Hey guys! I'm new.
Just looking to see some of people's favourite comics and discuss.
My personal favourites are the ditko and stan lee amazing spidermans, a bit of fantastic four and honestly lately I've been having an obsession with the Kickass series. Great graphics and story line, love it.
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Current favorites:
SAGA - great science fiction world-building, beautiful art, and a well-written story each issue that is satisfying and always ends on a note that has me anxious for the next issue.
PROPHET - Another great science fiction comic from Image, but one that takes a different approach. This one feels more "organic," for lack of a better term with a cadre of artists whose styles mesh well. This is my favorite book, right now.
MIND MGMT - Matt Kindt's art is distinct, and I could understand someone not caring for its less than traditional style, but I have loved everything Kindt has done, and this is no different. Another, very different, science fiction story that is doing something that feels very different from anything else out there - or anything else I've read. Love this book.
Classic favorites:
Vietnam Journal - a realistic approach to telling the stories from the Vietnam war, from an actual Vietnam veteran. The stark black and white art adds so much to the stories Don Lomax tells in this series. And in recent years he returned to this series, which was canceled in the 90s when Apple Comics went out of business, and the collected editions of these new stories should be arriving at my house soon. Can't wait to give this a proper re-read.
Sandman - my favorite comic series of all-time. Neil Gaiman and a series of fantastic artists created something special, in my opinion, with this. A 76-issue + story about stories and myth and fantasy and relationships and evolution of character that amazes me every time I read it. Love this book!
Love & Rockets - This would be a close second to Sandman, as far as my all-time favorites, and Los Bros Hernandez are still going strong with their 30-year series. A simple premise, on its face, this book has Gilbert & Jaime Hernandez, with occasional work from older brother Mario, crafting stories about people, their relationships, and the real-world (with some magical realism interspersed in Gilbert's works) experiences they encounter. It is an amazing book that looks simple, but is infused with as much heart and pathos as almost anything else you will have read. With beautiful cartooning from all of the Hernandez brothers, this book is deserving of all the accolades it has received through the years.
And there are many others. But those are the first that come to mind.
chris
Matthew
PS
If you like the art on Saga try Y the Last Man from Vertigo it has the same writing/art team.I recently read the first issues to both series, courtesy of free samples supplied by Comixology -- Saga didn't really appeal to me, though Y was intriguing enough for me to put on my list of books-to-catch-up-on-later.
Matthew
Unfortunately I've yet to read a series by him with a satisfactory ending. They come off as hurried at worst and "so what?" at best. Both Y and Ex Machina left me cold, but I enjoyed every issue right up to that end. And it certainly hasn't stopped me from picking up Saga and loving it.
Pride of Baghdad? A must read. He absolutely rocks it in single graphic novel storytelling.
Y the Last Man is probably my all-time favorite book, its the first one I hand to people who've never read a comic before and think it's all superhero child fare, which a surprising amount of people do.
Other books I enjoyed quite a bit: Queen and Country, Preacher (which @thecomicgeek you should check out if you want something violent), Waid's Daredevil, Hawkeye, Jinx, the first 5 years of Powers, Invincible... the list could go on forever.
Thanks! I'll check it out. I looked up Y the last man and I'm gonna look for that one too. I love dystopian stuff as well.
http://panelsbyexperts.tumblr.com
thanks a lot!! sounds great. I'll look for it tonight when I'm at the store. Zombies with superpowers sounds pretty great.
@ChrisMurrin I'm gonna check out Locke & Key. I like what you wrote on your blog. the art also looks fantastic in the panel you posted
I'm a real newcomer to Vampi. For years, decades even, I dismissed her stuff as eye candy for kids who couldn't get ahold of Playboy. And don't kid yourself...the cheesecake is definitely in there. It happened that I found a used trade of some of her early exploits and picked it up cheap...and got hooked almost immediately. Amazing art by some of illustration's finest (seems like pretty much everyone wanted a shot at drawing her!), compelling stories of horror, action, mystery and the occasional slice of (very mild) erotica...I was hooked. There's a lot more to her than the gratuitous T&A.
I'm speaking of the old archive books - not the recent stuff Dynamite is putting out (it's not bad, but if you want the GOOD stuff, you gotta go way back!)
@Torchsong how much money does it usually go for? (the old ones)
thanks!!
-Blazing Combat: One volume, war stories that are just as good as Kurtzman's EC stuff. The book was canceled due to protests from Army PXs devastated sales
-Creepy: Goodwin left with issue 17, so his work is reprinted in the first 4 volumes (5 issues per book)
-Eerie: Goodwin left with issue 11, so the first 3 volumes reprint his work (5 issues per book)
After that, it's hit or miss, so buy carefully.
For other horror stuff, you simply can't go wrong with Alan Moore's Swamp Thing.