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So I’ve been neglecting comiXology lately on my tablet and putting my main focus on the Amazon Kindle app (I’ve read 3 books so far this year!). I decided to read Batman Inc.: Leviathan Strikes and holy shit…blown away. A pretty great conclusion to the Batman Inc. series, BUT the best part was reading it digitally.
I get a full screen shot of each panel, one at a time, and then I get to experience the full page at the end. It’s such an AMAZING way to fully appreciate the art and story telling procedure. Especially with Chris Burnham’s Steranko-esque imagery, this art and story excelled together.
I love good comics.
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Picked up the We3 Deluxe Edition hardcover. Can’t wait to check out the new Quitely pages.
Also picked up the All Pigs Must Die “God is War” full length.
Now I’m eating chicken and broccoli pizza with alfredo sauce on wheat crust.
I like today.
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Just bought the deluxe edition hardcover that came out today!
Comics We Love: ‘We3,’ The Heartbreaking Story of Cuddly Killing Machines
Run, run, run to your nearest comics retailer to pick up the new We3: Deluxe Edition this week and you will be treated to the most heartfelt, kinetic, violent, and universal lost-animals-going-home-story ever told. A compact slice of minimalist storytelling mastery, We3 is Milo & Otis meets “Call of Duty”: a simple, touching story of three scared animals looking for a home remixed to the mayhem of the first-person shooter. And if you’re wily enough to pick up the hardcover Deluxe Edition, you will be treated to no less than 10 pages of story that previously went unpublished. I know!
But We3 is more than a cute and fuzzy tale wrapped in latex and razorblades. It just may be the very best comic to introduce a new audience to the uniqueness and potential of the modern medium…
Back in the heady, exciting days of “comics activism,” there was a frequent topic of discussion on the boards: what was the best comic to hand to a non-reader to get them interested in comics? Answers were all across the spectrum, from sensible to quirky to seriously? (Really? Palookaville?) The consensus opinion, though, was that the book would have to be short, self-contained, non-superhero story that appealed to an audience of all tastes and ages.
Read much more at ComicsAlliance.(via lowtalker)
Posted on August 16, 2011 via ComicsAlliance with 31 notes
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