deserves stories that have some story to them, after all. Being used to Dan DeCarlo’s Archie work, the current art team of Dan Parent and Jim Amash seems to be lacking as well, with every character seeming to be more flat and generic than I left them. Archie comics have never really been at the cutting edge of comics – I’m not sure that they were even at the cutting edge of comics aimed at kids, for that matter – but they were definitely much better than this, once upon a time. Overall, pretty Awful, really.

X-MEN: THE 198 #1: The fourth sequel to House of M to explore the aftermath of “M-Day” (behind the Decimation one-shot, Son of M, and Generation M), and by this point, I give up. Wouldn’t it have been nice to have all of these stories be told in one title, preferrably one of the core X-Men books? This series, which shares a writer with Son of M and a concept – what happened to the other mutants in the wake of losing their powers? – with Generation M (Yes, I know that this book focuses on the mutants that still have their powers, and Generation M on the mutants that don’t. But still, it’s the same basic idea, and one that probably would’ve been stronger if each group’s story could be contrasted with the other), has no real reason to exist, and that vapidity is at the heart of this introductory issue. Minor characters get into trouble, sentinels attack, and I lose interest and wonder how many new series an event that was meant to reduce the number of mutants can spin off, instead. Crap, with special mentions for the eyecatching cover by Juan Doe and the ugly interior art by Jim Muinz.

See what I mean about it being a weak week? And that’s without my again complaining about what’s become of JLA, which I’m skipping because I did that last week and there’re only so many times that you can say “Really, it’s barely professional editorially-directed filler” before it gets boring. PICK OF THE WEEK is Ultimate Extinction, the book that makes me reconsider how dumb an idea Ultimate Galactus is, and PICK OF THE WEAK is Veronica, because it makes me sad in my comics lovin’ heart. Give the book to Bryan Lee O’Malley and Cameron Stewart, tell them to make comics for teenage girls and see what happens, says I.

It’s not all doom and gloom, however, because the TRADE OF THE WEEK is Essential Avengers Volume 5, and it is a thing of wonder. Roy Thomas in his prime starts off the collection, before giving way to Steve Englehart, who brings the X-Men, the Defenders, and Don Heck along for the ride. These are comics so good that they’ll make you want to talk like Stan Lee for days afterwards. 500+ pages of 1970s Marvel Madness for less than $20, effendi! Nuff Said!

Whoops! What's arriving 1/11/06 (Today!)

See, I'm so late, I have no commentary this week, see you soon with reviews.... 100 BULLETS #68 2000 AD PROG 2006 AMAZING JOY BUZZARDS VOL 2 #4 ANGEL OLD FRIENDS #2 (OF 5) ARES #1 (OF 5) BATMAN LEGENDS OF THE DARK KNIGHT #199 BATMAN STRIKES #17 BOOK OF LOST SOULS #4 CABLE DEADPOOL #24 CAPTAIN ATOM ARMAGEDDON #4 (OF 9) DANGER GIRL BACK IN BLACK #3 (OF 4) DAUGHTERS OF THE DRAGON #1 (OF 6) DESOLATION JONES #5 DMZ #3 ED THE HAPPY CLOWN #4 (OF 9) ELFQUEST THE DISCOVERY #1 (OF4) EXILES #75 FABLES #45 GHOST RIDER #5 (OF 6) GI JOE AMERICAS ELITE #7 GREEN ARROW #58 HAWKMAN #48 JLA #124 JLA CLASSIFIED COLD STEEL #2 (OF 2) JUDGE DREDD MEGAZINE #239 (C:4) MARVEL ADVENTURES FANTASTIC FOUR #8 MARVEL MILESTONES BLOODSTONE X-51 & CAPTAIN MARVEL II NEW THUNDERBOLTS #17 NEW X-MEN #22 NEXT EXIT #7 SCOOBY DOO #104 SHE-HULK 2 #4 SMALL GODS #12 SON OF M #2 (OF 6) STAR WARS REPUBLIC #81 SUPER BAD JAMES DYNOMITE #1 TALES FROM RIVERDALE DIGEST #8 TALES OF TEENAGE MUTANT NINJATURTLES #18 TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES #25 ULTIMATE EXTINCTION #1 (OF 5) ULTIMATE X-MEN #66 VAMPIRELLA REVELATIONS BECK CVR #2 VERONICA #167 WILDCATS NEMESIS #5 (OF 9) X-MEN THE 198 #1 (OF 5)

Books / Mags / Stuff ADRIAN TOMINE NEW YORK SKETCHES 2004 SC BACTER-AREA GN BATMAN HUSH RETURNS TP BATMAN ILLUSTRATED BY NEAL ADAMS VOL 3 HC (RES) CINEFANTASTIQUE JAN 06 VOL 38 #1 DC UNIVERSE THE STORIES OF ALAN MOORE ESSENTIAL AVENGERS VOL 5 TP FRANK JIM WOODRING DVD FRANK PUPSHAW & PUSHPAW LUTE STRING HEAVY METAL MARCH 2006 JAMES BOND COLONEL SUN TP JANES WORLD VOL 4 TP JUDGE DREDD TOTAL WAR TP KING OF CROOKS FEATURING THE SPIDER HC ED KODT BUNDLE OF TROUBLE VOL 14TP LEES TOY REVIEW JAN 2006 #159 MARVEL KNIGHTS 4 VOL 4 IMPOSSIBLE THINGS HAPPEN EVERY DAY TP METAL GEAR SOLID VOL 2 TP MODESTY BLAISE VOL 1 GABRIEL SET UP SC (DEC032663) NIKOLAI DANTE COURTSHIP OF JENA MAKAROV TP RED SEAS UNDER BANNER OF KINGDEATH TP SEVEN SOLDIERS OF VICTORY VOL1 TP SPIDER-MAN VS SILVER SABLE VOL 1 TP TOYFARE ALEX ROSS DC HEROES &VILLAINS CVR #103

What looks good to you...?

-B

If You Think That Our Dance Is All In The Hips: Graeme's reviews of a lot of books.

Rosario Dawson is going to save comics! Or something. I’m sure that Ms. Dawson is a wonderful person and everything, but the announcement of her new comic from Speakeasy sounds less like Speakeasy breaking new ground and more like the time that Marvel said that Freddie Prinze Jr. was going to write Spider-Man for them to me. Still, good luck to her, if only because I thought Josie And The Pussycats was a great movie. Because I’ve been away for the last month or so, I’m not reviewing this week’s books as much as various books from the last four weeks that I managed to get through this week, in between long stretches of work and more long stretches of work. It’s a fairly DC-centric list, but at least I’m avoiding the three DC trades that I got for Christmas, so as to not bore those who don’t understand the brilliance of ‘50s and ‘60s DC superhero books. Those who wish I was reading more indie things, recommend stuff to me for when I’m done catching up.

BIRDS OF PREY #89: Call me a sucker, but I was glad to see that the DC solicits for March didn’t follow through on Gail Simone’s hints that Birds of Prey would have an entirely new cast after the One Year Later jump. Never mind this issue’s fanboy thrill of Ex-Commissioner Gordon finding out that his daughter is Oracle and then telling her that he’d always known that she was Batgirl, there’s just something comfortably dependable about this book; Gail’s proven herself to be a writer (much like Dan Slott over at Marvel, for that matter) that brings characterisation, action and snappy dialogue far better than the B-list characters that she works with deserve. As with most DC books right now, this issue is pretty much closed off to new readers nonetheless, as it’s tying up loose ends before Infinite Crisis hits, but it’s done with heart and humor. Okay, if you can follow what’s going on.

THE FLASH #229: Talking of Infinite Crisis, this book’s still vamping for no immediately apparent reason before cancellation. Given that we’re one issue away from the end and the story still feels like the product of the fill-in team that it is, I’m still not sure why they didn’t just end the book with the last issue of Geoff Johns’ run. What’s that, you say? “Money”? Oh. Crap.

GOTHAM CENTRAL #39: Hello, heavy final page foreshadowing of depressing ending: “He believed in what you did, in what he did… And I do too, Renee… Right now, I have to… What choice do I have? Because if I don’t… Oh, Lord, if I don’t, Renee… Then my husband has died for nothing…” And with that, any hope I had that the book wouldn’t end with a “The law isn’t enough” conclusion flew right out the window (Not that I had that many hopes for that, considering the hints about Montoya’s downward spiral continuing in 52 that’re flying around the place these days). Nonetheless, this is the best that the series has been in years, with a plot and quality that mirrors the story that launched the book, maybe because it feels like there’s a direction again after so many issues of Plug In The Generic Batvillain. Kano and Stephano Gaudiano provide some nice art, too. All round Good, really.

GREEN LANTERN #6: I’m sure there was a coherent story somewhere in here, once upon a time. Geoff Johns probably just got really really distracted while he was writing it or something. Simone Bianchi’s art is a thing of strangely-European-comics-of-the-70s wonder, as Hibbs mentioned through Lester way back when it came out, but even it can’t save this from having the feeling of having been written by someone who’s not sure what to do with a favorite toy now that he owns it. Eh, eh and more eh.

INFINITE CRISIS #3: Is it wrong of me to be loving this as much as I am? The reveal of who the second Lex Luthor was made a strange kind of sense, and I’m wondering if the obvious Earth-2 Superman Represents Geoff Johns And He Hates Today’s Comics of the first couple of issues is all a set-up for Earth 2 Superman Is Old And Easily Fooled, If You Didn’t Like Identity Crisis Then You’re Old And Easily Fooled Too further down the line, which’d be fun. Batman having a breakdown! Superboy being a whiny bitch! A page of neon This is the new Blue Beetle signage! Yes, it’s preaching to the converted, but what superhero book coming from Marvel or DC that isn’t written by Grant Morrison isn’t these days? For what it is, it’s Very Good, but you can have the argument that what it is isn’t a good thing in the long term, if you want.

JLA #123: By contrast, Crap. So, Brad Meltzer’s going to relaunch this with Ed Benes, apparently, which means that, in a few months, we’ll have a decently-written if Gerry Conway-worshipping Justice League book that looks as if it was drawn in the ‘90s. I can’t wait.

Okay, I can.

SEVEN SOLDIERS: BULLETEER #2 / SEVEN SOLDIERS: FRANKENSTEIN #2: And the second wave of Seven Soldiers continues, as Grant seems to explaining everything after all. Bulleteer feels like Old Friends Week, as we get a direct follow-up to Seven Soldiers #0, as well as an indirect follow-up to Shining Knight #3. Both are welcome, but both also rob the book of its own feel or identity a bit; instead of a book in itself, it feels like it’s the exposition book where Grant had an idea for a character, but not a story. Frankenstein, on the other hand, brings back a character from Klarion and possibly explains what he was up to all along, but in a story that feels like it could only have happened in this book. It’s an entirely different feel from the horror movie of the first issue – this one is a big budget sci-fi movie – but it works; perhaps this is the series where Grant’s going to tackle mainstream movie genres each issue. Bulleteer: Okay, Frankenstein: Excellent.

SUPERMAN/BATMAN #23: I get a lot of shit for being a fan of this book, and it’s around this point where I start thinking that I may be deserving of it. We’re four months into Jeph Loeb’s phoning it in, with a plot that substitutes dramatic reveals for substance or logic and dialogue that’s entirely injoke or cliché. What makes it different from the times where this book has worked for me – Ed McGuinness’s first run on the title, or the Carlos Pacheco run – is the lack of big stupid idea fun. Yes, there’s a half-chuckle at seeing the Maximums poking fun at the Ultimates, but that joke’s old within a few pages, never mind a few issues, and there’s nothing behind it to make it last. Kryptonite Batman? Great, but make it something more that him hitting Superman for a few pages and then going away with no explanation. The return of Red Son Superman and Batman Beyond? If they were there for any reason, sure. I don’t know; there seemed to be some internal logic to things like the Giant Composite Superman Batman Robot, or the Zombie Justice League, in the past that’s lacking here. It’s as if whatever gonzo credibility the book had has been abandoned in the rush to the finish line. Ed McGuinness’s art is still the bouncy castle of the superhero world, though. Eh.

THE THING #2: It really is just Marvel Two-In-One, isn’t it? Not that that’s a bad thing, but there’s something incredibly old-school about this book in writing and art (I have no idea why Andrea Di Vito has the reputation that he does amongst some fans – His work is generic and workmanlike to me, as if he was a fill-in guy on Nova or something in the ‘70s. Which, bizarrely, makes sense on this series) that’s both comforting and disturbing at the same time: Yes, it’s nostalgic and everything, but shouldn’t it be more, somehow? It’s Good, but I feel as if you should get more for your money, for some reason.

WONDER WOMAN #224: I know that it’s extremely anal to care about things like continuity and things like that, but the editors of this and Infinite Crisis need to be reminded to care about such things anyway. For those who haven’t seen this issue, it theoretically expands upon the six-or-so page scene in Infinite Crisis #3 where the Amazons bring out the Purple Death Ray, use it, and then leave Earth forever. And, in theory, that’s okay, because it’s a massive change to Wonder Woman’s status quo and should be seen in her own book so that people who aren’t reading Infinite Crisis know what happened. The problem is in the execution, as the two different versions of what happened are miles apart. It’s not just the dialogue which is, of course, different. It’s that neither book could agree on the sequence of events - Wonder Woman’s version adds in a confrontation between Brother Eye and Diana that’s missing from Infinite Crisis. Infinite Crisis has an appearance of Diana’s Gods that’s missing in Wonder Woman - or what the Purple Death Ray is – In Infinite Crisis, it’s a giant cannon, in Wonder Woman, a handgun attached to a backpack (Also, nowhere in Wonder Woman do they explain what the Purple Death Ray is. They use “PDR”, and “death ray”, perhaps because Greg Rucka felt suitably embarrassed at having to type the words “Purple Death Ray”). Like I said, I know it’s anal to care about things like that, but there’s such a difference between the two different versions of what’s meant to be the same thing that it just seems as if no-one cares enough to pay attention to what anyone else was doing. And to make matters worse for Wonder Woman, Infinite Crisis’s version was better, purely because it was lacking the overwrought dialogue and narration by Rucka. The end, and subsequent relaunch, of this book can’t come fast enough. Awful.

Y THE LAST MAN #41: The secret origin of 355 that has something to do with biting people and cannibals, but still ends up being kind of dull. I don’t know if it means that I’ve read/seen the “trauma in childhood leads to self-destructive impulses in teenage years that get harnessed by secret organization” thing too many times, or if it’s just that I’m feeling burned out by the lack of of forward motion in the story over the last few issues, but this was the most Eh the book has been since it started.

YOUNG AVENGERS SPECIAL #1: It’s pretty, but pretty vacant, as Jonathan Rotten once wrote in an early issue of The Comics Journal about the work of Barry Windsor Smith. Allen Heinberg’s tendency to be earnest overwhelms his tendency to be funny as he writes his way around a non-plot full of flashbacks to each character’s origin, each one illustrated by a big name artist slumming it just a little, and a small part of my love for the regular Young Avengers title dies as a result. With two exceptions, the flashbacks are either pointless or things we already know, but the two exceptions are worth mentioning – Kate’s flashback has her being attacked and, it’s implied, raped, which hopefully will be followed up at some point in the main title if only to make the inclusion of it here less gratutious (Yes, I know, Marvel heroes are born of tragedy and bad things, but still), and Billy’s flashback has him meeting the Scarlet Witch, which seemed interesting considering her current status in the Marvel Universe. The third bit of foreshadowing has a young Kang watching the team while a character comments “I don’t think there’s anything they can’t handle,” which is about as subtle as Greg Rucka’s Gotham Central thing above, and depressingly suggests that no story will ever just end in Young Avengers, but instead lead into reappearing characters and angst. For a comic that has no reason to exist, it’s Okay, but you can skip it and not miss anything you probably won’t catch again in the regular YA title.

PICK OF THE LAST FEW WEEKS THAT I’VE FINALLY MANAGED TO CATCH UP ON is Frankenstein, while the PICK OF THE WEAK is Wonder Woman, because it is very, very bad indeed. Tradewise, all I’ve been reading this week are old DC comics: SHOWCASE PRESENTS JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA, CRISIS ON MULTIPLE EARTHS: THE TEAM-UPS and that one about the greatest imaginary stories ever. But if you’re looking for a TRADE OF THE WEEK, I won’t believe anyone who says that Essential Official Handbook of The Marvel Universe isn’t what the world has been waiting for.

Next week: I continue to catch up on things, and Glaswegian Denise Mina takes over Hellblazer, which makes me homesick and hopeful for cruel Scottish weirdness on a monthly basis.

CE Sale: Part XIII (of XIII)

Finally, I had to close with this picture, just to show how serious Brian is about taking care of some overstock. A Sandman trade on sale at Comix Experience? I never thought I'd live to see the day frankly. And there are also Matt Wagner Grendel trades--also insanely hard to wrap my brain around. I just think this is a very decent sale and, again, the bargain pricing being offered to Savage Critic readers gives you a real edge on picking some great stuff at great prices.

There. My blatant shilling is through. We now return you to your regularly scheduled blog. Posted by Picasa

CE Sale: Part XII

I was a little worried my beloved Beck was going to be in this pile--but there's plenty of other selections in there--again, some that don't sell, and some where the overstock got a bit high. Like those volumes of Battle Royale, for example. There's actually a volume I need to bring my BR collection up to date, in fact, in the sales bins. If Hibbs will let me have that price break on manga that he's offering to the blog readers, I may just walk off with huge handfuls of the stuff on Friday. Posted by Picasa

CE Sale: Part XI

I was really shocked to see this and several other volumes of the Classic Conan trades in the sale bins. Again, there are some books that I think sell pretty well for us that Brian is putting in there so as to open up space in the store and in our storage areas. (Sorry I blew the focus out on a lot of these, by the way. The price on this, and I'm assuming the other classic Conans, is eight bucks). Posted by Picasa

The CE Sale: Part 1 (Apologia)

Okay. A bit of patience, please. I apologize--I had a lot more pictures and I tried to get Picasa to upload them all at one go, but it had no idea what the hell I was trying to do and wanted none of it. And I didn't mean to have these all pop up in different entries, but what the hell.

This isn't all saleswhoremanship on my part by the way--I love a good sale and waited a long time for CE to have something like this. (In fact, it took so long, I ended up working there instead. Sigh.) So I got up this morning, made my way to the store before it opened and rifled through the bins trying to see what kind of stuff Hibbs had put out there.

And I gotta say, I was shocked. He's moving stuff that hasn't sold, but also a lot of overstock of stuff that will sell. I saw the DC Showcase: Justice League of America for ten bucks, for crying out loud. This isn't the kind of sale where you feel like you're robbing the owner blind--this is Hibbs, after all--but if you figure in that offer to blog readers that Brian mentioned in a post below (which expires January 8th), you're gonna see some even bigger savings. If nothing else, all of this stuff is priced at a fair price--the price you always wanted to pay for, say, issues of The Escapist, or the DC Archives.

Anyway, let me walk you through some of the highlights in the entries above. Posted by Picasa

Shipping 1/4/06 .... and more!!

Happy New Year, one and all. I'm *almost* out from the blanket of work that settles at the end of the year, though I ain't there yet.

I spent most of yesterday doing inventory at the store, and pulling off stock for a big Graphic Novel/TP sale -- if I counted correctly, I put 678 GN/TPs out at MASSIVE discounts. We *start* at 50% off, and there's any number of items at 75%+ off.

I mention this here for two reasons -- #1) we normally don't DO "sales" at Comix Experience (It's been more than a decade since our last one) and 2) I wasn't organized enough to get the signage up for the sale yet. That means that you, reading this blog, have exclusive information about the sale, and, if you head to the store in the next day or two, will have FIRST CRACK at all of the wonderful books on sale.

A little something from every category/style/genre is in the sale -- everything from Alan Moore to James Kochalka and every point in between. There's tons of "mainstream" stuff on sale, tons of "alternative" work too.

While a significant percentage of what I marked down is slow/poor moving material (well, duh!), there's also a pretty good percentage of stuff that you ACTUALLY WANT that I just happened to have too many copies of, or is a little shopworn, that kind of thing.

There's even one or two books that were mentioned by Jeff, below, in his read on the best of 2005.

Also, as a one-time special inducement for you blog-readers, buy 3 or more sale-priced books, and take another 20% off the sale price. Buy 5 or more, and take 30% off the sale price. If those 5 books are all manga trades, you can have HALF OFF the sale price. Dayum! WHAT YOU HAVE TO DO FOR THIS SPECIAL PRICE: print off a copy of this blog entry, as "proof" you've read the blog (And so Bennett doesn't think you're full of shit, because I made this up on the spot, and he doesn't know, yet), *and* this offer is only good through close of business on Sunday, January 8th.

I'd go do it before Wednesday when I get the signs up, though, and everyone knows about it.

Right, so with that out of the way, here's what's shipping this week. Pretty small week, which is good after those last two ball-busters. Please don't forget that comics are for sale on THURSDAY this week -- if you go into your LCS on Wednesday, they're just going to point at you and laugh, man.

13TH SON WORSE THING WAITING #3 (OF 4) A G SUPER EROTIC ANTHOLOGY #25 A1 MISTER MONSTER WHO WATCHESGARBAGEMEN SP AEON FLUX #4 (OF 4) AIRSHELL #2 AQUAMAN #38 ARCHIE & FRIENDS #97 ASTONISHING X-MEN SAGA #1 BATMAN AND THE MONSTER MEN #3(OF 6) BETTY & VERONICA DOUBLE DIGEST #139 BLOOD OF THE DEMON #11 BONE REST #7 CHIMERA #1 CITY OF HEROES #9 DAY OF VENGEANCE INFINITE CRISIS SPECIAL DEAD EYES OPEN #3 DETECTIVE COMICS #815 DOC FRANKENSTEIN SKROCE CVR A #4 DOC SAMSON #1 (OF 5) DOWN #3 (OF 4) EXTERMINATORS #1 GODLAND #6 GORI LORI #1 GOTHAM CENTRAL #39 HARD TIME SEASON TWO #2 INTERIORAE #1 IRON MAN #5 JON SABLE FREELANCE BLOODLINE #6 (OF 6) JONAH HEX #3 JSA #81 JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED #17 KEIF LLAMA XENOTECH #3 (OF 6) LOONEY TUNES #134 MARLENE #1 MARVEL ADVENTURES SPIDER-MAN #11 MARVEL TEAM-UP #16 MARVEL ZOMBIES #2 (OF 5) MASTERS OF HORROR #1 (OF 12) MYTHOS X-MEN NEW EXCALIBUR #3 OUTSIDERS #32 PUNISHER #29 PURGATORI (DDP) #3 RISING STARS VOICES OF THE DEAD #6 (OF 6) RUNES OF RAGNAN #2 (OF 4) SABLE & FORTUNE #1 (OF 6) SENTINEL #3 (OF 5) SEVEN SOLDIERS FRANKENSTEIN #2 (OF 4) SHADOWPLAY #4 SPIDER-GIRL #94 SPIDER-MAN UNLIMITED #13 STAR WARS PURGE ONE SHOT SUPERMAN #225 SUPERMAN SHAZAM FIRST THUNDER #3 (OF 4) SUPREME POWER NIGHTHAWK #5 (OF 6) SWAMP THING #23 TEAM ZERO #2 (OF 6) TEEN TITANS #31 WITCHBLADE #93 X-MEN COLOSSUS BLOODLINE #5 (OF 5) X-MEN THE 198 FILES X-MEN THE END MEN AND X-MEN #1 (OF 6) Y THE LAST MAN #41

Books / Mags / Stuff ALAN MOORE SPELLS IT OUT ARTHUR SUYDAM ART OF THE BARBARIAN HC BATMAN THE LONG HALLOWEEN SER1 MASTER CASE ASST BILLY THE KIDS OLD TIMEY ODDITIES TP CHRONICLES OF CONAN VOL 9 RIVER DRAGONS & OTHERS TP ESSENTIAL OFFICIAL HANDBOOK OF THE MARVEL UNIVERSE VOL 1 TP HEAVY METALS ODYSSEY HC HELLBLAZER STARING AT THE WALL TP KISS & TELL GN LITTLE SCROWLIE VOL 2 DAWN OFFASHION VICTIMS TP MARVEL 1602 NEW WORLD TP MAZE AGENCY VOL 1 TP NEW AVENGERS VOL 1 BREAKOUT TP NEW RECRUITS TP PICTURES & WORDS TP SIN CITY GLASS ASHTRAY BLACK DEATH ICELANDIC SCHNAPPS SQUARECAT COMICS VOL 1 GN SUPERMAN SACRIFICE TP ULTIMATE ANNUALS VOL 1 TP UNIVERSAL MONSTERS CAVALCADE OF HORROR TP WILL EISNERS CONTRACT WITH GOD TRILOGY HC

The ASSHAT OF THE WEEK (for the latest order code) goes to Dark Horse's NEW RECRUITS GN which has a JUN code (for August shipping), yep, that's pretty late. I'm also fairly annoyed that we're just now getting the CONTRACT WITH GOD TRILOGY HC from Diamond now, because I understand it has been in bookstores for over a month.

That's it from me; what looks good to you this week?

-B

First Post(!) of 2006, because I woke up early.

A couple of years ago, Kate and I went to Hawaii for New Year; her brother lives there, working in the Coast Guard and saving lives and telling us how great the weather is in Maui. So, all of Kate's family decides that Maui's obviously the perfect place to see in the New Year, and we all save up our pennies and fly out, ready for sun, sea and surf. It rained for the entire time we were there.

The first three days or so, we managed to convince ourselves that tropical heatwaves were just around the corner. "The rain is the Gods' way of saying aloha!" we were told by locals eager to keep us from being depressed, and we went along with it until New Year's Eve, which we spent outside, soaked to the skin, watching people in fake grass skirts try and smile while freezing to death as they tried to do traditional dancing. We went back to our hotel, where the TV news told us that we were in the middle of the worst rain Maui had seen for over 30 years.

So this year, Kate and I decided to go on a road trip to Portland, Oregon for New Year, just the two of us, getting away from it all. We'd drive up the coast, route 1, then 101, stopping off for an evening in nice local cheap hotels along the way. Guess what happened?

We're cursed when it comes to New Year travelling, I'm telling you. Cursed.

(We're back in San Francisco now, after an epic 14 hour journey yesterday that seemed as if it may never end by the time we got stuck outside of Vacaville for two hours because route 80 was closed. Not that that was the first time we'd found roads closed - 101 North was closed when we tried to go up in the first place, and the 505 was flooded last night as well. We did manage to make it to Portland, though, and stayed here, which we'd highly recommend to anyone looking for a hotel there.)

All of this is a long way to introduce the fact that I've not read many comics lately. But the last comic I read in 2005 was ALL STAR BATMAN AND ROBIN THE BOY WONDER #3, which was really kind of Crap. Miller rips off his own Catwoman origin for the Black Canary, fails to move the plot forward at all, and Superman appears at the end for no good reason. Lee continues to make me think that he's drawing all of this in a rush, and somewhat embarrassed to be doing so, with some more weird proportions on almost every character... It's really not very good at all, which is a shame considering that I actually secretly enjoyed the first two issues.

Here's hoping 2006 sees better comics, better weather, and good fortune for the lot of you reading this. I'll try and not vanish for three weeks at a time again, as well. Happy New Year, all.

Why Not? Jeff's Best-Of Picks for 2005.

Didn't feel much like writing reviews today so I thought it might be fun to dig through my entries for 2005 and pull together a "Best of" list. Way back when (before we used blogger), Brian put together a best-of list that was impressively complete--by assigning numerical values to each grade, he was able to crunch numbers and statistically confirm his picks for the best books of the year. I thought it'd be a hoot to do that, even if I just sorted through my Picks of the Week and grabbed stuff. Of course, it's never that easy. I neglected to even make picks for the first few months of the year. So after spending the morning skimming through the 80,000 words I wrote for this blog this year (that's not a number pulled at random, by the way--I pulled all my entries into Word so I could do searches and decided to do a wordcount as well), I came up with the following:

Ongoing and minis Banana Sunday: Colleen Coover and Root Nibot's four issue mini was great all-ages fun with delightful characters and awesomely cartooned monkeys. I cannot wait for the trade as I hope to handsell a bunch of these.

Berlin: We only got two issues this year of Jason Lutes's masterly study of the city of Berlin at the dusk of its decadent days, but they were two very solid issues. If I was a bigwig at, say, Pantheon Books, I'd give Lutes lots of money so he could focus on this series fulltime. Great stuff.

Death Jr.: This videogame tie-in wasn't as strong as Ted Naifeh's solo work maybe, but his art looked amazing in full-color and the story was enjoyable all-ages work. Would that all tie-in work was this strong (although I don't think even Whitta and Naifeh could have saved, say, Marvel Mega-Morphs).

Desolation Jones: The first issue blew my mind. And although the rest hasn't come close, it's still a strong read, filled with heartbreakingly beautiful art, and a hero that revisits and deepens Ellis's "chainsmoking, miserable bastard" archetype.

Fell: This is equally strong work from Ellis--in fact, I would say it's even stronger since the three issues to date have been done-in-ones with shorter page counts--and the best work I've seen by Ben Templesmith by far. Deserves all the attention and sales it's been getting.

The Goon: I'm still working for a good high-concept pitch to explain Eric Powell's book (currently, I'm fond of "Imagine Bernie Wrightson drawing E.C. Segar's Popeye" but that's not it either) but that's probably because Powell, like Mike Mignola, has created something that draws on all of his interests and strengths that he can execute with complete confidence. One of my big faves.

Gotham Central: Surprisingly, this book popped up as my Pick of the Week a lot in 2005. I thought it would have worked better as a straight procedural stuff--it had just a tremendous line-up of talent the whole way through, and Brubaker and Rucka lavished a lot of time and care on their scripts even when they had bigger gigs to attend to--than as the "Batbook-but-not-really" approach. But what do I know? Maybe it would have sold even more poorly without superheroes and supervillains splashed all over it. I'll be sorry to see this one go.

Hellboy The Island: This miniseries really humbled me because I outright loved it and yet would be hard-pressed to explain anything that happened. Also, I had strangely complex emotional responses to the work even while not understanding it. I hope that means there's more than just "some guy natters on at Hellboy until punching begins" to the piece. Even if not, it's mind-blowing cartooning.

Little Star: Every issue of this I encounter in a kind of free-fall: I read it, love it, am unable to find out while in the store how many issues it is and how close it is to being finished, and then hang in limbo until the next issue. In a way, it's a nice match for Andi Watson's quiet examination of a family man caught between his career dreams and daily life, but I also find myself greedy for the trade to see how subtly Watson worked his themes throughout all the chapters.

Planetary: Not quite sure how many issues we got this year (two? three?) but I admire how Ellis and Cassaday take a slow-but-steady approach to this regardless of impatient fan clamor.

Seven Soldiers: I'm not crazy about the whole thing (at least not yet) but the zero issue, and the Guardian and Klarion miniseries kicked my ass soundly with their dark humor, ambition and fun. That Morrison can live up to his own hype as often as he does is a remarkable achievement.

Solo: All the issues have been great, but those issues three through five (Paul Pope, Darwyn Cooke and Mike Allred) were tremendous works by idiosyncratic artists with things to say about DC characters and DC concepts. I hope DC keeps all of these in print, because we could probably sell those three issues 'til the end of time.

Shaolin Cowboy: Geoff Darrow's rousing series has had two issues that just knocked me off my feet, but all of it is worth time and attention as Darrow takes his trademark meticulous art and uses it as a straight man to his enjoyably deranged story concepts. This stuff made me laugh even while holding me in awe of the talent at work. Wow.

She-Hulk Vol. 2: Dan Slott reteams with Juan Bobillo for another round of impressively crafted stories that manage, by dint of talent and affection, to simultaneously send-up and honor all manners of superhero craziness. I can't tell how glad I am this team and title got another chance.

Young Avengers: More or less ditto with Allan Heinberg's stuff here, although it's not quite as satisfying as Slott's work. It's hit a stumble or two (The Patriot drug thing, the time-travel stuff which always hurts my brain) but for the most part he's taken an absurd premise and made it one of my favorite titles on the stand each month. I'll take it over New Avengers any day.

Stand-outs & One shots: Action Philosophers All Sex Special: Dunlavey and Van Lente tackle the lives (and sex lives) of St. Augustine, Thomas Jefferson and Ayn Rand, and allow the reader to infer how their subjects' philosophies meet and differ. Really knocked me out.

Following Cerebus #5: Dave Sim, in pondering his thoughts about how an editor shapes the work, calls up guys like Paul Pope, Chester Brown and Craig Thompson to see what degree it's played for them. Shows the suprisingly expansive and inquisitive sweep of this magazine to all areas of the comic field, not just Sim's work.

Love & Rockets Vol 2 #14: I always love Jaime and Beto's L&R, but Jaime's work in this issue captured all the bittersweet joys of being middle-aged and seeing life unfold around you. Awesome.

Moxie, My Sweet: A collective of artists tackle a handful of stories by Mark Campos which allows for the sweep of an anthology but the focus of a personal vision. A little pricey maybe but worth it.

Spider Man Human Torch #3: I liked all of this mini by Slott and Templeton but I loved this issue in particular: The Spider-Mobile, The Red Ghost and The Super-Apes and Hostess ads are some of the greatest and goofiest things about comics in the '70s and this issue has them all in a perfectly constructed story.

Ultimate Fantastic Four #19-20: Mike Carey and Jae Lee take old tropes from early FF comics--the Baxter Building under attack, the FF running down hallways in different directions and facing super deathtraps--and update them with wit and panache. Unlike a lot of Ultimate books, this doesn't try to shatter your brain with over-the-top widescreen action and radical reinvention. It just works, and works very well.

Trade Paperbacks, OGNs and Collections 676 Apparitions Of Killoffer HC: I dissed this at release because it was too fucking big and too fucking expensive, but goddamned if some of the imagery hasn't continued to haunt me. It's a stunning achievement worth seeking out, and Killoffer is one of those cartoonists I can't wait to see more of, but couldn't this have worked just as well at a smaller size and price? So I can recommend to people who don't have money falling out of their pockets?

Beck Mongolian Chop Squad: I'd like to think I would have loved the first two volumes of Harold Sakuishi's rock and roll coming of age manga without first reading O'Malley's Scott Pilgrim, but I'll never know for sure. 2005 is the year I've really gotten hooked on manga and the joy of a big, unfolding story. Unfortunately, because this is currently my favorite, it just can't get released fast enough for me. (I also debated about whether to put manga in the ongoing section or the trade section--since they're episodic, most manga are just big floppies in some ways, but I opted to put them here because it's how they categorized, by and large).

Black Hole HC: I still haven't reread it all in one go, but just having this book on my shelf is a triumph. How many publishers did this series outlast? In a way, this is such a distillation of all of Burns' obsessions, I'll be curious to see what his next major work ends up being about. The same things reconfigured? Or will this put some ghosts to rest?

The Best of The Spirit TPB: As I said a few weeks ago, having a greatest hits book and a library of work for completists is the sign of a more diverse marketplace, and I love being able to read some of my favorite Spirit stories without either spending some serious coin or flipping through longboxes for my Kitchen Sink issues. I wish two of the big releases of this year--The Push Man and Walt & Skeezix--could have had the leisure to introduce their artists in such a fashion, rather than starting at the very beginning of their careers and working forward.

Essential Fantastic Four Vol 4 TPB: Similarly, having a inexpensive collection of the best work of Lee & Kirby (and Sinnott--I think Sinnott is what really helped kick Kirby into overdrive on this title) was great. James Masente was shocked I didn't give this an Excellent rating when I first reviewed it, and in a way he's right--it's just right near the tip-top of the best comics work ever done--but that's because, as lovely as it looks in black and white, it's not in color as originally intended.

Ice Haven TPB: Dan Clowes' reworking of his influential standalone issue of Eightball added needed highlighting to themes and subplots (I needed it, anyway). I wish it wasn't so much more expensive than the original issue considering there's not that much more added to it, but it's an important work and having it in a format that can end up in libraries and classrooms is a vital step--one that makes me hopeful the medium has undergone a sea change in public perception that will not be undone.

Kinetic TPB: Thank god this got collected. Too subtle to build a readership, Kelley Puckett and Warren Pleece's very odd book about a teen that gets superpowers is a genuinely affecting work. I can't help but wonder where it might have gone if it'd continued publication, but it was offbeat enough that its sudden conclusion felt fitting.

The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck TPB: I can't tell you how many of these I've handsold this year. In fact, for me, it's been the crucial missing element to our all-ages section. Between this, the one-volume Bone, and the three volumes of Leave It To Chance, I've got a substantial selection of work to show parents. Not only do they usually pick up at least one of those titles, but I feel confident they'll be back for more. This is just a great read for anyone--it's filled with history, action, comedy and characterization. In a way, it's Origin done right and I'm glad it's finally easily accesible. This sucker has got to stay in print.

Love Roma Vol. 1: I'm very much a manga neophyte but even I could tell Minoru Toyoda's love story among two seventh graders is unique. Since it's a romantic comedy of manners, I also have to give kudos to Del Rey for providing the right amount of cultural context for the reader to get it. This is another one where I've been impatiently waiting for the next volume for months.

Perfect Example TPB: Like Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck, this collection of John Porcellino's tales from the '80s was previously available as a trade. I'm grateful to Drawn & Quarterly for getting it back into print. Porcellino is unique in his ability to glean the beatific just under the skin of the mundane and to show how each depends on the other.

Scott Pilgrim Vols 1 and 2 OGN: Volume 1 came out in 2004 but it was one of the first things I read in '05. Bryan Lee O'Malley is a major talent, and his tale of a Canadian slacker's love life effortlessly works nearly every major pop culture diversion of the last forty years into his material yet still makes the work effortlessly smart and funny. But the bitch of it is, that's just scratching the surface. This may just turn out to be one of the best bildungsromans seen in any medium, A Portrait of the Artist As A Young Man that's delightful and accessible to everyone. Probably my favorite work of the year, overall.

Sgt. Frog vols. #1-10: I owe John Jakala a bottle of good Scotch or something for hooking me on this absurd and enjoyable comedy series about a group of incompetent invaders ostensibly readying to attack Earth. Mine Yoshizaki and crew are able to do so much with so little, and have mastered the formula of introducing a new element whenever things start to lag. (I think there's also some weird subtext going on in the book, but that's a topic for another day.) This series is a true guilty pleasure for me, and recommended for anyone who likes the deeply silly.

Seaguy TPB: Speaking of deep and silly, this is the collection of Grant Morrison and Cameron Stewart's Vertigo mini from 2004, where an unimportant hero ends up on an essential quest in a world that's seemingly forgotten such things. A lot of people seemed to get tripped up on all the wackiness, but this wasn't just a lark. Seaguy is also a sad and knowing parable about how comic companies retard the growth of even their lamest icons (and, by extension, the people who read them). Great stuff.

Sexy Voice and Robo: Iou Kuroda's offbeat set of stories detail the adventures of a smart teen phone club worker who has adventures with gangsters, killers, mad bombers, and a hapless otaku type. It's the closest I've found yet to a comic equivalent of Haruki Murakami's enjoyably odd novels.

Top Ten: The Forty-Niners OGN: Alan Moore and Gene Ha return to Neopolis, this time to its founding, to show a world and a young man in transition. As (almost) always, Moore effortlessly retools the superhero milieu to heighten the humanity of his story, and in Ha, he's found a perfect collaborator to take his amusingly baroque approach to new levels. Fun, fun, fun.

Trailers HC: Far from perfect, this OGN by Mark Kneece and Julie Collins-Rousseau, about a young man cracking under the pressure of keeping a dark secret in a white-trash trailer park where secrets are impossible, had great art, a strong story and a very decent page-to-price ratio. A very solid read, and I hope this team gets a chance to tell more stories and strengthen their chops.

Tricked TPB: Like Box Office Poison, Alex Robinson's latest tale is nearly peerless in making its reader care about what happens to his characters. Although somehow, like BOP, I found this an engrossing, intensely enjoyable read despite being oddly empty: I can't say it left a lasting impression despite its ambition. But a good read is a good read, and crafting an enjoyable page-turner of this size is no small achievement.

Ultra Vol 1 Seven Days TPB: Girls isn't really doing the trick for me, but this collection of the Luna Brothers' first mini from 2004 is a witty mix of Sex and the City and superheroes. It doesn't sound like it'd work, like it would be too calculated, but I thought it did work, and well.

WE3 TPB: And finally, this collection of Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely's three issue mini of animals in battlesuits trying to escape the military is a masterfully crafted shot of heartfelt adventure.

Wow. I thought that would be easier than reviewing this week's books! That'll teach me.

What'd I overlook? What made your list?

Shipping 12/29

Staff party, Christmas at Mom's, Hannukah at Dad's... Three parties in three days,man, I am pooped! Here's what's shipping this week -- another stupidly large week, yes. Remember, comics are not for sale until THURSDAY, both this week, and next. If you go into your Local Comic Shop on Wednesday, they're going to point thier fingers at you and laugh.

10 ONE SHOT 2000 AD #1467 2000 AD #1468 30 DAYS OF NIGHT ANNUAL 2005 ACME NOVELTY LIBRARY #16 ALL STAR BATMAN AND ROBIN THEBOY WONDER #3 AMAZING FANTASY #16 AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #527 ARANA HEART OF THE SPIDER #12 ARCHAIC #1 ARCHIE DIGEST #222 BART SIMPSON COMICS #27 BATMAN #648 BERLIN #12 BETTY & VERONICA #214 BLACK PANTHER #11 BLACK WIDOW 2 #4 (OF 6) BPRD THE BLACK FLAME #5 (OF 6) CATWOMAN #50 DAREDEVIL #80 DAREDEVIL FATHER #5 (OF 6) DRAX THE DESTROYER #4 (OF 4) EVIL ERNIE IN SANTA FE #3 (OF4) EXILES #74 FALLEN ANGEL IDW #1 FANTASTIC FOUR SPECIAL FATHOM #6 FREAKSHOW #12 GEORGE ROMEROS LAND OF THE DEAD #4 (OF 5) HACK SLASH LAND OF LOST TOYS #2 (OF 3) HEAD #13 HUNTER KILLER #5 JLA CLASSIFIED #15 JOVAS HARVEST #2 (OF 3) KEEP #3 (OF 5) LOVELESS #3 LUCKY BAMBOO PRESENTS #0 MALINKY ROBOT BICYCLE METAL GEAR SOLID SONS OF LIBERTY #2 NEW AVENGERS #14 NICK FURY HOWLING COMMANDOS #3 NIGHT MARY #5 (OF 5) OFFICIAL HNDBK ULTIMATE MARVEL UNIV ULTIMATES & X-MEN 2005 PARIS #2 (OF 4) PERHAPANAUTS #2 (OF 4) REVELATIONS #5 (OF 6) REVOLUTION ON THE PLANET OF THE APES #1 (OF 6) ROCKETO #4 SENTRY #4 (OF 8) SHE-HULK 2 #3 SILENT DRAGON #6 (OF 6) SILENT HILL DEAD ALIVE #1 (OF5) SOLO #8 SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #157 SPIDER-MAN BLACK CAT EVIL THAT MEN DO #5 (OF 6) SPIDER-MAN LOVES MARY JANE #1 SUPERMAN BATMAN #23 TEEN TITANS GO #26 THING #2 THOR BLOOD OATH #6 (OF 6) ULTIMATE FANTASTIC FOUR #26 ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN #88 UNCLE SCROOGE #349 VIGILANTE #4 (OF 6) WALT DISNEYS COMICS & STORIES #664 WHAT IF DAREDEVIL WHAT IF THOR WOLVERINE #37 WONDER WOMAN #224 X-FACTOR #2 X-MEN #180 X-MEN AND POWER PACK #3 (OF 4) YOUNG AVENGERS SPECIAL #1

Books / Mags / Stuff BLACKSAD VOL 3 TP CAPTAIN AMERICA & THE FALCON SECRET EMPIRE TP CHARLEYS WAR VOL 2 AUG OCT 1916 HC COMICS BUYERS GUIDE MAR 2006 #1614 CONAN AND THE JEWELS OF GWAHLUR HC DAWN VOL 1 LUCIFERS HALO NEW ED TP DIMONA VOL 2 GN (OF 3) FABLES VOL 6 HOMELANDS TP FEMME FATALES DEC 05 JAN 06 VOL 14 #5 GOON FRANKY MINI BUST HARLEQUIN PINK A GIRL IN A MILLION TP HARLEQUIN VIOLET RESPONSE TP KID BEOWULF GN LADY SNOWBLOOD VOL 2 THE DEEPSEATED GRUDGE TP LEX LUTHOR MAN OF STEEL TP LOTR MAP OF MIDDLE EARTH POSTER MARVEL ADVENTURES SPIDER-MAN VOL 2 POWER STRUGGLE DIGEST MARVEL COMICS PRESENTS WOLVERINE VOL 2 TP MARVEL MASTERWORKS GOLDEN AGEALL WINNERS VOL 1 NEW ED HC RANN THANAGAR WAR TP SENTRY TP NEW PTG SFX #138 SHADOW STAR VOL 7 VICTIMS EYES ASSAILANTS HANDS TP SHAUN OF THE DEAD TP SPAWN COLLECTION VOL 1 HC STAR TREK COMICS CLASSICS VOL2 DEATH BEFORE DISHONOR TP (C: STAR WARS GENERAL GRIEVOUS TP STRANGE GIRL VOL 1 GIRL AFRAID TP TEZUKAS BUDDHA VOL 7 PRINCE AJATASATTU HC TIMES OF BOTCHAN VOL 2 GN (OF10) TOP COWS BEST OF MICHAEL TURNER TP ULTIMATE SPIDER-MAN VOL 14 WARRIORS TP VIDEO WATCHDOG NOV 2005 #123 WE ALL DIE ALONE HC WILD ROCK GN

As for the ASSHAT OF THE WEEK, well, it's Christmas, man, so let's skip pointing any fingers. Not the latest title, but, still, I have to wonder why we're getting the 7th volume of Tezuka's BUDDHA when they haven't shipped us the 6th one yet....

-B