The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century 2009
by:
Alan Moore (author)
Kevin O'Neill (author)
In Chapter Three, the narrative draws to its cataclysmic close in London 2008. The magical child whose ominous coming has been foretold for the past hundred years has now been born and has grown up to claim his dreadful heritage. His promised aeon of unending terror can commence, the world can...
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In Chapter Three, the narrative draws to its cataclysmic close in London 2008. The magical child whose ominous coming has been foretold for the past hundred years has now been born and has grown up to claim his dreadful heritage. His promised aeon of unending terror can commence, the world can now be ended starting with North London, and there is no League, extraordinary or otherwise, that now stands in his way. The bitter, intractable war of attrition in Q'umar crawls bloodily to its fifth year, away in Kashmir a Sikh terrorist with a now-nuclear-armed submarine wages a holy war against Islam that might push the whole world into atomic holocaust, and in a London mental institution there's a patient who insists that she has all the answers.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781603090070 (160309007X)
ASIN: 160309007X
Publish date: July 10th 2012
Publisher: Top Shelf Productions, Knockabout
Pages no: 80
Edition language: English
Series: The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (#3)
This particular artist got between me and enjoyment of the text, the women, while being the heroes of the story, are grotesque and I just couldn't really get past that to the story. Yes it's clever and twisted and you need to know your cultural tropes but I wasn't really all that caught up by it an...
Reading LoEG has become like watching a car accident just to see how bad it gets. Alan Moore is probably the best writer who ever worked in comics but he has become an angry and bitter man and he takes it out on his borrowed characters. As the age of Haddo's Moonchild arrives our heroes are hopele...