iamrman: (Marin)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-05 06:37 pm

Incredible Hulk #161

Writer: Steve Englehart

Pencils: Herb Trimpe

Inks: Sal Trapani


Steve Englehart ties up some loose ends from the Beast's short-lived solo series.


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iamrman: (Franky)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-05 04:36 pm

Hawk and Dove (1988) #3

Writers: Barbara and Karl Kesel

Pencils: Rob Liefeld

Inks: Karl Kesel


Kestrel strikes!


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iamrman: (Bon Clay)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-05 12:06 pm

Guy Gardner: Warrior #24

Writer: Beau Smith

Pencils: Mike Parobeck and Butch Guice

Inks: Dan Davis


Zero Hour tie-in.

Guy is transported back in time to the day of Coast City’s destruction.


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iamrman: (Power)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-05 10:06 am

Green Lantern #187

Writer: Paul Kupperberg

Pencils: Bill Willingham

Inks: Rich Rankin


Hal tries to defend Carol from the Predator. It goes just as well as everything else Hal does.


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selenak: (Cat and Books by Misbegotten)
selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote2025-07-05 10:59 am

Barbara Kingsolver: Demon Copperhead (Book Review)

Aka a 2022 novel set in the Appalachians during the late 1990s and early 2000s with the euphemistically called "Opiod Crisis" very much a main theme, and simultanously a modern adaptation of David Copperfield by Charles Dickens. The last Copperfield adaptation I had seen or read was the Iannucci movie starring Dev Patel in the title role which emphasized the humor and vitality of the novel and succeeded splendidly, but had to cut down the darker elements in order to do so, with the breathneck speed of a two hours mvie based on a many hundred pages novel helping with that. Demon Copperhead took the reverse approach; it's all the darkness magnified - helped by the fact this is also a many hundred pages novel - but nearly no humor. Both adaptations emphasize the social injustice of the various systems they're depicting. Both had to do some considerable flashing out when it comes to Dickens's first person narrator. No one has ever argued that David is the most interesting character in David Copperfield. As long as he's still a child, this isn't noticable because David going from coddled and much beloved kid to abused and exploited kid makes for a powerful emotional arc. (BTW, I was fascinated to learn back when I was reading Claire Tomalin's Dickens biography that Dickens was influenced by Jane Eyre in this; Charlotte Bronte's novel convinced him to go for a first person narration - which he hadn't tried before - and the two abused and outraged child narrators who describe what scares and elates them incredibly vividly do have a lot on common.) But once he's an adult, it often feels like he's telling other people's stories (very well, I hasten to add) in which he's only on the periphery, except for his love life. The movie solved this by giving David - who is autobiographically inspired anyway - some more of Dickens`s on life and qualities. Demon Copperhead solves it by a) putting most of the part of the Dickens plot when David is already an adult to when Damon/Demon is still a teenager (he only becomes a legal adult near the end), b) by making Damon as a narrator a whole lot angrier than David, and c) by letting him fall to what is nearly everyone else's problem as well, addiction.

Spoilers ensue about both novels )

In conclusion: this was a compelling novel but tough to read due to the subject and the unrelenting grimness. I'm not saying you should treat the horrible neglect and exploitation of children and the way a rotten health system allowed half the population to become addicts irreverently, but tone wise, this is more Hard Times than David Copperfield, and sometimes I wished for some breathing space in between the horrors. But I am glad to have read it.
laughing_tree: (Seaworth)
laughing_tree ([personal profile] laughing_tree) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-04 09:39 pm

Absolute Green Lantern #3 - "The Philosopher's Stone"

image host

Originally I wanted John Stewart to be the main protagonist, and I wanted him to be around forty-five. I sat down one day and thought to myself ‘Do I want to do another haunted old man comic? Do I want to do another comic about an older man?’ A lot of my comics seem to be about old men. I was getting notes about how passive John was in the book as well. I was searching for who else could be the protagonist after that, and I had plans for Hal, and I needed somebody who cuts through really well. That’s Jo Mullein. -- Al Ewing

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iamrman: (Marin)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-04 06:46 pm

Excalibur #52

Writer: Alan Davis

Pencils: Will Simpson

Inks: Jimmy Palmiotti and Jeffrey Albrecht


Professor Xavier tries to wake Rachel out of her coma.


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iamrman: (Sindr)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-04 02:30 pm

The Demon #10

Words and pencils: Jack Kirby

Inks: Mike Royer


I have run out of Phantom references, so I don’t know... Something-something Angel of Music?


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laughing_tree: (Seaworth)
laughing_tree ([personal profile] laughing_tree) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-04 06:12 am

All-New Venom #7-8

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I do see Paul as just an incredibly ordinary person. I don't think he's the devil. I don't think he's a saint. -- Al Ewing

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iamrman: (Nightbutt)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-04 10:33 am

Batman #492

Writer: Doug Moench

Pencils and inks: Norm Breyfogle


Knightfall.

The Mad Hatter throws a tea party.


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shadowpsykie: (ask the questions)
shadowpsykie ([personal profile] shadowpsykie) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-03 03:44 pm
iamrman: (Marin)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-03 05:29 pm

Amazing Spider-Man #102

Writer: Roy Thomas

Pencils: Gil Kane

Inks: Frank Giacoia


Spider-Man teams-up with the Lizard to take on Morbius.


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thanekos: Seiga Kaku from Touhou 13, shadowed. (Default)
thanekos ([personal profile] thanekos) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-07-03 10:27 am

Immortal Thor #25 this week is #24's aftermath.

There's the effects of that previous issue's well-teased end.

There's Thor after the fact as was solicited -

" .. [meeting] the Serpent who wore his own face and held his own hammer. "

It's a little more bitter than their meeting in #17. )