In this graphic novel we see Doctor Strange has fully accepted his role in the world of magic and still looking for ways to heal himself physically. He has become one of the world’s greatest magicians. He fights evil trying to take over the world while combating his own troubles. This is my firs...
The Dark Horse Book of Hauntings has eight stories by various authors. I found this while browsing my library's catalog online. And it was a happy surprise find a Hellboy story in here! It is one of my favorite stories in this graphic novel. Some of the stories were okay, others I really enjoyed.I l...
It's a good story, but with a sad sad ending. The drawing and story-telling are both great. After you get familiar with the characters, it is just so sad the male character cannot be together with the woman he really loves.
Chadwick again makes what with others would have sunk into a polemical tract into an engaging graphic novel. This time he takes a long look at population growth.Concrete is made an offer he can't refuse - in return for a sought-after painting he must endorse a CEOs program to stem population growth....
Paul Chadwick retells and expands Concrete's origin story with great results.As originally told, Concrete's origin story was by necessity brief - it was traumatic, but necessarily went through the governmental red tape as quick as was plausible so that the story could go where Chadwick wanted it to ...
'Think Like a Mountain' has Concrete on his own making a difficult choice about an issue that has long been close to his heart. Since political speechwriter Ron Lithgow has had his brain transplanted into a living stone body, he's been seeking out the good he can do. There have been ups and downs, h...
So, first of all, this author really starts to make Deadpool into what he'll become. He's great. There's less floundering, although he hasn't quite hit his stride as a character yet. But jokes like this? These are great, and I feel like I'm finally where I want to be: seeing how Deadpool came ...
'Killer Smile' is a perfect thriller: the stakes are high and the characters are all human. Larry Munro, after some harmless if condescending flirting, finds himself held hostage by a sociopath and his girlfriend. Paul Chadwick covers a lot of ground with 'Concrete', but this is the first time I was...
Despite being world-famous and a published author, Concrete has a cash-flow problem. So when Larry receives an offer about a high-paying job on a film Concrete readily accepts. Chadwick pulled from his own experience working on a workhorse genre film for 'Fragile Creature', and it shows. The stretch...
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