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Gilbert Hernandez




Title Creator Publisher Series Price
Nursery Rhyme Comics Gahan Wilson, Roz Chast, Tony Millionaire, Lilli Carre and more ... (:01) First Second $17.77
($19.95 list)
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edited by Chris Duffy This 115 page, full-size, full color collection of 50 "timeless rhymes" includes all the favorites and then some.  What makes this one different?  What makes it stand out from the crowd?  What makes it mind-bogglingly amazing?  The list of artists who created the 50 works that fill this volumedoes, that's what.  It is practically a "who's who" of contemporary cartoonists that stretches around the block.  We're only going to give you a baker's dozen here, just to whet your appetite:  Gilbert & Jaime Hernandez (each contributing their own comics nursery rhyme), Theo Ellsworth, James Sturm, Jordan Crane, Eleanor Davis, Patrick McDonnell, Kate Beaton, Craig Thompson, Lilli Carré, Tony Millionaire, Roz Chast, Gahan Wilson... we think you get the idea. This is pretty much a guaranteed gift success story if a comics fan is involved in any capacity:  whether you're giving or getting, this one has it all.  And it is practically a Platonic ideal as a gift designed to sprout a love of comics in a new reader.
Love and Rockets: New Stories #4 Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $11.99
($14.99 list)
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Yowza!  The new issue of Love and Rockets has arrived.  Last year's issue packed such a wallop that we are still thinking about it.  Even though more than a year has passed since then, we never felt like we were waiting for the next one.  It seems that the supernatural power that is imbued through the pen and ink on paper and reproduced in the pages of Love and Rockets is such that it is able to imprint its content on readers' minds to whatever degree is necessary to keep it thriving there until the next issue arrives.  And so, now that the new issue is here – and from what we've heard, it's another mind-blower – all we can do is hold onto our hats and dive in.  See you there!
Citizen Rex Gilbert Hernandez, Mario Hernandez Dark Horse $17.77
($19.99 list)
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The other Hernandez brother, Mario, busts out with brother Beto and pens a fantastic fifties-style sci-fi fable that focuses on a highly stratified, mediated, fabricated and policed society that put us in mind of a futuristic synthesis of Latin and Anglo America – which, come to think of it, may very well be how things play out. In other words: this work of old school comics that echoes the science fiction comic books of the 1950s that nourished the growing minds in the Hernandez household could tell The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal a thing or two about the shape of things to come.  Citizen Rex is also a frantic, fast-paced and fun read packed with detail and nuance, that, while completely zany, will, nevertheless reward close reading.  Hardcover!
Love from the Shadows Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics The Fritz B-Movie Collection $17.77
($19.99 list)
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Here we have the third volume in Gilbert's ongoing series, "The Fritz B-Movie Collection" (the first two being Chance in Hell and The Troublemakers).  As with the first two volumes, this is a 120 page black and white hardcover with a painted dustjacket by a guest artist (this time it's by newcomer, Steve Martinez).  Gilbert is extending his own set of generic conventions in this series, and they are all on display once again:  sex, and plenty of it; violence (less this time around, but still not for the squeamish); barren western landscapes strewn with rock formations and pocked with caves; mysterious organizations with ill-defined aims; and crazy plot twists and turns that will leave your head spinning. 
Strange Tales II #2 Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez, Tony Millionaire, Jeffrey Brown and more ... Marvel Strange Tales II $4.44
($4.99 list)
OUT OF STOCK!
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We can hardly belive our eyes:  under a picture-perfect Jaime Hernandez cover are Marvel Comics  stories by both Gilbert and Jaime Hernandez.  "Old School Rules" featuring Iron Man and the Human Torch by Beto, and "Love and the Space Phantom" by Jaime.  Feast your eyes and treasure the moment, for it may not come again.  Also on hand is more Marvel mayhem perpetuated by the likes of Tony Millionaire, Jon Vermilyea, Jeffrey Brown, Farel Dalrymple, Paul Hornschemier, Nick Bertozzi, David Heatley, Sheldon Vella and Paul Maybury.
Love and Rockets: New Stories #3 Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $11.99
($14.99 list)
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Break out the champagne, it's here!  The third annual installment of the latest incarnation of the greatest comic book series of our times:  Love and Rockets.  This is the purest manifestation of the Perfect Sphere of True Comics that we mere mortals are likely to encounter here on planet earth.  Two stories each by both Jaime and Gilbert, who fairly evenly divide the issue between them.  We'll certainly have more to say about this issue before too long.
MOME #19: Summer 2010 Edward Bak, Robert Goodin, Conor O'Keefe, Tim Lane and more ... Fantagraphics MOME $12.75
($14.95 list)
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Whew!  This issue of MOME is a frantic roller coaster ride of graphilocity that left our mind reeling.  The journey begins with this issue's bifurcated cover, which sets the stage for the lead story:  the first part of Josh SImmons new serial, The White Rhinoceros.  We are then treated to "The Imaginist," Olivier Schrauwen's most fully realized work to date.  Next up is Gilbert Hernandez with a new tale of the one and only Roy!  Then hold onto your hats for the precipitous plunge that is the tale of "Evelyn Dalton-Hoyt."  Within this work's 21 tumultuous pages, author/artist, D.J. Bryant has penned a demonically deft deconstruction of "Driven to Destruction," a 1970s Steve Ditko story originally published in Haunted #4 published by Charlton Comics, that infers (with a little help from Ditko's sideline of bondage comics) a torturous sexual repression at the heart of Ditko's seventies sensibility.  So as not to give anyone the wrong idea,  let us be clear and state that "ED-H" is a story that is fully capable of standing on its own merits, that can (and will) be wholly appreciated without any knowledge of the work of Steve Ditko; the Ditko angle is, however, vertigo inducing to all long time fans of his work.  Then we have Tim Lane's "Hitchhiker," a tale full of Lane's trademarked dark and foreboding pen and ink work, but one that takes an unexpected turn.  We then take a pastoral pass through the pastel colorings of Conor O'Keefe in "Vote Lily at the Dog Show" before being put through the twisted sensibility of Robert Goodin in "The Spiritual Crisis of Carl Jung."  MOME 19 then closes with the latest chapter in T. Edward Bak's Wild Man.  Whew, indeed.
High Soft Lisp Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $13.99
($16.99 list)
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And for any Love and Rockets fans who thought things were getting a little too Jaime-centric there, we now present the latest in the original series of trade paperback volumes collecting the work that originally appeared in comic book form.  High Soft Lisp collects work that originally appeared in both the second volume of Love and Rockets, as well as from Gilbert's solo title, Luba's Comics and Stories.  Collectors should take note of the fact that the indicia states that "a few pages have been added, and some have been altered" in the service of creating a more unified feel.  And readers should also take note that Gilbert's hormones were, apparently, in overdrive during the period when this work was created, as there is quite an abundant amplitude of sexual activity on display here as Gilbert puts Fritz & Co. through the paces in his attempt to delineate the heartbreak that is immanent in every act of sexual congress that occurs in a world where all is surface, where what you see – and only what you see – is what you get; a world where everyone is living in their own personal movie and every life is merely a role.
Troublemakers Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics The Fritz B-Movie Collection $15.95
($19.99 list)
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Beto's new stand-alone graphic novel is finally here!  This time around he heads deep into Jim Thompson territory with this tale of of a terrible trio of backstabbers that is perhaps his most caustic comment yet on the horrors of self-centeredness.  A straight-up, hardboiled work in the pulp tradition.  While this may appear to be a twenty dollar hardcover graphic novel, that's only superficial.  At its heart it is a cheap, grimy twenty-five cent paperback found on the floor at the back of the garage.  With page after page plauged with doubt and soaked with ennui and despair, you'll finish up with life lessons learned and characters to avoid.
The Best American Comics 2009 Dash Shaw, Koren Shadmi, David Sandlin, Ron Regé and more ... Houghton Mifflin Best American $20.00
($22.95 list)
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edited by Charles Burns Well, Crumb is a tough act to follow, but we'll give it a shot with this star-studded anthology filled with the best and the brightest from the last twelve months of comics, as judged by Charles Burns.  In a book like this, we feel that the contributor list says it best:  Doug Allen, Peter Bagge, Gabrielle Bell, Matt Broersma, Daniel Clowes, Al Columbia, Robert Dennis Crumb, Sammy Harkham, Tim Hensley, Gilbert Hernandez, Kevin Huizenga, Ben Katchor, Kaz, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, Michael Kupperman, Jason Lutes, Tony Millionaire, Jerry Moriarty, Anders Nilsen, Gary Panter, Laura Park, Mimi Pond, Ron Regé, David Sandlin, Koren Shadmi, Dash Shaw, Art Spiegelman, Ted Stearn, Jillian Tamaki and Mariko Tamaki, Adrian Tomine, Chris Ware, Dan Zettwoch.  'Nuff said.  Well, actually, we can't help but add that while the material contained in this anthology is absolutely fabulous, the quality of its reproduction is, mysteriously, not up to the same standard as the three previous volumes in this series, which were excellent in that department.  This shouldn't stop anyone from picking up this fine volume, but it is worrisome.  Let's hope that this was a one time aberration and that next year we'll find the fine folks at Houghton Mifflin have figured out what went wrong and put things in the production department back on track.
Love and Rockets: New Stories #2 Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $11.99
($14.99 list)
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It's Here!  We don't have a lot to say about it, yet, but what else do you need to know, really?  Well, for starters, how about the fact that this issue features a 42 page pantomime comic by Beto that is a midnight ferry ride through the subconscious realm that will leave you with that tantalizing feeling you get when you wake up from a particularly vivid yet mystifying dream:  that you had the answer, that you saw how all the pieces fit together and you had it all figured out... if only you could remember!  And then there's the fantastic fifty-page finale of Jaime's epic opus of femme superheroics, "Ti-Girls Adventures Number 34."  This contemporary classic that transcends all attempts to categorize it now only comes out once a year, so we feel that all we have to say is, "Be there, or be square!"
Luba Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $33.99
($39.99 list)
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At last!  The second hardcover collection in the epic saga that began with the mammoth (and now, sadly, out of print*) Palomar.  Luba is a massive 600 page hardback that collects the entirety of the three previously released softcovers, Luba in America, Luba: The Book of Ofelia, and Luba: Three Daughters, and then some. The combined retail price of these three softcover trades is $59.97 making the choice of this stunning hardcover a no-brainer for anyone who had yet to purchase this amazing material.  And not only that, this time around the work is printed on non-reflective flat white stock yielding superior image quality, which it will make tempting to even those who already have the trades.  Luba follows the the titular character along with a large supporting cast that spans three generations and the environs of Mexico and southern California. This is a series that  is populated by some of the most colorful characters in the history of comics and that's saying something considering they're all printed in black & white. There are plot lines, actions, reactions and interactions galore.  There is powerful social commentary side by side with action and laughs, and more insight into character formation and sexual development than you will find anywhere else.  Act now to take advantage of our special price! (offer ends 20 June 2009) (*However, there's no need to despair as the entirety of Palomar is available in three excellent softcover volumes, here.)
Love and Rockets #14 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.60
($4.50 list)
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The greatness continues, with Xaime turning in two more days -- Thursday and Friday -- of "Day by Day with Hopey," and Beto doing likewise with his two new installments in "Dumb Solitaire," along with the latest twist in Julio's Day.  Bonuses include a whacky two-pager by Xaime and one-pagers by both Beto and Mario.
Love and Rockets #13 (volume two) Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.60
($4.50 list)
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Beto checks in with an eleven-page installment of  "The Song of the Sea Hog," the tale of one man and his  six wives (five ex-, one current and all still in touch -- ouch!), a  two-page "Julio's Day," and the inaugural of a new series of one-pagers, "The Kid Stuff Kids," which, on the basis of this one at least, seems to play with the form a bit.  Jaime struts his stuff with three "Angel of Tarzana" strips featuring 'Sports Girl' Rivera, two more noirish two-pagers on Ray 'Down-and-Out' D and his obsessive non-starting relationship with Vivian 'Frogmouth', and, finally, "Wednesday Is Bitter Ends Day," the latest episode in "Day By Day With Hopey", that follows our heroine as she transitions to the next chapter of her saga-filled life.  All this in one 32-page comic book.  How do they do it!  Love and Rockets:  still the best comic book on the planet.
Love and Rockets: New Stories #1 Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $12.75
($14.99 list)
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Love and Rockets is dead!  Long live Love and Rockets!!  What we mean is:  Love and Rockets, Volume 2, the standard comic book size format series which has carried Love and Rockets through the last eight years, is no more.  In it's place we have the first issue of Love and Rockets: New Stories, a 100 page annual (Annual?  Only one Love and Rockets per year?  How will we survive?  ¡sob!) of all new work by the one and only los hermanos Hernandez.  This time out of we have a whopping 50 pages (which is, believe it or not, only the first half of this epic yarn) of hi-jinx superheroics delivered as only Xaime can, plus -- count 'em -- six new Gilbert stories and, as an added bonus, a new collaboration betweeen GIlbert and Mario.  You'll want to take your time with this one, and savor every moment.
Love and Rockets #12 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.60
($4.50 list)
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What can we say?  These guys are still at the top of their form.  This issue delivers:  three more-or-less connected, Maggie-related shorts by Jaime venture into the dark underbelly of LA at the same time as they plumb the depths of the human soul, while a relatively (but not entirely) light-hearted romp featuring Hopey looks at relationships; two longer pieces by Gilbert provide more insight into the family romance that lies at the heart of all human character development, with a special focus on the ignorance that poses as superiority in "A Gift for Venus" and more heartbreak soup in the latest installment of "Julio's Day."
The Comics Journal Special Edition 2005 (#5) Paul Hornschemeier, Igort, Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez and more ... Fantagraphics $19.95
($24.95 list)
OUT OF STOCK!
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Well, for our money at least, this volume is hands down the best so far.  It has a tripartite structure:  A survey of Manga Masters featuring pieces on Osamu Tezuka, Hideshi Hino, Suehiro Maruo, Saseo Ono and Yoshihiro Tsuge; a focus on Vaughn Bodé that features a critical appreciation, a revealing biography and a personal reminiscence  -- all amply accompanied by classic and rare Bodé comics, illustrations and rarely (if ever!) seen sketchbook pages; and then there's the giant comics feature:  this time around the theme is "seduction" and the contributions by many of today's best comics practitioners are top notch.  Among the contributors are Jaime and Gilbert Hernandez, Igort (whose 4-pager is among the highlights), Mary Fleener, Rick Geary, Bill Griffith, Megan Kelso, Paul Hornschemeier, Marc Bell, Gabrielle Bell (whose submission is her most accomplished work yet published), Carol Lay and many others.  This is a great volume to have just lying around:  no matter what page you open to you'll find something engaging.
Luba - The Book of Ophelia Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $18.35
($22.95 list)
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(Love and Rockets Book 21)  Well, for those among you who, for whatever reason, have not managed to purchase each new issue of Love and Rockets and/or Luba when they're hot off the press, and/or for those who have but can't live without the collected editions as well, we have a new dose of Gilbert Hernandez masterworks.  Gilbert's Luba - The Book of Ophelia collects Luba #3 - 10,  Luba's Comics & Stories #2 - 5 and Measles #3.  The legendary mythos continues.
Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories: Volume Two David Mazzuchelli, Leif Goldberg, Brian Chippendale, Elinore Norflus and more ... Yale University Press $20.00
($28.00 list)
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edited by Ivan Brunetti It's too early to say for certain, but this follow-up to Brunetti's already classic 2006 anthology, also published by Yale University Press, might just be even better than its precursor.  One thing's for certain:  Brunetti has held onto -- and further refined -- his editorial vision of arranging the work contained in this volume in an organic sequence, deftly managing to map out the similarities between artists so that each piece flows smoothly into into the other, creating an amazing sense of an innate connectivity between all areas of comics here on display.  This book is a powerful ally in the struggle to bring the light of comics to those poor souls still dwelling in the darkness.  It's the perfect choice to turn on a friend or relative to the joy, beauty and pleasures of our favorite medium.  Hold onto your hats, here's the contributor list:  Daniel Clowes, Saul Steinberg, Sammy Harkham, Chris Ware, R. Sikoryak, Michael Kupperman, Drew Friedman, Mark Beyer, Mack White, Jayr Pulga, Renee French, Kim Deitch, Richard Sala, J. Bradley Johnson, Archer Prewit, Anonymous (utility sketchbook), HJ Tuthill, Milt Gross, Bill Holman, Harvey Kurtzman, R.Crumb, Basil Wolverton, Art Spiegelman, Jess, John Hankiewicz, Tim Hensley, Bill Griffith, Richard McGuire, Gilbert Hernandez, Jim Woodring, David Collier, Eugene Teal, Charles Burns, Karl Wirsum, Gary Panter, Paper Rad, Fletcher Hanks, CF, Charles Forbell, Ron Rege, Jr., Winsor McCay, Matthew Thurber, Souther Salazar, Kevin Scalzo, Megan Kelso, James McShane, Laura Park, Vanessa Davis, Onsmith, Joe Matt, Jeffrey Brown, Martin Cendreda, Dave Kiersh, John Porcellino, Carrie Golus/Patrick Welch, Jessica Abel, Cole Johnson, Lynda Barry, Debbie Drechsler, Diane Noomin, Aline Kominsky-Crum, Ariel Bordeaux, Chester Brown, Anders Nilsen, Joe Sacco, Phoebe Gloeckner, Elinore Norflus, Brian Chippendale, Leif Goldberg, David Mazzuchelli, Jerry Moriarty, Ben Katchor, Frank Santoro, Dan Zettwoch, Kevin Huizenga, Harvey Pekar/R.Crumb, Carol Tyler, Maurice Vellekoop, Seth, Adrian Tomine, Jaime Hernandez & David Heatley.  It's simply amazing.  Comics Power!  PLEASE NOTE:  We feel compelled to mention that this volume includes several pieces that contain quite explicit sexual content; and while this content represents only a miniscule fraction of the total, it nevertheless renders this volume fit for ADULTS ONLY.
McSweeney's #13 Mark Beyer, Ivan Brunetti, Kaz, Art Spiegelman and more ... McSweeney's McSweeney's $20.00
($24.00 list)
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Finally, it's here:  the most anticipated release of 2004 (so far).  Striving for objet d'art status, McSweeney's 13 comes as close as any comics release to attaining it.  Starting with a dust jacket that folds out into a two sided comics poster: the outer side featuring a dense full color, 360º narrative by editor and comics fiend, Chris Ware; the inner side featuring a vaguely ceremonial (think Mayan) worshipping of the idols of comics by Gary Panter.  But there's more:  tucked into the folds of this dust-jacket-cum-suitable-for-framing-wall-art are two mini-comics commissioned especially for this issue; one -- in full color -- by Ron Rege, Jr., and the other in B & W (as it should be) by long time mini-master, John Porcellino.  And that's just the dust jacket!  Moving on to the front and back binding plates (the hard covers beneath the dust jacket), we have a hundred or so images culled from a 1936 guide to cartooning separated by a lavishly embossed spine. The end papers are by Ivan Brunetti, and feature a wallpaper of minimalistic renditions of his personal comics and cartoon hall of fame.  And, finally, there is the contents of the book itself.  The subject of much speculation as to whether it would be reprints or newly commissioned work, the answer is... Both!  About half and half, depending on how you look at it.  Here's how it breaks down:  Some of the work has appeared in non-comics periodicals, but is collected herein for the first time.  Under this category are Mark Beyer, Ivan Brunetti, Kaz, Art Spiegelman (although his pieces are being reprinted everywhere at this point) and some of the pieces by Chris Ware.  Straight out reprints are the inclusions by Charles Burns (although the frontispiece is new), Chester Brown, Debbie Drechsler, Jaime and Gilberto Hernandez, Mark Newgarden, Archer Prewitt, Joe Sacco, Richard Sala (newly colored, however), Seth, and Adrian Tomine.  New to us -- and therefore, we imagine, new to you as well --  are the works by Lynda Barry, Jeffrey Brown, Dan Clowes, David Collier, R. Crumb, Kim Deitch, Julie Doucet, David Heatley, Ben Katchor, Joe Matt, Richard McGuire, Gary Panter, some of the Chris Ware, and of course the aforementioned dust-jacket and minis.  In addition to all this contemporary work, there are selections of classic and archival work sprinkled throughout: First and foremost among these is a 15-page spread on "the inventor of comics," Rodolphe Töpfler, and his first appearance in America, introduced by Chris Ware; an 80% reproduction of an original 1922 Mutt and Jeff daily strip by Bud Fisher that takes four pages to display (which gives you an idea of how big they drew comics back then!); and a nine page spread on George Herriman, introduced by Tim Samuelson and featuring Herriman's last Krazy Kat dailies, also reproduced from the originals.  And, as if this weren't enough, there are two appreciations by Chris Ware, one of the abstract-expressionist-turned-representational-painter-with-a-personal-affinity-for-comics-iconography, Philip Guston, and the other of Peanuts creator, Charles Schulz.  In addition there is a critical appreciation of comics from John Updike, and nostalgiac/elegiac remembrances of comics related experiences by Glen David Gold, Malachi Cohen, and Chip Kidd.  The volume opens with a preface from Ira Glass, followed by an introduction by Chris Ware, who, when all is said and done, is clearly more than simply the editor of this work.  This is a great piece, especially when you consider it's primary purpose:  preaching to the unconverted, those countless, teeming millions out there in America and beyond who don't locate the foundation of their identity in comics.  With this volume, McSweeney's begins a new ambitious distribution arrangement with Publisher's Group West in the USA and Penguin Books in the UK; thereby bringing their publications before a great many more potential readers.  They couldn't have chosen a better volume to initiate this venture.  Let's wish them luck.
Love and Rockets #16 (Volume Two) Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.60
($4.50 list)
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In case you wondering, we thought we'd take this moment to let you know that Love and Rockets is still going strong, with new issues appearing at a steady clip. And the work continues to be of the highest caliber, building, issue by issue, the most signifigant narrative structure on the contemporary comics landscape.
Love and Rockets #15 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.60
($4.50 list)
Lr2_15
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In case you wondering, we thought we'd take this moment to let you know that Love and Rockets is still going strong, with new issues appearing at a steady clip. And the work continues to be of the highest caliber, building, issue by issue, the most signifigant narrative structure on the contemporary comics landscape, as our in-depth look at "Saturday is Shatterday" from #15 amply testifies (click on image at left to read).
Sloth Gilbert Hernandez $17.95
($19.95 list)
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Two years in the making, Gilbert H.'s all new graphic novel for Vertigo is an allegorical tale of a suburban teen who wills himself into a year long coma, waking up a year later unchanged except that he is now the anti-Flash -- the world's slowest teen; the embodiment of sloth. We'll be back with a review as soon as we read it.  True believers don't need to wait to hear what we have to say about it, of course, this is, after all, an all new work by Gilbert Hernandez.
Love and Rockets #7 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.15
($3.95 list)
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The latest of the greatest.
Love and Rockets #6 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez, Mario Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.15
($3.95 list)

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more greatness from Los Bros.
Love and Rockets #5 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez, Mario Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.15
($3.95 list)

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Secret origin of Penny Century.  An instant calssic!
Love and Rockets #4 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez, Mario Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.15
($3.95 list)

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There's no getting around it:  if you don't have it, you need it.
Love and Rockets #3 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez, Mario Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.15
($3.95 list)

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The Beat goes on.
Love and Rockets #2 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez, Mario Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.15
($3.95 list)

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Every issue a must.
Love and Rockets #1 (volume two) Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez, Mario Hernandez Fantagraphics Love and Rockets $3.15
($3.95 list)

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The most important comic book series of our times gets a new lease on life, starting right here!