
Love and Rockets
Say what you want, but the whole alternative/independent comics scene and its affiliation with and connection to the alternative/independent music scene wouldn't exist if not for the initial impetus provided by Love and Rockets. The Hernandez Bothers' grafting of the you-can-do-it-anyway-you-want ethos and class consciousness of punk rock onto the fun-and-fantasy mythos and craft consciousness of comics was the first, best and most important contribution towards a new comics made in the 1980s; a contribution that continues to resonate to this day. Add to that their fluent and insightful expression of a contemporary Hispanic American identity alongside of a comfortable yet emotionally complex embrace of gay and bisexual characters, both delineated with breathtaking clarity by creators who are as accomplished at drawing as they are at writing and you've basically got a modern American masterpiece. The emotional core of Love and Rockets, as well as the center of the creative process behind it, is characterization. No one has ever created comic book characters with the depth of humanity of those that appear in Love and Rockets. Maggie and Hopey, Speedy and Ray, Luba and Chelo, Tonantzin and Pipo, and the seemingly countless others -- even those that may only appear in a panel or two, never to be heard from again -- all seem so real that it is actually possible to believe for those moments that you behold them that Xaime and Beto are simply channeling these characters into our dimension from the Perfect Sphere of True Comics where they live out lives as real as our own, if not (and this is when it gets scary) even more so. <<•>> The manifestations of the Love and Rockets Universe in our lowly earthly plane are somewhat sprawling, but by far the most substantial part exists in the initial fifty issue run of the comics magazine, Love and Rockets, published by Fantagraphics from 1982 to 1995. Only about half of these are currently in print. However, the entirety of their contents (along with some minor revisions) has been collected in a series of books (twenty-four so far - the first fifteen of which have now been reformatted as seven fabulous low-priced volumes that are an incredible value). In 2001, Love and Rockets was relaunched in comic book format – technically, volume two – with all new stories by Jaime & Gilbert, along with input from their older brother Mario, who also contributed to the original series, and has produced a smattering of stories for anthology publications over the years. This second volume ran for twenty issues, before being superceded in 2008 by Love and Rockets: New Stories – technically, volume three – which is a book size annual. In the interregnum between series, Jaime & Gilberto produced a plethora of work on their own based on ideas that they had harbored while working together on L &R. The most notable of these are Jaime's Penny Century series which ran for seven issues and Beto's New Love and Luba series. These too have begun to be collected in the aforementioned series of books, constituting the sixteenth through the twentieth volumes as of this writing. <<•>> An important caveat to note is that many issues of Love and Rockets deal graphically with themes involving adult sexuality and violence. While the content in this regard varies greatly from issue to issue, in general the earlier issues -- roughly the first half of the original run, up to #25 or so -- have less graphic content of this nature, while the later issues have more. As a result, it is our general policy to limit sales to those over 18 years of age. Should someone younger display a keen interest, we would custom pick appropriate issues depending on age and demonstrated level of maturity as long as that person was accompanied by a parent.
While some individual stories would be fine for all ages, it is probably best to say that, generally speaking, Love and Rockets is not appropriate for anyone under 13. The Copacetic Comics Company stocks the entire catalogue of in-print work by the Hernandez brothers, and maintains an in-store stock of much of that which is out of print as well. <<•>> The Hernandez brothers, with their work on Love and Rockets and related titles, initiated a new chapter in American popular culture. By providing a powerful connection between the parallel youth cultures of music and comics, Love and Rockets enabled the respective energies and ideas of each to flow through and invigorate the other, creating a circuit that has now become a permanent fixture on the American scene. And this isn't just a matter of being in the right place at the right time, either. The level of excellence embodied in the work that has been and continues to be produced by the Hernandez Brothers is simply unparalleled: The degree of personal introspection that is channeled through the characters, the mastery of craft in the service of expression, the aspiration to achievement, the sincerity of purpose -- nowhere else in the world of comics (and few places anywhere in the world, for that matter) does it all come together as successfully as it does in the pages of Love and Rockets.
| Title | Creator | Publisher | Series | Price | ||
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| 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: 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! | |||||
| 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: 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. | |||||
| Love and Rockets #20 (volume two) | Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$6.39 ($7.99 list) |
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While we're on the topic of what's right with comic books today, what better to segue to than this 56-page double size issue includes the entirety (and then some, as it is the "director's cut" which restores some deletions made at the behest of NYT editors) of Jaime's "La Maggie la Loca" strip that ran in The New York Times Sunday Magazine, an all new 24-page story (well, it's 24 half-pages, so, quibblers could make the case that it's more like a 12-page story... but we won't!) by Jaime operating in his patented Dennis the Menace/Peanuts mode, and an epic 24 page Beto tale featuring Venus and Co. that works to analyze how female gender and sexuality are constructed in a variety of media from print to film to television while telling a tale of love, loss and spiritual rebirth, as is his wont. | |||||
| 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: 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!" | |||||
| New Tales of Old Palomar #2 | Gilbert Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$6.75 ($7.95 list) |
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After (re)visiting the classic tales of Palomar in Human Diastrophism, you now have the opportunity to take another look in at the early antics of its populace back in the day in the second installment of New Tales of Old Palomar. This issue features a single extended tale that mixes Gilbert's current creative occupations of inevitable adult corruption with the halcyon innocence of early Palomar. | |||||
| Love and Rockets #19 (volume two) | Gilbert Hernandez, Jaime Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$3.60 ($4.50 list) |
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Is there ever a time when Love and Rockets is not worthy of mention? No! This issue is another classic. It wraps up a lot of loose ends and clears the table for the next round. | |||||
| Love and Rockets #17 (volume two) | Jaime Hernandez, Gilbert Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$3.60 ($4.50 list) |
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Kippee-yi-yi-yay! It's another issue of Love and Rockets! | |||||
| 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) |
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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). | |||||
| 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 #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." | |||||
| Love and Rockets #11 (volume two) | Los Hermanos Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$3.60 ($4.50 list) |
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It's here already! The latest issue of the greatest comic book series of our times. Jaime continues his descent into the underbelly of LA with a Ray D. mini-epic that really comes on like a 1950s film noir; somehow managing to pack it all into a mere five pages, a feat that he alone could pull off. Beto ponders on the consequences of treating women as commodities and marriage as a consumer choice. And plenty more. | |||||
| Love and Rockets #10 (Volume Two) | Jaime Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$4.75 ($5.95 list) |
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To celebrate the tenth issue of their second volume of the greatest comic book of modern times, Los Bros have put together a mammoth 64 page square-bound extravaganza that features the conclusion of both the latest Maggie saga by Jaime and the epic, "Me for the Unknown," by Beto and Mario. Plus, two new installments of Julio's Day and an all-10-page "Roy and his Pals" story by Beto. And finally, as if that weren't already enough, a giant list of "Our Favorite Comics" by Jaime, Beto and Mario, that includes favorite specific issues, as well as titles, writers and artists. A veritable walk down memory lane. Don't miss it! | |||||
| 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! | |||||
| 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. | |||||
| Esperanza: A Love and Rockets Book | Jaime Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$15.00 ($18.99 list) |
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This 248-page black & white 7.5" x 9.25" softcover is the fifth volume of Locas stories by Jaime Hernandez; and the eighth overall, the other three collecting Gilbert's Palomar stories. Esperanza picks up where 2010’s Penny Century collection left off in collecting the the stories from the second volume of Love and Rockets – the comic book size series that ran from 2000 through 2007. Together, the two volumes collect everything Locas up through #19, the second to last issue of the series (#20, the last issue, presents the full color story that originally ran in the New York Times, along with a second, off-format story of Maggie's childhood, neither of which would work in this volume; completists take note). Page after page of immortal classics fill this essential volume. We know that all true believers already own the original issues, but, for the rest of you: It really doesn't get any better than Love and Rockets. Really. | |||||
| 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. | |||||
| Penny Century | Jaime Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$14.99 ($18.99 list) |
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Well, talk about an embarassment of riches! Not only have we been treated to the long awaited Art of Jaime, but now we also have the latest in the splendiferous series of trade paperback volumes that, since 2007, have been repackaging the classic work of both Jaime and Beto. Penny Century is the fourth Jaime volume and the first to present his work that appeared after the conclusion of the initial seminal run of Love and Rockets. The book opens with the one of kind classic of comics choreography that is Whoa Nellie!, Jaime's 68 page ode to women's wrestling. Then we are treated to the super fabuous experience of the Maggie and Hopey Color Fun one-shot in glorious black & white. The bulk of the book collects the titular seven-issue series in its entirety (yes?), followed by the "secret origin" of the lead character, "Bay of Threes," from the fifth issue of the second volume of Love and Rockets. 248 pages of Jaime Hernandez in fine form. Is there really anything else that needs to be said? | |||||
| Locas II | Jaime Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$33.99 ($39.99 list) |
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418 pages of the greatest comics of our time under one cover. This volume picks up, roughly, where Locas left off, and collects nearly all the standard comic book size formatted work that Jaime has executed since the conclusion of the original 50-issue run of the magazine size formatted Love and Rockets. Locas II bring together under one cover all six issues of the Penny Century series along with Jaime's contributions to the first nineteen issues of the twenty-issue run of the second volume of Love and Rockets. Not everything from this period is here, however. The most notable exclusion is the first work Jaime completed after the termination of L&R, vol. I, the three-issue mini-series, Whoa, Nellie! As it was only tangentially connected to the Locas storyline, it is not collected here. Also not included are numerous short strips – mostly one or two pages in length – that appeared in the aforementioned issues of Penny Century and L&R, vol. II, but are not related to the Locas continuity, as well as the full color, novella length work that originally appeared (slightly abridged) in The New York Times Sunday Magazine and subsequently appeared in Love and Rockets, Volume II #20. (Completists take note!) That said, what you are getting is a big book filled with the best of the best, all laid out in a mammoth narrative arc that continues to build on the magnificent structure of past work in creating the most richly complex and deeply human work in the history of comics. | |||||
| 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.) | |||||
| Locas | Jaime Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$39.95 ($49.95 list) |
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Whoops! We were so excited by this book's arrival that we plum forgot to list it here and so announce its presence on our shelves. Sorry about that. This book is our lead contender for greatest comics collection of all time. It places between two covers the entirety of the adventures of Maggie and Hopey that transpired during the original fifty-issue run of Love and Rockets. Reña Titanion, Rand Race, Penny Century, H.R. Costigan, Terry, Daffy, Izzy, Speedy, Ray D., Doyle, Danita and all the rest: they're all here. It's big: over 700 pages in all! It's an embossed hardcover edition that's got a swell dust-jacket! And don't forget Gilbert's Palomar; we haven't: it's our lead contender for second greatest comics collection of all time. | |||||
| Ghost of Hoppers | Jaime Hernandez | Fantagraphics | Love and Rockets |
$18.35 ($22.95 list) |
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(Love and Rockets Book 22) Well, for those among you who, for whatever reason, have not managed to purchase each new issue of Love and Rockets 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 Jaime Hernandez masterwork. Jaime's Ghost of Hoppers collects his contributions to Love and Rockets V.2 # 1-4 & 6-10 (V.2#5 was already collected in Dicks & Deedees). The legendary mythos continues. | |||||
| 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. | |||||