Robot Detectives Battle Superhero Bastards For Your Comics Dollars – avengers – io9.

Robot Detectives Battle Superhero Bastards For Your Comics Dollars


Hope you’ve been saving up your pennies for this week’s comic haul: There’s an impressive amount of new releases that you’ll want to take home and cherish for at least the next seven days. Yes, these are Comics We Crave.

Let’s start with Electropolis, the new Dark Horse collection of Dean Motter’s Retrofuture Deco Noir story (Preview here). Filled with robot detectives, femme fatales and the power of electricity, it’s just one of many off-beat genre books appearing at comic book stores this week.

And if Electropolis‘ pulp fiction is your thing, then maybe the Batman/Doc Savage Special (Dark Knight Detective versus Man of Bronze!) will also float your boat, after all. Or maybe Sky Doll: Doll Factory, a collection of unseen material from the awesome European strip Sky Doll, will provide your reading material for the next few days.

But if you prefer your heroines a little less suggestible than Sky Doll, the first issue of Tank Girl: Skidmarks is probably more your speed. Unsurprisingly, we’d also point you in the direction of the debut of Locke & Key: Crown of Shadows, but we’re biased.

Maybe you’re looking for something you’ve already seen in major motion pictures? That’s okay; not only is there a preview issue of the new series of Wall-E, but there’s also Star Wars Purge: Seconds To Die, which follows a young Darth Vader killing off as many Jedi as possible, post Revenge of The Sith. And that’s not all! There’s also a paperback collection of DC/Wildstorm’s recent The X-Files series.

For those who can’t get enough of those superheroes, then I’d recommend the first issue of Warren Ellis’ Supergod, his latest “What if superheroes were bastards?” series. Or, on the opposite end of the superhero spectrum, the Absolute Justice hardcover, collecting Alex Ross’ expansive love letter to the Super Friends (No, really).

In between those two extremes, there’s Dynamite’s Project Superpowers: The Black Terror Vol. 1 collection, DC’s Green Lantern: Agent Orange collection, which leads into the current Blackest Night storyline, Supergirl: Who Is Superwoman? (in which Sterling Gates and Jamil Igle manage to undo years of abuse and make Supergirl a likable, working character again – good job, people) and the Authority: The Lost Year Reader (reprinting Grant Morrison and Gene Ha’s two completed issues of their abandoned run, ahead of Keith Giffen and other artists aiming to complete the story in their absence).

There’s also Marvel’s PunisherMax (Yes, one word. It’s the new “mature readers” title for the character, and maybe Marvel thinks pushing words together is more adult?), Green Hulk/Red Hulk collection (Heroes‘ writer Jeph Loeb writes a couple of gamma-irradiated monsters in a couple of adventures), the first issue of Strange (Mark Waid’s reboot of the former Doctor Strange, Sorcerer Supreme). And also, there’s all manner of X-Men books: the Dark Avengers/X-Men: Utopia collection, as well as collections of Wolverine: Tales of Weapon X, Wolverine Weapon X: Adamantium Men and Wolverine/Gambit. All your Wolverine needs should definitely be met this week, let’s face it.

Get them all this week at Meltdown Comics or click the banner below to never miss an issue.

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MELTDOWN GETS A LITTLE HOTTER WITH THE SQP LINE OF ART BOOKS

Meltdown Comics is delighted to announce the addition of the SQP collection of fantasy, erotic, and pin-up art books to its Hollywood location.

For over 35 years, SQP Art Books have been showcasing the very finest in illustrated cheesecake, with bad girls drawn so VERY nicely. Vampires, pirates, warriors, mermaids, fairies – from sword-wielding to cleavage-baring, SQP has spanned the globe in search of artists who know how to celebrate the female form in all its curvaceous delights!

These books are proving to be a one-stop gold mine of ideas for the tattooing community, as both old-school pin-up masters like Jay Scott Pike and Baron von Lind, as well as today’s younger talents like Dave Nestler, Edward Reed, and Arantza are featured.

SQP also publishes a line of VERY graphic novels for the Adult market, including the torrid “Teach Me” series by Enrique Villagran and the sordid and sultry tales of “Magenta” by Nik Guerra.

Are you handy with ropes, or do you just like to watch? Bondage art books by Vincent Stephens, Steve O Reno, and the always knotty Alazar are among the company’s most popular titles (take note: NO make-believe women are ever harmed in the making of these books!)

If you like your fantasy art served with a side of naughty intentions, then Meltdown is your most logical and local source to add to your personal library!

Currently, we’re carrying 20 titles, with more added each week!

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©2012 Meltdown, Inc. WP retouched by the hand of FD for Meltdown, Inc.