Archive for December, 2008
I think the (free adult comic book) worst injustice Byrne commited to this revamping of Superman was the poor characterisation. Awfully done. It’s a shame too, with a rich, strong supporting cast like Superman’s it shouldn’t have been that hard to pull off. But instead the ch
I think the worst injustice Byrne commited to this revamping of Superman was the poor characterisation. Awfully done. It’s a shame too, with a rich, strong supporting cast like Superman’s it shouldn’t have been that hard to pull off. But instead the ch
The premise of this story is that Superman lands in Russia during the height of the Cold War. Most writers would’ve gone for an easy “Superman as a bad guy” story. Instead, we get a mature and refreshing take on the Man of Steel that surprisingly cha
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
A Short Note From The Publishers
This post is designed in the hopes that either the overwhelming ennui or the rousing can-do spirit of this holiday season will catch you in the mood to briefly help us with the site by writing in.
We want your links. Are you a cartoonist, comics industry person or have a connection to an on-line expression of something related to comics? Do you know of any? If we don’t have the site you’re thinking of linked to here, or linked to correctly, we’d love to include it.
Happy 41st Birthday, Chris Ware!
Happy 25th Birthday, Julia Wertz!
CR Holiday Interview #6: Eddie Campbell
*****
I love talking to Eddie Campbell, one of the great cartoonists. I was particularly glad to talk to him in this brief space between 2008 and 2009. In 2008, First Second published the last of three Eddie Campbell books that anchored the first few seasons of their line. The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard is a sweetly and gracefully told meditation on life as story, loaded with some of the most exquisite imagery of Campbell’s long and distinguished career. In 2009, Top Shelf plans to release the massive Alec omnibus depicted above, placing in chronological order all of the cartoonist’s wonderful autobiographical and autobiographically informed work into one place with several pages of new comics and another, smaller selection of never-printed ones. It will surely become one of the most borrowed works in many a considerable comics library. If you weren’t aware, Campbell is also one of comics most interesting thinkers, and I’m happy to nudge him into some talk of formal aspects and publishing tends in the conversation that unfolds below. I enjoyed this back and forth very much, and I’m appreciative of how quickly Campbell turned the whole thing around. — Tom Spurgeon
*****
TOM SPURGEON: I don’t think it fully registered with me before, but you have a massive collection of your autobiographical work coming out in 2009. I always thought that this was a natural for a book at some point and I look forward to it with a not insignificant smile on my face. Is there a reason this seemed attractive to you right now?
EDDIE CAMPBELL: The evolution of our medium has made this the right time. If you think back, at first we’d publish serial comics because that was what the economics permitted (all those “mini” and “maxi” series). Then we would gather the material into a book. The medium developed to the stage where a publisher could pay an author an advance to take himself away and make the whole book before showing any of it. We now find ourselves at an even more advanced stage, where several of a veteran author’s books are gathered into a huge compendium. Thus Will Eisner’s Life in Pictures, which collected his various books that had an autobiographical element, Gaiman’s Absolute Sandman, Gilbert Hernandez’ Palomar, etc.
SPURGEON: How did plans for this particular format come together?
CAMPBELL: Chris Staros at Top Shelf has been wanting to do the book for several years, since those others I just mentioned started appearing. In the meantime I’ve been gradually making digital scans of the pages for the French editions, knowing that all the time I was building toward using these in my own big collection. It is a lot of work after all, scanning 640 pages, especially with all the zip-a-tones, trying to avoid and eliminate moir patterns. I’m probably now the expert on doing that stuff.
SPURGEON: When did new comics become a part of those plans?
CAMPBELL: The funny thing is that the way I started putting it all together isn’t quite the way it’s ended up. I had the six books (the King Canute Crowd, Graffiti Kitchen, How to Be an Artist, Little Italy, The Dance of Lifey Death, and After the Snooter,) arranged in a chronology that follows actual time rather than the order in which the books were drawn, and then I had a large 80-page section at the end which rounded up a lot of short pieces and some unfinished works which are still worth reading as they stand. But the more I looked at the pages I started seeing an epic sweep in which characters grow older, with a real sense of time passing. It’s ironic that in the comic book medium terminality has come to be seen as a holy grail, the notion of a thing being complete in itself (as in a “novel”), when the true essence of the comic strip is the very opposite, the concept of the eternal present. The greatest daily comic strips had no end. Conceptually, allowing for no interference by extramural forces, a strip may run forever (Like Gasoline Alley). Of course nowadays that quality has been usurped by the television soap opera. Given the dumbassed nature of comic books, the highest measure of commitment to quality, or terminality, that a writer can have is the determination to show characters being killed.
But I’ve wandered off the point. I saw this shape within the book and I shifted a few of the essential short things into their chronological positions and threw the rest out, then I saw the chance to complete the implied sequence by adding another book that brings things up to date. So we now have an all-new 35-page book at the end titled “The Years Have Pants”, which has also become the title for the whole compendium, since it fits so well. But the new book is in no way a conclusion, for it introduces a bunch of new developments that point to resolution outside of the text. I’ll also mention that there are half a dozen other unpublished pages included in the compendium.
SPURGEON: When we talked in 2006, you compared standard comics pages to a straitjacket, which I think as a value is an undercurrent to a lot of your formally audacious work of the last few years. What was it like, then, preparing new work for the Alec omnibus using a more standard grid?
CAMPBELL: I certainly wasn’t thinking of the “nine-panel grid” as a straitjacket, because an artist worth his salt can compose with infinite variety in a given space. Rather I was referring almost to the opposite result, to the way the American comic book idiom creates its own limitations while appearing to be freewheeling. I was looking at a portfolio piece recently by a young artist, and fastened upon an oddly shaped picture. It was rectangular, but the dimensions of the frame had no meaningful relation to the content, with misshapen blank areas around the figures. I asked why it was thus shaped and the reason was that this was the space left on the page after the other panels had been decided, which of course I had already judged to be the case before I started in, and I probably had to put the words in the head of this poor artist. ‘Why should this image receive less consideration than the ones before it?’ I demanded relentlessly. In fact, every stage of comic book composition is hampered by that same absence of thinking. Characters stand in limited ways in relation to the frame around them and in relation to other characters. There is a complicated pictorial syntax that seals everything in a rigid holding pattern, including the ways that balloons must be placed and the way pages end and begin. The box of space that each panel represents is governed by gravitational laws that only exist in comic books, and in no other idiom of art let alone real life. I’m referring specifically to the American idiom here, which is why I have no hesitation in regarding comic books as a genre of popular fiction. If you look at the old newspaper adventure strips you can see they are governed by a different set of laws.
Returning to your question, the inventive elements in my new pages have got more to do with leitmotifs and narrative patterns spread over three dozen pages. The construction is quite intricate.
SPURGEON: Was it pleasurable making those comics? Was it different than it used to be?
CAMPBELL: It was a great pleasure to draw in that style again after a layoff for a few years. I’m sure you can tell from looking at the pages that I was enjoying spending a lot of time on them. I even got the old zip-a-tones out of the mothballs and went to town with them like in the old days.
SPURGEON: In one of the new comics — and I swear I won’t ask too many questions about them — you end on a hysterically funny down note about how you’re glad that you got a certain kind of going out and carousing out of your system as a young man. Another one consists of a verbal beat down your wife provides you one morning about things she finds aggravating about you. These seem to me significant departures in terms of tone, the way you approach similar one-pagers in the past. Was that on purpose? Was there anything different about the way you approached these comics knowing they’d be published not alone, but with all of that early work?
CAMPBELL: The first page you mention was certainly designed to act as a balance to the activities at the beginning of the compendium, all that sleeping-bag and sofa-surfing that I once found so exciting a way to live. And the wife of my bosom has a moment that, while we’re not permitted to blame all angry outbursts on “the black and white menstrual show” (as Hayley Campbell’s boyfriend calls it), sometimes such outbursts are too absurd to be explained any other way. And in case it all sounds a bit middle aged, there is a grand five-page adventure with my son Callum, then nine (’Their father-son day out’), which ends with us getting arrested and then judiciously deciding to keep it a secret from his beloved mother. Every phase of life reveals its engaging peculiarities. But It is probably true that a note of frustration has crept into the work that wasn’t there at the end of After the Snooter, when I was traveling the world at the time the From Hell movie came out. That was a hell of a year. I turned down invites to Portugal and Berlin and canceled one to Brazil at a very late hour. I’ll probably never be invited anywhere again.
SPURGEON: When I saw you this summer when you were a guest of Comic-Con International, you seemed to be enjoying yourself — you smiled a lot — but you also seemed to be working through some serious questions on vocational issues. Is it fair to suggest that you were in a reflective mood earlier this year? How did that period resolve itself?
CAMPBELL: Reflective? I think it would be more correct to say that I waver between frustration and despair, with an occasional daytrip into elation. You must have caught me on a good day. It hasn’t resolved itself yet. I’m hoping the possibility of our TV show getting actually produced will refresh my brain.
SPURGEON: You mention the TV project… I think the last time you wrote about it on your site was about a month ago from the time we’re having this exchange of e-mails. Am I to take you’re now at a wait and see point? When should we know one way or the other if the project is going to progress further?
CAMPBELL: Waiting is what I have been doing since June 2007, with a promising event happening every couple of months. In fact I only started blogging about the subject once we had made an advance significant enough that even if the whole adventure should come to nothing, I would still have something to show for it. That is a little two and a half minute demonstration movie in which I play myself, with a computer animated Snooter bug and a guy in a specially made costume for the humanoid version. It’s even got its own music. It’s a well-made little piece of film, which I needed at that stage because the producers have seen what I do but up till then I had not really seen what it is that they do. We had videotaped an earlier rough version back in March which is probably the first time I had acted in front of a camera, at least since I was about ten with my dad’s super-8. In fact it was a completely different set-up from the finished short movie as we rejected it and wrote a new one except for a short dream segment in the middle in which I stand in a big blank white space and briefly talk to God, represented by a big child’s crayon drawing, a scene which you may recall from The Fate of the Artist. So the show as you can tell from that is going to be a mix of live action and different sorts of animation. I’m hoping we should know something within the next couple of months.
SPURGEON: On your blog, you’ve labeled your posts on the project “Our TV Adventure” and you’re written about the experience in an admirably open and engaging way, it seems to me. Has it been a creative boon as well? Does going over some of this material for a new medium make you reconsider your work on any level?
CAMPBELL: It’s adding a new level to the work rather than simply being an adaptation of what already exists. I was getting into that anyway with Fate as you may recall, in which I was missing from my own story and my part was played by a fictitious actor named Richard Siegrist. It’s almost like I was already striving to re-imagine my core work into film, going so far as to set up a whole seven page sequence in Fate in photographs (”fumetti” style as we call it in English, or “fotonovelas” as they call them where “fumetti” just means comics) which is the interview scene in which Hayley Campbell plays herself. So if our most ambitious version of the TV show gets to be made, there would be some of that complexity. Campbell would be played by an actor, but real Campbell would also be in it. I’ve written synopses for several episodes and I’m happy with them. So let’s see how far it gets before we have to change it all. You have to deal with so many other people in the TV game.
SPURGEON: You’re not someone whose work of this type might spring to mind as a natural for adaptation into another medium. How much of your work has developed out of an understanding of film techniques or approaches?
CAMPBELL: Probably none at all. I have always consciously rejected filmic analogues in comics. Indeed, I would say that composing comics in the same way as film often results in faulty technique. There’s an interview with Krigstein from way back (in Squa Tront or somewhere like that) where he explained how he felt that there had been a development in comic books, and I think he blamed it on Eisner, that resulted in a corruption of the integrity of the picture. By this he meant that breaking up of images into fragments, as film editors routinely do, does not have the same legibility on a printed page. In a blog post I used the finale to Krigstein’s “Master Race” as an example of his solution to the problem of creating a kinetic effect without fragmenting images. All 12 or 13 of the panels of the sequence contain both the pursuer and the pursued and the relationship between them is readable in all panels. In contrast to this I remember reading the old Batman Adventures comic books to my very young son, and those books were supposed to be aimed at the youngsters. The lad had difficulty in making sense of some of the images because of the ways in which people and objects were truncated by panel borders. The artists in there really needed some lessons in clarity, and the problem most of the time was that they were thinking in filmic terms. The best comics draw their magic from other wells.
SPURGEON: I love the double-page spreads and bigger, splashier, single-page images in Monsieur Leotard. I thought they were some of the most beautiful instances of art you’ve ever made. What was it about that story that led to these more transcendent moments within the wider narrative, as opposed to merely streamlining those plot points into a panel or a single page?
CAMPBELL: I wanted to recreate the nineteenth century through its particular typography. In a good cartoon strip the optical perception of the real is supplanted by an array of graphic devices (as opposed to the regular comic book style, whose currency is visceral simulation.) If you just glance at the thing you may fail to connect with it; you have to give yourself up to it. I experienced this when I came to first revise the Alec material. At first I thought, aw this all looks like just a bunch of old ink lines and half-there drawings, but once I entered into an exchange in the graphic currency, or started reading the work in other words, I found myself receiving the communicated experience afresh, without really thinking that it was my own experience. With Leotard there was a huge swathe of time and event to be covered and the big circus posters and old news banners were made to carry a lot of that responsibility. I don’t think a panel or page could have performed the function. There’s a lot of condensation in one of those poster-spreads.
SPURGEON: I was intrigued by the chapter where Etienne sleeps, pushing him through much of his own life story and between that and things like the way that he’s a diarist and the episodes are described as such I wonder if you intended a criticism of using one’s life as the fodder for art? I apologize if that sounds overly facile; I mostly wondered if you could talk about the diary-making element to the narrative and that remarkable sleeping chapter.
CAMPBELL: I’ve been thinking more and more about the idea of seeing your life as a story. Once you accept the challenge you must then ask whether you are writing a good story or a bad one, or whether it started well and then you lost interest and let it ramble, or whether you gave up on it altogether. It’s a matter of giving your life a shape, a journey toward a goal, and adhering to that and not wasting time. Etienne did in fact lose track of the plot of his story. Some ten years passed before he regained it. I may have been influenced a little in this sequence by Bernard Malamud’s The Natural. Nineteen-year-old Roy Hobbs is just about to arrive in the baseball world and take it by storm, or so the narrative style suggests, when he is suddenly shot by a lunatic. The story then jumps ahead 15 years. It was made into a great movie starring Robert Redford and directed by Barry Levinson.
SPURGEON: It’s hard not to see the circus and traveling show as precursors to modern show business or even artistic endeavor generally, the way that Arthur Kopit used the Buffalo Bill show in Indians and Robert Altman did again when filming that play. You also seem attracted in your work to first things, antecedents to things that exist in modern culture. Why the circus this time out? What is it that you saw there, that you wanted to make use of as a storyteller?
CAMPBELL: I wasn’t interested in the circus for itself, which is probably obvious. The book is short on the kind of details that would suggest I’m in love with the milieu. So certainly it was all metaphorical, though there are some daffy aspects of it that appealed to me, like the wording of circus posters and some of the characters in the freak shows. Not the icky weirdness of it, mind you, more the comical aspects of it all. I saw a poster of “Pallenberg’s Wonder Bears: Bruins that dance, skate, walk tight ropes and ride bicycles like humans” so naturally I had to have one of those in the book, and I called him Pallenberg. I also picked up the way that a kind of noble class in the circus realm attracts strings of adjectives to their names, so all the significant players have bi-adjectival pre-names just like the Amazing Remarkable Leotard, and in this way they are marked as superior individuals.
SPURGEON: I’m always fascinated in how you approach your different projects visually, Eddie. Monsieur Leotard is very complex that way: there’s a grid on some pages, but the margins are frequently filled, and there are sometimes up to four competing visual throughlines on a single page. What interested you about all of the marginalia and shifts in storytelling strategies on this project? Are you cognizant of these choices going in, or do they just grow organically out of doing the work?
CAMPBELL: There was a chapter in my History of Humour in my defunct Egomania magazine (a selection from this will be in the Alec Omnibus by the way) in which I examined the old marginalia in gothic illuminated manuscripts and talked about the late Michael Camille’s theories about them. I came away with the idea that there are potent regions on “the page,” that things tend to happen in specific quadrants of it. Camille’s main idea, with regard to the old fourteenth century psalters and bibles was that God lived at the center and evil and folly was pushed to the outer edges, which is why the modern browser may be astonished to see obscenities in holy books. The page is symbolic of the universe, with everything in its place. It struck me that a page in our own time is lacking in any kind of magic or meaning as a thing in itself. So for a couple of years there I was on the lookout for a project where I could put some of my thoughts into play. Leotard came up in my discussions with my co-author Dan Best (we’ve done two or three other things together) and I saw that book as the one. So right from the start it has a big generous margin in which a life outside of the physical everyday one is taking place. Characters have a life-after-death there. The authors can turn up there, as well as the more prosaic kind of footnotes that normally appear in such an environment. Once I got going it became deliciously complicated.
SPURGEON: A lot of your recent work seems to be done in collaboration — you worked with Hayley’s photography in Fate of the Artist, you worked with an existing script to make The Black Diamond Detective Agency and you worked with Dan Best on this latest. Even the work you showed me that’s forthcoming it’s almost like you’re working in collaboration with your older work. You have such an obviously strong voice and so much of your early work was done without anyone else contributing I wondered if you could talk to what you’ve gotten out of those recent collaborations, and why, if you seek them out, you seek them out.
CAMPBELL: I may have mislead you in Fate, in that my daughter posed for the seven page “fumetti” sequence but she only took the one author photo at the end. Any other photos in there are mine, though I can only think of the letter initials off the bat, and some of those were done on the scanner, including the edible cracker (what do you call them in the US?). With Black Diamond I was offered enough cash to make the job an attractive proposition, and the fact that I was given a free hand in the adaptation sweetened it. In some ways my book was a story about the story since I didn’t think it was an entirely credible one. All of these projects are ones that I’m happy about and I think I was able to express my view of the world through them even if they weren’t completely my own invention. Now and then I do spend time on stuff that I really shouldn’t have done, but you have to get through your life as best you can and pay all the bills. On the whole though, I don’t go seeking work. It all falls in my lap, but I have been saying no more often than I used to.
SPURGEON: One reason I wanted to talk to you so badly this year, Eddie, is that I think you have a very interesting take on the New York publishing world, and how they may be slowly revamping the comics industry into an adjunct of the children’s book publishing business. Can you talk a bit about what’s led you to think this? What can be done?
CAMPBELL: This is something that has been bugging me for some time. The latest news to come down is that First Second Books, the publisher of my last three books, are now under the umbrella of Macmillan’s Children’s Group. I’m not surprised, because the book world, by which I mean the mainstream book publishers as well as the libraries and the Library Association, has been viewing “the graphic novel” as a young reader’s genre for quite some time. In part I think it’s because the part of a publishing house that is likely to be interested in bright illustrated narratives is the children’s books department, and in part also because those publishers, and America’s libraries, see the “graphic novel” as a way of grabbing a part of the literate populace that has hitherto proved elusive. Now, I have no objection to young folks having their own literature specially designed for them, though when I was a young ‘un myself I would have been highly suspicious of anything that the adult world thought I should read because it was supposed to be good for me. Let’s not forget that this is one of the things that drew us to comics in the first place, the very fact that they were not approved by our adults; they were our visual rock’n'roll, the things we knew that they didn’t. However, let’s not get bogged down on that point. The problem with this development is that comics were supposed to have grown up and become the “graphic novel,” but now we are apt to find articles telling us that the “graphic novel has grown up.” In other words we’re back where we started. Furthermore, as an author of work that is likely to be classified as “mature” I have been finding it more and more difficult to find a publisher for a couple of projects I have been offering recently. I might have taken the hint that I have gone out of fashion except that the same publishers who rejected these proposed books were eager to secure me as the illustrator of texts by “one of our young reader’s authors” (this has happened twice, which tends to suggest a pattern and I declined both.) The upshot of it all is that I am back in an earlier position, working with Top Shelf on the Alec Omnibus and both Top Shelf and Knockabout on a book that is now finished and should be out at the end of 2009 titled The Playwright. As to what can be done about the larger shift in the business of comics, I really wouldn’t care to guess. The reorientation to a younger audience is probably apt. I find that I can read fewer and fewer comics these days. They’re like celery in that the effort it takes me to read them is way out of proportion to the information they can give. In my pessimistic moments I think the idea of complicated and challenging comics will recede and become commercially problematic. The market seems to want the “young readers” stuff. Was the idea of mature comics nothing but folly all along?
Updated a couple of days later: Tom, when I wrote the above I hadn’t noticed that you’d already commented insightfully on the MacMillan news. A relevant blog post has also just come up:Two highly compelling book-length comics that I found in the Young Adult Graphic Novels section of my local library, though I’m still not convinced they belong anywhere near there. Clyde Fans, by Seth, because there’s nothing teenagers like to read more than delicately paced studies of two brothers who tried to sell electric fans to Canadian retailers midway through the last century. From Hell, because…The post is followed by a revealing comment from a youth services librarian.
The whole issue is particularly frustrating because we had always hoped that success in the wider universe of books (i.e. outside of the comics specialty shops) would level out the playing field and give mature comics a bigger audience. This is not happening.
SPURGEON: Finally, we were on a panel this summer where you spoke eloquently about learning to write characters in a way that they may demand to be written differently once you’ve been around them a while. Knowing the characters helps inform you as to how they should be written. Is that true in autobiography or autobiographically-informed comics as well?
CAMPBELL: Yes, my ability to draw a character appreciates the further I get into a project. This means that the version away back at the beginning is always annoyingly unrealized and I always have to do some reworking on the early pages when I come to gather it together. With a real life representation it would be because I recall more details from the original model as I get further along. The same thing happens in movies, except the early work is never at the start of the movie. I watched Fellini’s Casanova recently after first seeing it way back in the ’70s. There’s a point about twenty minutes to half an hour in when Donald Sutherland suddenly seems to be playing a different version of the character and it always looked odd to me (it’s on the foggy bridge in what is supposed to be London, just before he meets the circus giantess). It was revealing in Sutherland’s commentary that this was the first scene they shot and they hadn’t quite figured out all the aspects of the character.
In conclusion, it’s no big revelation to say that Ben Grimm looked much different in Fantastic Four #20 than he did in #1. Nobody gave a thought to the possibility that many of the kids would have the whole pile on view at the same time. It’s a different kind of problem when you put out a 250-page book designed to weave a singular spell upon the reader. You probably want them to see contrasts between one character and another, not between one character and himself on an earlier page.
*****
Editor’s Note: I have a note from Mark Siegel about the issue of First Second moving away from non-children’s book more into children’s books that I’ll run and discuss when daily news returns to this stite January 5. He vociferously denies this will happen.
*****
* the cover from the new Alec omnibus, due 2009
* three random panels from the new Alec omnibus
* sample from one of the many memorable visual sequences in Monsieur Leotard
* one of the full-page images I liked in Monsieur Leotard
* great circus sequence within a static image from Monsieur Leotard
* a visual complex page from Monsieur Leotard
* close-up of a tiny image of partnership from Monsieur Leotard
* Campbell’s recent First Second Book
* a page I very much liked from Monsieur Leotard
*****
*****
*****
Batman: Child of Dreams HC
![]() If you could be anyone, who would you be? There’s a drug on the streets of Gotham that will make your dreams come true. For a minute, for an hour, for a whole night if you’re lucky, you can literally become your idol - provided your idol is one of Batman’s greatest enemies. The price for your fantas… |
|
Retail: $ 24.95 Your Price: $24.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 7% [?]
This series’ redemption comes from Leinil Francis Yu’s excellent artwork. It’s strong and colorful, but rarely is it bright. It fits the story perfectly. For this reason I would recommend this comic. I found it interesting to see a writer attempt a (comic books sell)
This series’ redemption comes from Leinil Francis Yu’s excellent artwork. It’s strong and colorful, but rarely is it bright. It fits the story perfectly. For this reason I would recommend this comic. I found it interesting to see a writer attempt a
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Majestic: Strange New Visitor TPB
Majestic: Strange New Visitor TPB
![]() A new collection including the Strange New Visitor crossover storyline where Lord Majestros finds himself in the home turf of Superman! Also included is the 4-issue miniseries that returned the Kheran warrior to the WildStorm Universe! This collection includes: Action Comics #811, Adventures of Supe… |
|
Retail: $ 14.99 Your Price: $14.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 7% [?]
It would have helped though, if the plot included a little explanation on why Doomsday was able to kill Superman. For those who have limited knowledge on why and how Superman acquired his powers, it won’t make sense why a virtually unknown and obviously (comic books has)
It would have helped though, if the plot included a little explanation on why Doomsday was able to kill Superman. For those who have limited knowledge on why and how Superman acquired his powers, it won’t make sense why a virtually unknown and obviously
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
FHFA Announces “Revised” Home Valuation Code of Conduct - Effective May 1, 2009
Washington, DC Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) Director James B. Lockhart announced that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will implement a revised Home Valuation Code of Conduct (Code) effective May 1, 2009. The Code is based on an agreement…
First Impressions - The 1004MC - Part Four - “House Cleaning”
I have been developing a workshop on the 1004MC and as I work through the process, every day is one of discovery. Despite having read 08-30 and the FAQ’s, along with the existing appraisal guidelines, I am not certain that…
AMCS - The first set of letters that spell appraisal de-valuation.
This is part 1 of a series regarding appraisal devaluation. The appraisal industry as of late has dealt with many issues that are resulting in the de-valuation of the industry. Management companies, data companies, and others have had little problem…
Power Rangers Dino Thunder: Day Of The Dino Volume 1
Power Rangers Dino Thunder: Day Of The Dino Volume 1
Because the world is never out of danger, three Reefside High students must rise up to meet their destiny head-on. While on a fossil-finding field trip, Conner, Kira, and Ethan fall into a sinkhole and discover powerful Dino Gems that give them each awesome super abilities. But alarming evil is afoo… |
|
Retail: $ 19.99 Your Price: $15.99 Buy/More Info |
DC Archives - Superman: Action Comics Vol. 3 HC
DC Archives - Superman: Action Comics Vol. 3 HC
![]() In this volume of SUPERMAN: ACTION COMICS ARCHIVES, Superman begins to face foes who would monopolize his time for decades to come: costumed villains! This is a 240-page hardcover reprinting the Man of Steel’s early adventures from ACTION COMIICS #37-52, written by Jerry Siegel, with art by Joe Shus… |
|
Retail: $ 49.95 Your Price: $49.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 7% [?]
The scene with Krypto, short as it is, is worth the price of the book by itself! Wonderful! (scan comic books)
The scene with Krypto, short as it is, is worth the price of the book by itself! Wonderful!
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
Learn More about New and Pre-existing Home Rebates
Jumpin’ Jack Flash / Super, The (Bricked)
Jumpin’ Jack Flash / Super, The (Bricked)
![]() Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 22.98 Your Price: $18.38 Buy/More Info |
Spies, Vixens, And Masters Of Kung Fu - The Art of Paul Gulacy HC
Spies, Vixens, And Masters Of Kung Fu - The Art of Paul Gulacy HC
![]() Star Wars, Batman, 007, The Terminator, Master of Kung Fu, and Catwoman: Building his reputation on these mega-properties Paul Gulacy has proven one of the most highly regarded comic book illustrators of the last 30 years! The artist populates his innovative and surreal designs with characters that … |
|
Retail: $ 34.95 Your Price: $34.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 6% [?]
What’s next? Superman happen to be Gay?! And Jimmy Olsen is Clark Kent’s boyfriend! Might as well revise Supes into SUPERGAY then. Sheeez (derp comic book prices) !
What’s next? Superman happen to be Gay?! And Jimmy Olsen is Clark Kent’s boyfriend! Might as well revise Supes into SUPERGAY then. Sheeez !
Flashbacks show us a young Clark befriending Lex, but we see nothing more than that. The rest of the graphic novel is set in the present, where Clark searches for his place in the world while battling the evil Lex Luthor. Much is left out that could hav
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

State of Grace
![]() New York City’s “Hell’s Kitchen” is a pressure cooker of pent-up anger… and it’s about to explode! Sean Penn, Ed Harris, Gary Oldman, Robin Wright, John Turturro and John C. Reilly deliver “exceptional performances” (The Hollywood Reporter) in this “finely drawn tale of betrayal, redemption and gu… |
|
Retail: $ 14.95 Your Price: $11.96 Buy/More Info |
Batman: Tales Of The Dark Knight
Batman: Tales Of The Dark Knight
Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 14.96 Your Price: $11.97 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 5% [?]
Lois Lane came off as a complete snob and competitively obessed, sort of like (456 comic book) Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.
Lois Lane came off as a complete snob and competitively obessed, sort of like Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Superman/Aliens II: Godwar #1 (of 4)
Superman/Aliens II: Godwar #1 (of 4)
![]() Superman faces the eternal ferocity of Aliens again in this explosive four-part series! Darkseid is bad enough, with his forces of Parademons and loyal henchmen on Apokolips, but, when a ship carrying the Alien brood crashes into his domain, will he finally find the key to creating a relentless, ind… |
|
Retail: $ 2.99 Your Price: $2.99 Buy/More Info |
DC Archives - World’s Finest Comics Vol. 2 HC
DC Archives - World’s Finest Comics Vol. 2 HC
![]() Presented in Volume 2 are sixteen super team-ups from World’s Finest Comics #86-101, including the classic "The Origin of the Superman/Batman Team." Other tales: Batman and Robin with super-powers and Superman with none; the mysterious Lightning-Man; Luthor teaming with the Joker t… |
|
Retail: $ 49.95 Your Price: $49.95 Buy/More Info |
Batman: Scarecrow Tales TPB
![]() A spine-tingling new collection spotlighting the greatest moments of the Scarecrow! Featuring eight stories spanning more than 60 years from 1941 to 2002! This volume collects: Batman #189, #262 Batman: Gotham Knights #23 Detective Comics #503, #571 The Joker #8 Scarecrow (Villains) #1 World’s Fines… |
|
Retail: $ 19.99 Your Price: $19.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
(Comic books knights) Writers have relied on three techniques to limit Superman. First is to have Superman conveniently forget his own powers in particular his near light speed movement. The second limitation is Superman’s own Boy Scout morality and third is the annoyingly ex
Writers have relied on three techniques to limit Superman. First is to have Superman conveniently forget his own powers in particular his near light speed movement. The second limitation is Superman’s own Boy Scout morality and third is the annoyingly ex
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Adventures Of Batman & Robin: Poison Ivy/The Penguin
Adventures Of Batman & Robin: Poison Ivy/The Penguin
![]() Adventures of Batman & Robin - Poison Ivy: A grade school teacher takes a night job working for a rough nightclub owner. Beneath his tough exterior, though, her new boss is kind and very protective of her. Adventures of Batman & Robin - The Penguin: Penguin, ever crafty, takes on Batman in a… |
|
Retail: $ 12.98 Your Price: $10.38 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
(Comic book online) I think the biggest problem with the Supergirl character was that she was never anything more than a pale imitation of her famous cousin. Whatever depth the character might have had was never strong enough to let her step out of Superman’s shadow. Wheth
I think the biggest problem with the Supergirl character was that she was never anything more than a pale imitation of her famous cousin. Whatever depth the character might have had was never strong enough to let her step out of Superman’s shadow. Wheth
This was a shame. I think supergirl is a cool character and can be done well, but this just makes clear that DC has no idea what to do with her. There is no characterization, no back up characters and the story can only loosely be called a “story.” The
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
The Robin Hood Gang
Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 9.98 Your Price: $7.98 Buy/More Info |
Batman Begins: Cillian Murphy as Scarecrow Mini-Statue
Batman Begins: Cillian Murphy as Scarecrow Mini-Statue
![]() Batman Begins explores the origins of the Batman legend and the Dark Knight’s emergence as a force for good in Gotham. In the wake of his parents’ murder, disillusioned industrial heir Bruce Wayne (Christian Bale) travels the world seeking the means to fight injustice and turn fear against those wh… |
|
Retail: $ 29.99 Your Price: $29.99 Buy/More Info |
Batman: Out Of The Shadows
Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 14.96 Your Price: $11.97 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
(Fawcet comic books) Normally, I prefer the color Archive editions of old DC comics, but I can see the sense in issuing these particular stories stories in black and white. Jimmy Olsen is fun to read but I would not want to be paying $50 for a hardcover collection of a few
Normally, I prefer the color Archive editions of old DC comics, but I can see the sense in issuing these particular stories stories in black and white. Jimmy Olsen is fun to read but I would not want to be paying $50 for a hardcover collection of a few
The Soviet Superman is never meant to be evil just overprotective and stifling. Unfortunately the author chose to absolve the alternate Superman of most of his crimes by blaming them on outside manipulations reducing the impact of the story. I also have t
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
Batman Begins: Christian Bale as Batman Statue
Batman Begins: Christian Bale as Batman Statue
![]() A whole new start to a the legend of the Dark Knight. Based on Christian Bale as Batman in the movie Batman Begins this hand-painted, cold-cast porcelain statue includes a Certificate of Authenticity, is packaged in a 4-color box. This statue measures approximately 12 and 1/2 inches tall and is limi… |
|
Retail: $ 195.00 Your Price: $195.00 Buy/More Info |
Birds Of Prey #94
![]() Written by Gail Simone Art by Paulo Siqueira & Robin Riggs Cover by Terry & Rachel Dodson The Society pulls out the big gun: Prometheus! Can the Huntress outwit a kidnapper who’s got the skills of thirty assassins and an escape route to the Ghost Zone?… |
|
Retail: $ 2.99 Your Price: $2.99 Buy/More Info |
Flash: Race Against Time! TPB
![]() Lost in time. His only lifeline back home, cut. After defeating Savitar, Wally West, the fastest man alive, bounces off the Speed Field and spirals through time encountering dangers he never thought possible, and seeing firsthand the repercussions his action will have on the future. Meanwhile, back … |
|
Retail: $ 14.95 Your Price: $14.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
It would have helped though, if the plot included a (comic book art archive) little explanation on why Doomsday was able to kill Superman. For those who have limited knowledge on why and how Superman acquired his powers, it won’t make sense why a virtually unknown and obviously
It would have helped though, if the plot included a little explanation on why Doomsday was able to kill Superman. For those who have limited knowledge on why and how Superman acquired his powers, it won’t make sense why a virtually unknown and obviously
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Holiday Treat #1: A Few Of The Cards Received This Year
John Cei Douglass:
*****
John Freeman:
*****
Fernando Garcyffffneda(?):
*****
Darko Macan:
*****
Gary Beatty:
*****
Andrew Farago and Shaenon Garrity
*****
Dean Haspiel
*****
Paul Karasik
*****
Mid-Ohio Con
*****
Rebecca Dart For The Inkstuds
*****
J. Chris Campbell
*****
*****
A Short Note From The Publishers
This post is designed in the hopes that either the overwhelming ennui or the rousing can-do spirit of this holiday season will catch you in the mood to briefly help us with the site by writing in.
We want your links. Are you a cartoonist, comics industry person or have a connection to an on-line expression of something related to comics? Do you know of any? If we don’t have the site you’re thinking of linked to here, or linked to correctly, we’d love to include it.
We want to wish you a happy birthday. Are you a prominent or semi-prominent comics person who would be willing to help me recognize comics history by wishing you a happy birthday? Stipulations: 1) Tom has to have heard of you, but he’s heard of most people. 2) We need a birth date.
We want to know where you are (but only generally). Are you willing to share with the world of comics where you live in order that people potentially contact you, hire you, perhaps invite you to social gatherings? We’d love to include you or the people in comics you know on the Comics By Local Scene List.
Most of all, we want to know what we can do better. Anything that this site can do to better serve your needs, we want to try and make happen.
Thank you for your help, and thank you so much for your patronage. We hope you’re having an excellent holiday season and we look forward to serving you throughout and into the New Year.
God Bless Us Every One
Saul Steinberg, 1976
Seven Soldiers Of Victory Vol. 1 TPB
Seven Soldiers Of Victory Vol. 1 TPB
![]() One of the most creative minds in comics, Grant Morrison (ALL STAR SUPERMAN, THE INVISIBLES, JLA, ANIMAL MAN) delivers his most groundbreaking and ambitious project yet: SEVEN SOLDIERS ! Comprising seven different 4-issue miniseries and two bookend Specials, this colossal 30-part tale of death, betr… |
|
Retail: $ 14.99 Your Price: $14.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 5% [?]
(Comic book art water splashing) The only good that came out of this storyline was the excellent follow up trade collection THE RETURN OF SUPERMAN, which provides more story and higher quality art for your dollar.
The only good that came out of this storyline was the excellent follow up trade collection THE RETURN OF SUPERMAN, which provides more story and higher quality art for your dollar.
The art may take some comic fans a while to get used to. Everyone looks huge and bulky. But the action is intense throughout.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Batman: 1:43 Scale 2000 Batmobile #3
Batman: 1:43 Scale 2000 Batmobile #3
![]() Live the Batman experience with Corgi’s new line of DC Comics Batman vehicles from past decades. This series of 1:43rd die-cast collectible vehicles with unique action features will be a "must-have" for Batman fans worldwide! This 1:43rd scale 2000 Batmobile measures approximately … |
|
Retail: $ 12.99 Your Price: $12.99 Buy/More Info |
Superman and Batman: Generations - An Imaginary Tale TPB
Superman and Batman: Generations - An Imaginary Tale TPB
![]() This book is hot! Careful you don’t get Byrned. Ahem… sorry. This Elseworlds story of the world’s finest heroes starts in 1939 with the first meeting of Superman and Batman. As the decades pass they join forces to battle the Joker, Lex Luthor, a team-up of Mr. Mxyzptlk and Bat-Mite as well as othe… |
|
Retail: $ 17.95 Your Price: $17.95 Buy/More Info |
San Jose Costa Rica Private Investigator
Popularity: 5% [?]
(Comic book collection software) This story is told in four parts. Chapter One, “Smallville,” has Clark discovering his powers and coming to a decision about whether or not to go public. Chapter Two, “Metropolis,” finds Clark moving to New York City to be a writer and having his so
This story is told in four parts. Chapter One, “Smallville,” has Clark discovering his powers and coming to a decision about whether or not to go public. Chapter Two, “Metropolis,” finds Clark moving to New York City to be a writer and having his so
I grew up as a fan of Superman, but I never really read the comics. Recently I have gottn back into following the exploits of the Man of Steel, but there was so much I missed. This book has helped explain a lot without me having to go back and buy all t
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
SeattleHome.com - Edmonds Real Estate. Washington Homes, Condos, Local Listings and more
SeattleHome.com - Edmonds Real Estate. Washington Homes, Condos, Local Listings and more Search All Local Listings for homes and condominiums in Edmonds with Washington State The person who performs this real estate appraisal exercise is called the real estate appraiser or property valuation surveyor. …
Ask the Biz Brain - Bridgeton News
My property value has decreased considerably, so how do I get my New Jersey property taxes lowered? They were assessed at the height of the real estate bubble. — RubenGood timing. Taxes are set by town budgets and may increase despite a reduced New Jersey Real EstateDec …
Real Estate in McHenry IL - Townsinfo
Real Estate in McHenry IL - Townsinfo McHenry Homes and condo:McHenry IL, Richmond IL, Wonder Lake IL, Harvard IL, Johnsburg IL A free listing service will only give you scanty information about which homes are going for foreclosure but a paid service will give you much detailed …
for listings-homes MLS estate home sale-real
for listings-homes MLS estate home sale-real Real estate for sale and mls listings of new homes, home, farms,farmland, river front, lake view and lake front house, new condominiums for sale in the Peru are of Illinois The traditional 30 year mortgage had a term of 360 months …
Robin’s Hood
Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 24.95 Your Price: $19.96 Buy/More Info |
Superman Cartoons Vol 1
Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 4.98 Your Price: $3.98 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
(India comic books online) Despite the tweaking to Superman’s origin which he establishes as occurring today, rather than in the 1930’s or 1950’s, the author really doesn’t break any new ground. Luthor’s scheme, if you can call it that, is so over the top that it reminds me of
Despite the tweaking to Superman’s origin which he establishes as occurring today, rather than in the 1930’s or 1950’s, the author really doesn’t break any new ground. Luthor’s scheme, if you can call it that, is so over the top that it reminds me of
It is an amazing story for a lot of good reasons, outlied by previous reviwers so well, it?s is firmly placed in a real and credible world, the character is very well developed, he is smart, the government have a very interesting role and the art is gorge
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Tekmira Partner Alnylam Files First IND for an RNAi Therapeutic Utilizing SNALP
… Tekmira believes it has a leading intellectual property position in the field of siRNA delivery. … clinical trials and obtaining regulatory approval to market Tekmira’s products, the safety and efficacy of …
Recession-proof Yankees keep on spending
… them to set the top of the market. Around the rest of baseball, the highest … The Mets new ballpark appears modest in comparison. Citi Field costs $800 million, and at …
Ancient water source vital to Australian industries, tourism
… productive farmlands. Angus Emmott runs a cattle property called Moonbah in central Queensland and relies … The bores underpin the social and economic value of this huge inland area of Australia …
Zacks.com featured expert Kevin Matras highlights: ProShares Ultra Health Care, ProShares Ultra Technology and ProShares Ultra Consumer Goods
… as the price goes up (i.e. the market or industry goes up), investors can actually … goes down, your stock would increase in value commensurately. Ultra ETFs work the same way … more about it here Zacks.com is a property of Zacks Investment Research, Inc., which was …
Adventures of Superman #493
![]() Warehouse Find — We don’t normally offer less-than-mint-condition books for sale, but with the continued demand for back issues, we’ve decided to add our Warehouse backstock to our website. The majority of our comics are in mint condition, but there are some with minor dings. We will accept no retu… |
|
Retail: $ 1.25 Your Price: $1.25 Buy/More Info |
Maryland Retirement Communities
Popularity: 5% [?]
Much worse than the myths perpetuated by Dan Brown with his now infamous allegedly factual based novel DA VINCI CODE did for the profanity of creating myths behind the myths alleged to Christ and Mary of Magdala DC Comics did with their primary Legenda (digital coloring of comic books)
Much worse than the myths perpetuated by Dan Brown with his now infamous allegedly factual based novel DA VINCI CODE did for the profanity of creating myths behind the myths alleged to Christ and Mary of Magdala DC Comics did with their primary Legenda
If you would have two Superman books to buy, I would recommend “Whatever Happened to the man of tomorrow” and this one, hands down.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Marvel Age Spider Man Vol. 2 TPB: Everyday Hero (Digest Edition)
Marvel Age Spider Man Vol. 2 TPB: Everyday Hero (Digest Edition)
![]() The world-famous wall-crawler’s early adventures continue with the first appearances of classic villains such as Electro and the Lizard, and the return of one of his first foes: the Vulture! Plus: Spider-Man vs. the Living Brain, Peter Parker’s fight with Flash Thompson, and the wall-crawler tackles… |
|
Retail: $ 5.99 Your Price: $5.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 6% [?]
Jurgens was nothing special on Superman, this story and his Thor run are among the most boring of stories. Heck, Death of Superman was in a way the end of comics as we know it, with few issues being left undamaged by the no talent work. (comic book art work)
Jurgens was nothing special on Superman, this story and his Thor run are among the most boring of stories. Heck, Death of Superman was in a way the end of comics as we know it, with few issues being left undamaged by the no talent work.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Superman: Unconventional Warfare TPB
Superman: Unconventional Warfare TPB
![]() A new trade paperback collecting the two back-up stories from ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #625-626 plus all of issues #627-632 in addition to Secret Files Profile Pages . The Man of Steel is challenged when a more powerful Replikon arrives for a fight - the first layer of a complex scheme that may prove … |
|
Retail: $ 14.95 Your Price: $14.95 Buy/More Info |
Orange County Criminal Defense Attorney
Popularity: 5% [?]
(Comic book writing for kid) Why people are reviewing this item as Superman: The Journey and Superman: Sacrifice, I have no idea, but Superman: Ruin Revealed is a good read, and worth reviewing in its own right as well.
Why people are reviewing this item as Superman: The Journey and Superman: Sacrifice, I have no idea, but Superman: Ruin Revealed is a good read, and worth reviewing in its own right as well.
The build up to the identity of Lois’ shooter is much more interesting than the actual reveal, but in the end, the identity of Ruin will shock you. and that’s really what this book is all about.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Adventures Of Robin Hood: Vol 1
Adventures Of Robin Hood: Vol 1
![]() Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 6.99 Your Price: $6.99 Buy/More Info |
Justice League: Mega Armor Superman Action Figure
Justice League: Mega Armor Superman Action Figure
![]() The Justice League was created to uphold justice through out the galaxy. These brave super heroes are always ready to take on evil. The Mega Armor Superman Figure stands approximately 4 1/2-inches-tall and comes with a gun and Mega Armor. Recommended for ages 4 and up…. |
|
Retail: $ 11.99 Your Price: $11.99 Buy/More Info |
Chicago Real Estate Gold Coast
Popularity: 5% [?]
(Katy keene comic books) So better luck next time. By far the best part of this story was the first 10 or so pages.
So better luck next time. By far the best part of this story was the first 10 or so pages.
In all, a must read for any fan and worth every penny.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Adventures of Superman #494
![]() Warehouse Find — We don’t normally offer less-than-mint-condition books for sale, but with the continued demand for back issues, we’ve decided to add our Warehouse backstock to our website. The majority of our comics are in mint condition, but there are some with minor dings. We will accept no retu… |
|
Retail: $ 1.25 Your Price: $1.25 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 5% [?]
In 2004, with the success of SMALLVILLE and the forthcoming release of SUPERMAN RETURNS, the good folks at DC Comics decided it was time for Superman’s origins to be re invented for the first time since John Byrne’s popular THE MAN OF STEEL series in th (future comic book prices)
In 2004, with the success of SMALLVILLE and the forthcoming release of SUPERMAN RETURNS, the good folks at DC Comics decided it was time for Superman’s origins to be re invented for the first time since John Byrne’s popular THE MAN OF STEEL series in th
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Superman: Classic Silver Age Action Figure Series 1 - Perry White
Superman: Classic Silver Age Action Figure Series 1 - Perry White
![]() Perry White runs the Daily Planet with an unparalleled eye for honest journalism and is unknowingly Superman’s boss! This action figure features multiple points of articulation and a display base. Also includes a copy of the Daily Planet and a small Daily Planet building. Packaged in a four-color bl… |
|
Retail: $ 14.99 Your Price: $14.99 Buy/More Info |
Superman Returns Movie Statue: In Flight
Superman Returns Movie Statue: In Flight
![]() This limited edition hand-painted cold-cast porcelain statue measures approximately 10-inches tall by 7-inches wide by 7-inches deep and includes a full-color Certificate of Authenticity and is packaged in a 4-color box. This statue is limited to 2500 pieces…. |
|
Retail: $ 150.00 Your Price: $150.00 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
(Comic book image) The series starts with news that a meteor is headed to earth, and President Lex Luthor is convinced Superman is responsible read the books for details , and puts out an enormous bounty for whoever brings in the caped crusader. Batman helps his alien frie
The series starts with news that a meteor is headed to earth, and President Lex Luthor is convinced Superman is responsible read the books for details , and puts out an enormous bounty for whoever brings in the caped crusader. Batman helps his alien frie
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
Teen Titans Deluxe Party Kit
Make your party a true adventure with the Teen Titans Deluxe Party Kit. The Teen Titans Deluxe Party Kit for 8 guests includes:
- (8) 9″ Dinner Plates
- (8) 7″ Dessert Plates
- (8) 9oz Paper Cups
- (16) Lunch Napkins
- (8) Invitations with envelopes
- (24) Piece Purple Cutlery Set* - (8) Forks (8) Spoons (8) Knives
- (24) Black Cake Candles*
- (1) 54″ x 102″ Teen Titans Plastic Tablecover
- (18) 12″ Latex Balloons - 6 each; Regal Purple, Deep Jade and Sun Yellow*
- (1) 19″ Green Metallic Star Balloon* with balloon cup* and stick*
- (3) 81′ Crepe Streamers - 1 each; Royal Purple, Holiday Green, Buttercup Yellow*
- (3) 75′ Curling Ribbons - 1 each; Purple, Emerald, Yellow*
These are officially licensed Teen Titans? DC Comics products. *Please Note: These items (*) are not offically licensed.
Don’t forget a Disposable Helium Tank* and other related items shown below.
:
Company:BuyCostumes
List Price:
Amazon Price:
Absolutely MAD Magazine - 50+ Years
Absolutely MAD DVD Collection collects over 600 issues of MAD magazine, one of the classic humor magazines. Every issue is here, from 1952 to 2006 — 460 issues in all. It also includes most of the Special Editions: XL’s, Super Special and Color Classics. There’s even interviews with the many of the writers, Spy VS Spy animation video, Spy VS Sky Mountain Dew commercials and much more.
DVD-ROM:
CD-ROMEvery issue of MAD Magazine on 2 DVDs,Read every single page as they were originally published - all the stories, letters pages, articles, and advertisements,Includes video clip interviews from the MAD writers and clips of Spy vs Spy animation,Over 600 complete printable issues, cover to cover, that’s over 17,500 scanned pages in full color,A truly interactive experience and can leverage the success of the late night show to introduce MAD Magazine to an entire new generation of consumers.
Company:GIT Corp
(2006-12-15)
List Price:$49.99
Amazon Price:$27.65
Used Price:$29.55
Nintendo Monopoly
Now You’re Playing With Power! The most recognizable and unforgettable characters in the video game world have teamed up to bring you the Nintendo Collector’s Edition of the world’s most popular board game, MONOPOLY. No controllers are necessary this time as you join forces with Mario, Luigi, Link, Zelda, Kirby and others on a quest to defeat your opponents and own it all. This edition comes complete with 6 collectible pewter tokens featuring Mario’s Cap, Link’s Iron Boots, Donkey Kong’s Barrel, Hylian Shield, Koopa Shell and NES Controller. Rules include a 60 minute speed play option for a shorter game with the same amount of fun. Now you can buy, sell and trade your favorite Nintendo characters for a whole new game-playing experience. From everyone’s favorite red-capped plumber to barrel-tossing Donkey Kong, they’re all up for grabs in this exciting fun-filled adventure. For 2 to 6 players. Ages 8 and up.
Toy:
Customized game board features iconic characters from Nintendo’s 7 most popular video game properties: Mario, Donkey Kong, Zelda, Metroid, Kirby, Star Fox, and Wario,Familiar, traditional Monopoly game play,Collectible pewter tokens,Speed play option included
Company:MONOPOLY
(2006-06-12)
List Price:$35.95
Amazon Price:$26.50
Flash Vol. 2 #196
![]() Warehouse Find — We don’t normally offer less-than-mint-condition books for sale, but with the continued demand for back issues, we’ve decided to add our Warehouse backstock to our website. The majority of our comics are in mint condition, but there are some with minor dings. Sorry, no returns on W… |
|
Retail: $ 2.25 Your Price: $2.25 Buy/More Info |
Justice League: Mega Armor Batman Action Figure
Justice League: Mega Armor Batman Action Figure
![]() The Justice League was created to uphold justice through out the galaxy. These brave super heroes are always ready to take on evil. The Mega Armor Batman Figure stands approximately 5-inches-tall and comes with Mega Armor. Recommended for ages 4 and up…. |
|
Retail: $ 11.99 Your Price: $11.99 Buy/More Info |
Batman in the Fifties TPB
![]() The Fifties. . .The decade of hula hoops, sock hops, UFOs, drive-in movies, atomic paranoia and Gotham City’s greatest hero–Batman! It was a decade in which the Caped Crusader was to boldly go where no Batman had gone before. With the success of new technologies, and American children looking up to… |
|
Retail: $ 19.95 Your Price: $19.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
If you read through the unending twists and turns of this story to the final. Then you should get an A for effort but give an F to DC for showing us a Superman pushed over the edge and the final battle with Wonder Woman is both unbeliveable and among the (bringing comic books)
If you read through the unending twists and turns of this story to the final. Then you should get an A for effort but give an F to DC for showing us a Superman pushed over the edge and the final battle with Wonder Woman is both unbeliveable and among the
Unfortunately, as Revealed is the final part of a trilogy, it spends a great deal of time tying up loose ends and completing the story from the other two books. In addition, as it is a tie in to other stories like The OMAC Project, Day of Vengeance and Su
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

Showcase Presents: Superman Family TPB Vol. 1
Showcase Presents: Superman Family TPB Vol. 1
![]() The super-affordable Showcase collections continue with a volume spotlighting Superman’s girlfriend Lois Lane and pal Jimmy Olsen, collecting the first 22 issues of Superman’s Pal, Jimmy Olsen and Lois’s first solo outing from Showcase #9!… |
|
Retail: $ 16.99 Your Price: $16.99 Buy/More Info |
Superman: Metropolis #6 (of 12)
Superman: Metropolis #6 (of 12)
![]() Believing it’s really Lena Luthor, the Tech takes human form and leaves the city’s machinery to run uncontrolled. Plus, Jimmy’s falling love with the ghost in the machine…. |
|
Retail: $ 2.95 Your Price: $2.95 Buy/More Info |
Adventures of Superman #493
![]() Warehouse Find — We don’t normally offer less-than-mint-condition books for sale, but with the continued demand for back issues, we’ve decided to add our Warehouse backstock to our website. The majority of our comics are in mint condition, but there are some with minor dings. We will accept no retu… |
|
Retail: $ 1.25 Your Price: $1.25 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
“What was the point of Lex Luthor. A human being who dared to challenge a God.” (simpsons comic book guy)
“What was the point of Lex Luthor. A human being who dared to challenge a God.”
I know it wasn’t all written by Greg Rucka and Geoff Johns, but they’re both capable of much, much better things than this.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
Vice #2
![]() Hit TV writer Aron Coleite ( Crossing Jordan ) and fan-favorite penciler Tyler Kirkham ( Darkness/Superman ) continue their blistering new ongoing series! The Violent Incident Control Enforcement branch of the FBI-V.I.C.E.-are bad men sent in to do even worse jobs. In this issue, one member of the t… |
|
Retail: $ 2.99 Your Price: $2.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
By all means this series should have worked. It’s John Byrne and it’s in the 1980s. He’s at his peak. I wanted it to work but frankly, this is a terrible story. (hardboiled comic book art)
By all means this series should have worked. It’s John Byrne and it’s in the 1980s. He’s at his peak. I wanted it to work but frankly, this is a terrible story.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
olivia in her stroller - dscf0006

DC Comics Logo II T-Shirt (L)
![]() A few friends drop by in support of the new corporate marque on the new DC Comics Logo II T-Shirt. Features the new DC Comics Logo flanked by great new Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman illustrations by Jim Lee. Screenprinted in color on the front of a white 100% cotton shirt the DC logo has never l… |
|
Retail: $ 17.95 Your Price: $14.36 Buy/More Info |
Teen Titans: Animated Series Action Figure - Super-Deformed Robin
Teen Titans: Animated Series Action Figure - Super-Deformed Robin
![]() Daring, determined, resourceful. Martial arts, acrobatic speed and a utility belt full of gadgets is all he needs to take you down in a heartbeat! The Robin Action Figure stands approximately 6 inches tall, speaks when you push a button on his base and features bobbin’ action. Recommended for ages 4… |
|
Retail: $ 11.99 Your Price: $11.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 3% [?]
Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i (hallden division comic books)
Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i
After “Crisis on Infanite Earths” was finished in 1986, several DC Comics characters were re started, and Superman led the charge. We are reintroduced to Kal El’s planet, which was destroyed, but not before benevolent Jor El could rocket his only son
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
Outsiders Vol. 3 #27
![]() Batman and Katana guest-star in the explosive conclusion to ‘Tick Tock!’ Batman and The Outsiders are together again as the sins of the past blast back, forcing the team into a confrontation with a deadly terror that is not what it seems…. |
|
Retail: $ 2.50 Your Price: $2.50 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
Batman looks EXACTLY the same as the series 1 figure. (comic book prices and values)
Batman looks EXACTLY the same as the series 1 figure.
Lois Lane came off as a complete snob and competitively obessed, sort of like Monica Geller from “Friends” except without the charm.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Batman: Journey Into Knight #3
Batman: Journey Into Knight #3
![]() Batman seeks clues about the mysterious plague unleashed on Gotham in the depths of the subway system and has a close encounter with an express train! Meanwhile, the Carrier makes an alliance that could lead to even more trouble for Gotham…. |
|
Retail: $ 2.50 Your Price: $2.50 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 3% [?]
(Spider man comic book collectible) Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i
Bottom line.as the years pass, I predict this will be a seriously sought after collector’s item. So buy it soon or now .before someone on “Amazon Marketplace”, “Ebay”, or some “other seller” in the next 20 years tries to sell you a used copy of i
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Power Rangers Dino Thunder: Day Of The Dino Volume 1
Power Rangers Dino Thunder: Day Of The Dino Volume 1
Because the world is never out of danger, three Reefside High students must rise up to meet their destiny head-on. While on a fossil-finding field trip, Conner, Kira, and Ethan fall into a sinkhole and discover powerful Dino Gems that give them each awesome super abilities. But alarming evil is afoo… |
|
Retail: $ 19.99 Your Price: $15.99 Buy/More Info |
Batman #572
![]() Warehouse Find — We don’t normally offer less-than-mint-condition books for sale, but with the continued demand for back issues, we’ve decided to add our Warehouse backstock to our website. The majority of our comics are in mint condition, but there are some with minor dings. We will accept no retu… |
|
Retail: $ 1.99 Your Price: $1.99 Buy/More Info |
Flash: Dead Heat TPB
![]() Meet Wally West. The fastest man alive… or so he thought. A new contender for the title has emerged… and with him comes death at near light-speed. His name is Savitar. And at his side is an army of speedsters dedicated to the malevolent will of their master and the destruction of those who would… |
|
Retail: $ 14.95 Your Price: $14.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
(Bugs bunny comic books) Writers have relied on three techniques to limit Superman. First is to have Superman conveniently forget his own powers in particular his near light speed movement. The second limitation is Superman’s own Boy Scout morality and third is the annoyingly ex
Writers have relied on three techniques to limit Superman. First is to have Superman conveniently forget his own powers in particular his near light speed movement. The second limitation is Superman’s own Boy Scout morality and third is the annoyingly ex
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Batman: Return To The Bat Cave
Batman: Return To The Bat Cave
Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 14.98 Your Price: $11.98 Buy/More Info |
Video Flash Card: Multiplication
Video Flash Card: Multiplication
Please visit the Things From Another World website for product details…. |
|
Retail: $ 12.95 Your Price: $10.36 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
And some readers are bothered by Loeb’s shifting between Batman’s and Superman’s perspectives throughout a given scene (amazing spider man comic book) or page with the use of captions.
And some readers are bothered by Loeb’s shifting between Batman’s and Superman’s perspectives throughout a given scene or page with the use of captions.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Superman: The Death of Superman TPB
Superman: The Death of Superman TPB
![]() "Superman dead! Metropolis marvel killed in action." Can it be! The man of steel is no more? This is a collection of all the DC single comic issues that originally covered the demise of Superman. This book collects: Superman: The Man of Steel #s 17-19 Superman Vol. 2 #s 73-75 Adven… |
|
Retail: $ 9.99 Your Price: $9.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
This was a shame. I think supergirl is a cool character and can be done well, but this just makes (comic book characters of 1930) clear that DC has no idea what to do with her. There is no characterization, no back up characters and the story can only loosely be called a “story.” The
This was a shame. I think supergirl is a cool character and can be done well, but this just makes clear that DC has no idea what to do with her. There is no characterization, no back up characters and the story can only loosely be called a “story.” The
This is a very deep story that cuts to the core of Superman in a way that canonized stories cannot. Essentially Superman becomes a metaphor for an all intrusive government. Benjamin Franklin once said, “Those who would give up essential liberty to purcha
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.

DC Archives - Superman Vol. 6 HC
DC Archives - Superman Vol. 6 HC
![]() This thrilling hardcover volume reprints Superman (first series) #21-24, featuring stories by Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster and others, plus an introduction by comics industry giant Steve Geppi, owner of Diamond Comic Distributors. Both the art and the stories showcased in this volu… |
|
Retail: $ 49.95 Your Price: $49.95 Buy/More Info |
Batman/Tarzan: Claws of the Cat-Woman TPB
Batman/Tarzan: Claws of the Cat-Woman TPB
![]() Batman. Tarzan. Two orphaned noblemen who have honed their minds and bodies to the peak of human performance. Two fearless warriors who have sworn to protect their respective homelands. Now, a new evil has surfaced, one that will bring these two legendary heroes together for the first time. In a ro… |
|
Retail: $ 10.95 Your Price: $3.83 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
I admit I enjoy this, but (comic books tell) it can get tiresome every now and then.
I admit I enjoy this, but it can get tiresome every now and then.
In “Superman the Animated Series” Brianiac is a computer from Krypton. I would’ve gone on assuming that was true in the real Superman comic if it wasn’t for this book. It was definately wonderful and nesscessary for me to buy this book.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Complete Madman Comics Vol. 2 TPB
Complete Madman Comics Vol. 2 TPB
![]() The New York Times says, "Madman abounds in Flash Gordon gadgetry and slobbering leviathans direct from the pits of the netherworld." Sound like fun? You bet it is! And now’s the time to find out for yourself, with the Madman Comics Yearbook ‘96 ! It’s 152 pages of pop-art action,… |
|
Retail: $ 17.95 Your Price: $17.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
Much worse than the myths perpetuated by Dan Brown with his now infamous allegedly factual based novel DA VINCI CODE did for the profanity of creating (comic books action figures) myths behind the myths alleged to Christ and Mary of Magdala DC Comics did with their primary Legenda
Much worse than the myths perpetuated by Dan Brown with his now infamous allegedly factual based novel DA VINCI CODE did for the profanity of creating myths behind the myths alleged to Christ and Mary of Magdala DC Comics did with their primary Legenda
This statement by Superman pretty much sums up the relationship between Superman and Lex Luthor except that in a weird twist the God is the hero and the man the villain. Red Son’ turns the dynamic 180 degrees into its more natural state. Baby Kal L lands
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.

Last Train to Deadsville: A Cal McDonald Mystery #1 (of 4)
Last Train to Deadsville: A Cal McDonald Mystery #1 (of 4)
![]() Dark Horse is bloody thrilled to present the most terrifying team-up of talent to hit the comics scene in years, as fan-favorite horror scribe Steve Niles ( 30 Days of Night, Dark Days, Criminal Macabre ) joins artist Kelley Jones ( Deadman, Batman, TheHammer ) to bring you the follow-up to last yea… |
|
Retail: $ 2.99 Your Price: $2.99 Buy/More Info |
Superman: The Dailies Vol. 1 1939-1940 TPB
Superman: The Dailies Vol. 1 1939-1940 TPB
![]() Collecting the first 306 newspaper strips of the first son of Krypton, this book features the best possible reproduction of these landmark black and white strips, with much of the earliest material shot from rare syndicate proofs…. |
|
Retail: $ 14.95 Your Price: $14.95 Buy/More Info |
Batman Begins: Tribal Fire Movie Logo Shirt (L)
Batman Begins: Tribal Fire Movie Logo Shirt (L)
![]() Be judged and defined by your actions and buy this great t-shirt sporting the bat-logo from the movie Batman Begins , lit up on Tribal Fire . This shirt is sure to be an instant classic, so quickly make your judgement and take action to get yours now before they’re all snatched up. The logo is print… |
|
Retail: $ 16.99 Your Price: $10.19 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
To really understand this book, you have to keep in mind these stories were (comic book finest girls) written at a time when the government didn’t regulate what chemicals went into drinking water, pregnant women were encouraged to smoke, and doctors regularly prescribed cocaine a
To really understand this book, you have to keep in mind these stories were written at a time when the government didn’t regulate what chemicals went into drinking water, pregnant women were encouraged to smoke, and doctors regularly prescribed cocaine a
I got the opportunity to read the guide, and it was a magnificent and mesmerizing quick read; with pages upon pages of beautiful photography from the film admittedly for those of you who’ve spent the last year following the film’s production via the in
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Skyscrapers near the Pan Pacific

JSA: All-Stars TPB
![]() Legacy If the Justice Society of America stands for anything, it is a tribute to the legacy of the first generation of super-heroes. Only four of the original team remain - Hawkman, Flash, Green Lantern and Wildcat - and they are put to the ultimate test when a powerful entity known as Legacy captur… |
|
Retail: $ 14.95 Your Price: $14.95 Buy/More Info |
Superman Mini-Statue: Departure From Krypton
Superman Mini-Statue: Departure From Krypton
![]() With the destruction of Krypton imminent, scientist Jor-El and his wife Lara placed their infant son Kal-El in an experimental rocket to send him to Earth and safety. This hand-painted cold-cast porcelain mini-statue, measures approximately 6 and 1/2-inches tall. Packaged in a 4-color box…. |
|
Retail: $ 49.99 Your Price: $49.99 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
I have to wonder if there’s any writer besides Alan Moore capable of (gold key comic books) writing a truly great Superman story.
I have to wonder if there’s any writer besides Alan Moore capable of writing a truly great Superman story.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Marvel Heroes Scene Kit
Use this Wall Decorating Kit to transform any room into a metropolitan backdrop! The Marvel Heroes Scene Kit includes:
- (1) Package of 2 City Scape Room Rolls (1 for the bottom and 1 for the top of the scene) that each measure approximately 48″ wide x 23′ long (121.9cm x 7.01m); put both rolls together to create a cityscape theme.
- (1) Marvel Heroes Happy Birthday Scene Setters Add-On that contains 2 halves that make 1 decoration; each half measures approximately 33.5″ x 65″ (85.1cm x 165.1cm)
- (1) Spiderman & Wolverine Scene Setters Add-On that contains 1 Spiderman Add-On and 1 Wolverine Add-On; each measures 33.5″ wide x 50″ tall (85.1 x 127cm)
Please Note: Add-On Wall Decorations contain an assortment of items that are printed on 1 or more plastic sheets and may need to be cut out separately.
- Choose your space
- Install Room Rolls
- Finish off your scene with any or all Scene Setters Wall Decorations
- Decorations can be hung with adhesive or pins (not included)
Keep your decorations secure with Sticky Tack (sold separately).
Spider-Man, Wolverine, Iron Man, Captain America, the Hulk and the distinctive likeness(es) thereof are Trademarks of Marvel Characters, Inc. and are used with permission. Copyright 2007 Marvel Characters, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Scene Setters? by amscan
:
Company:BuyCostumes
List Price:
Amazon Price:
Batman Beyond - Return of the Joker (The Original Uncut Version)
Some diehard Batfans have been slow to warm to the animated series Batman Beyond even though it was created by the same team responsible for the excellent Batman cartoon of the early ’90s. The Dark Knight should be a brooding avenger in a noir-nightmare Gotham City, the purists argue, not some smart-aleck teen four decades in the future, with jet packs, invisibility shields, and other sci-fi gizmos loaned him by an elderly Bruce Wayne (voiced, excellently as always, by Kevin Conroy, his stony bass given a raspy hint of old age), now confined to hobbling about on a cane and monitoring his protg’s activities from the Batcave. Between its respectful reexamination of the “tortured hero” mythos and its sleek, anime-inspired look, this feature-length movie should go a long way toward quieting their complaints. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that they’ve brought back the most legendary figure in the Rogues Gallery (voiced by Mark Hamill, deliciously deranged), but exactly how and why the Joker has managed to turn up 40 years after his last meeting with Batman still as youthful and diabolical as ever is explained not only logically but terrifyingly as well. The secret behind his arrival is perhaps the saddest, grimmest twist any purported “kids’ show” has dared to attempt. (Parents may well want to preview this tape before screening it for the very young.) Once again, Warner Brothers’ cartoon Batman has outshone all the live-action films, never allowing the thrilling action set pieces or flashes of wry humor to drown out the drama, even tragedy, of the all-too-human superheroes. –Bruce Reid
Director:
Curt Geda
DVD:
Animated,Color,DVD-Video,Full Screen,NTSC
Company:Warner Home Video
(2002-04-23)
ISBN:0790766833
List Price:$9.98
Amazon Price:$3.42
Used Price:$3.99
Punisher T-Shirt, Skull
100% preshrunk cotton with design printed on the front, 5.6 oz with shoulder-to-shoulder tape with a seamless collar, and double needle construction throughout.
Apparel:
Company:CHOICESHIRTS
List Price:
Amazon Price:
The Baby Doll
Audio CD:
Company:Newbury Comics Records
(2004-09-28)
List Price:$9.99
Amazon Price:$7.29
Used Price:$7.87
Batgirl: Year One TPB
![]() As the dynamic duo of Batman & Robin soar the skyline of Gotham City fighting crime, another masked adventurer faces extraordinary odds agains such foes as Killer Moth, Blockbuster and Firefly. And she doesn’t take orders from the Dark Knight! This heroine is determined to make it on her own… … |
|
Retail: $ 19.95 Your Price: $19.95 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 4% [?]
I know it wasn’t all written by Greg Rucka and Geoff Johns, but they’re both capable of much, much better things than this. (book card comic guide price)
I know it wasn’t all written by Greg Rucka and Geoff Johns, but they’re both capable of much, much better things than this.
The Comic Book is one of America’s unsung contribution to culture.
Comic Books portray our fears, our desires and ethos.
Batman: Urban Legend - Jim Lee T-Shirt (XXL)
Batman: Urban Legend - Jim Lee T-Shirt (XXL)
![]() The Dark Knight swings into action on the new Batman: Urban Legend T-Shirt. Features the art of Jim Lee screenprinted in full color on a navy blue 100% cotton shirt. The skies are safe with Batman on the watch!!… |
|
Retail: $ 21.99 Your Price: $13.19 Buy/More Info |
Batman: Rush - Jim Lee T-Shirt (XL)
Batman: Rush - Jim Lee T-Shirt (XL)
![]() Gotham’s guardian is coming at you with the new Batman: Rush T-Shirt. Features the art of Jim Lee screenprinted in full-color on the front of a black 100% cotton shirt. When the Dark Knight comes running towards you, you know there’s a damn-good reason!!… |
|
Retail: $ 17.95 Your Price: $10.77 Buy/More Info |
Popularity: 3% [?]
















































