OT: Books, Comics, Graphic Novels, Trade Paperbacks

Beliveau

The Goo Goo Muck
Dec 10, 2007
23,513
5,456
ATL
If it can be read, post it here. I'm an old dinosaur who still reads paper books. Carry on my wayward son!



1742045866818.png

I read a couple horror trades called "Something is killing the children". I've been reading illustrated books since 1969, and I used to write about them. This book is as good as anything I've read in the last quarter century, but I'm trying to avoid horror. It's a dilemma. Sorry if you don't like the sig.
 
Last edited:
An American ex pat writer friend of mine who publishes books in Slovenia sent me a package that arrived just today of books that an Australian ex pat writer friend of his living in Prague Louis Armand who also publishes books gave to him to send around to whoever wherever. They include Armand's own Vampyr: A chronicle of revenge and Glitchhead + Ansgar Allen's Plague Theatre, the German surrealist Melchior Vischer's Second Through Brain and Johnny Pulp's (? obviously a pseudonym) Palomares/Bomb Grrls. The Vampyr Armand is a very very large trade paperback full to the brim with photos and graphics some 700 pages long. Anyway Armand publishes as Equus and my Slovenian friend is Corona Samizdat.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Beliveau
I have a ton of Marvel Omnibus' and DC Absolutes and the full run of Marvel's Conan the Barbarian and Savage Sword Omnibuses. Love them.
I stupidly gave all of my early Marvels to my nephew and have regretted it ever since he told me he had no idea where they were (nor did he seem to care).
 
  • Like
Reactions: Beliveau
Vampry sounds absolutely fascinating!!!!!

I was thinking of buying it before but when you look Vampyr up on Abebooks it's like $52. That's pricey and was enough to stop me. It's a big book and all but......I'm glad to get it for nothing. I've read a bit of Armand before. He can be very literary but not without some humor and suspense. The Combinations is his best known book. It's set in Prague during the Cold War and atmospherically it's cold and kind of forbidding--dark and industrial---a little gothic and there are ghostly presences here and there though it's not horror really. Some of it is set in an orphanage kind of mental asylum. It's a real long one too. I liked it though. I've read a crime novel of his and a poetry collection as well.....something else I'm pretty sure.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Beliveau
I've had a copy of X-Men: Dissolution and Rebirth sitting on my desk for two years and I really want to spend a month going through it and all the issues. Some I've never read, some I'm very familiar with. To me that's the creative peak of the series from when they're defeated in Australia and you have some old friends (Banshee and Forge) along with various other alumni trying to find them. This led to my favorite version of the team (the short lived 1990-91 lineup) and had those three back to back to back story arcs (X-Tinction Agenda, reuniting with Xavier in Shiar, Muir Island Saga) before the Blue and Gold Teams.

There's actually a book called The Claremont Run that studies the themes, choices, and generally what went on in his 17 years on the book. I'm not sure it addresses the behind the scenes turmoil from 1991.

I also picked up the Ghost Rider Epic Collection which has the first dozen or so issues from the 90s Danny Ketch run. I'm surprised MCU hasn't tried to use him as the main Ghost Rider yet.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Beliveau
1742563480347.png

John Constantine, Hellblazer: Dead in America Collected​


Writer: Si Spurrier Artist: Aaron Campbell Publisher: DC Comics Hardcover: February 26, 2025, $39.99 Issues: 11

John Constantine was created by Alan Moore during his legendary Swamp Thing run. This book is also very good. The art in these posts may be from a different book featuring the same character. Sorry if you don't like the sig.

========================================================

1742564229731.png

DC's Most Powerful
1. The Spectre
2. Superman
3. Dr. Manhattan
4. Icon
5. Darkseid
6. Black Adam
7. Martian Manhunter
8. Orion
 
Last edited:
Because of playing the heck out of and enjoying the video game Space Marine 2, I got the first three books of the Horus Heresy and am enjoying it. The Warhammer 40k universe is pretty neat.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Beliveau
The original tmnt was great, up until Eastman and Laird brought in other writers since they blew up and were focused with the 1987 cartoon and 1990 movies. Lost its flavor.
I mean I have always thought it's been cool. And the cartoon and those movies are great to me. Maybe it's just being the perfect age at the time, but I love them. And I love the video games too.
 
Another vote for the Last Ronin and Lost Years,

Also:
DMZ especially the first 6 or so TPBs.
Scalped was pretty fun
Bone is possibly the greatest fantasy story ever told
I always had a soft spot for Scott Pilgrim
Sin City is a classic
 
adding hide avatars option

Ad

Ad