HOT PICKS! On Sale This Week!

Scott and Dan pick the comics they’re most looking forward to…

Dan Greenfield, editor, 13th Dimension

007: 50 Greatest Bond Cars, Eaglemoss/Hero Collector. A compendium of 50 souped-up vehicles driven by James Bond and his greatest adversaries, from the beginning to the ever-delayed No Time to Die. There are renderings, photos, cutaways, the gamut. Oh, and you know as well as I do that the Aston Martin DB5 is tops.

Dollar Comics: The Sandman #23, DC. DC has pulled back on its Dollar Comics and Facsimile Edition lines since the pandemic hit and with all the changes at the publisher, I doubt they’ll be back in full force any time soon, if ever. But there is a Dollar Comic this week, so you know how this works: Vote with your wallet if you want DC to get back in this game. (This issue ties in to the Sandman/Locke & Key: Hell and Gone crossover with IDW.)

The Avengers: Marvels Snapshots #1, Marvel. This one-shot by Barbara Randall Kesel and Staz Johnson takes you back to the Bronze Age era of Michelinie, Perez and Byrne. Just dig this variant by Johnson! (Click here for a SNEAK PEEK.)

James Bond: Scaramanga’s Golden Gun Prop, Factory Entertainment. An exact replica from The Man With Golden Gun – you can even disassemble it into its component parts. The only thing it doesn’t do is fire. (A good thing.) It’s $799 and worth every penny if you have that many pennies to spend.

Scott Tipton, contributor-at-large, 13th Dimension

JLA by Grant Morrison Omnibus, DC. All of Morrison’s epic 1990s JLA run under one cover, including the tremendously fun DC One Million miniseries!

Excalibur Omnibus Vol. 1, Marvel. Chris Claremont and Alan Davis’ Excalibur was always the runt of the litter when it came to Marvel’s X-Books, which is too bad, as they’re charmingly told comics beautifully illustrated by Davis. Here’s your chance to see what you missed out on.


Marvel Masterworks: Marvel Two-In-One Vol. 5, Marvel. Another of Marvel’s underrated gems of the late ’70s, this period of MTIO from Mark Gruenwald, Ralph Macchio, John Byrne and George Perez includes the outstanding Project Pegasus Saga!

Author: Dan Greenfield

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4 Comments

  1. I love Morrisson’s JLA, but I find so much of his work outside of that to be tedious and impenetrable. I bought the DC One Million omnibus, and it was a slog. The actual Morrisson issues were entertaining, but forgettable, but the entire rest of the “event” was a really laborious read. In JLA, he found a way to birth these great mind-blowing concepts, but kept them grounded with the JLA characters and mythos. I really appreciate the fact that his run can be read by an adult, or a kid, and enjoyed by both. AFTER his run, JLA went downhill, FAST.

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    • Tonebone – I agree with you 100%. Morrison’s JLA brought a lot of fun back to DC, but DC One Million was indeed a slog. He really needs a good editor to help focus his concepts, and DC One Million was the beginning of Morrison getting too much free reign.

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    • Have you read his & Dan Mora’s KLAUS? THAT is a fantastic read that can be enjoyed by all ages!

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