
This week’s best cover is Star Trek: Alien Spotlight: Romulans #1.
Marvel Zombies 2 #5, Marvel Comics.
Jason and The Argonauts #2, Bluewater Comics.
Uncle Sam and the Freedom Fighters #6, DC Comics.
Fall of Cthulhu #10, Boom Studios.
Freddy Vs Jason Vs Ash #5, DC Comics/Dynamite Entertainment.
She-Hulk #26, Marvel Comics.
The Engineer #2, Archaia Studios Press.
Narcopolis #2, Avatar.
The Dead Rider #2, Dark Horse Comics.
Project Super Powers #1, Dynamite Entertainment.
Star Trek: Alien Spotlight: Romulans #1, IDW.
Trade Paperbacks:
The Savage Sword of Conan Vol 2, Dark Horse Comics.
Infinite Crisis DC comics.
Previews: May
-Swinebread
My new comics-Michael Moore's Promethea Trade Paperback #5
ReplyDeleteThanks bra!
(those sneaky Romulans!)
Ooo. That cover makes me feel so nostalgic.
ReplyDeleteAnd old, as it made me think of the AMT Romulan Warbird I built as a kid.
My new comics = nothing. Darnit. I did find a copy of Batgirl: Silent Running at a used bookstore on Sunday, though.
Damn. Now I have to go back to Excalibur to pick up romulans.
ReplyDeleteHate the Romulans all you want, but at least they have comfortable chairs.
ReplyDeleteLB – No, Thank You! At least you know were the store is Now!
ReplyDeleteArkonbey – Wow, that’s very cool. I remember seeing one in a glass case when I was a young kid. The Romulan Warbird was my favorite ship form TOS.
Dean – Great art this time!
Snab – They sure do, because they’re not all stuffy like the vulcans
I built one of those AMT Warbird models, too. I think I had every one of the kits in the series including the one that was a (TOS) phaser, communicator, and tricorder. I also went nuts, got a couple more of the old Enterprise kits, and made them into the Hood and the Constellation.
ReplyDeleteAh, the joys of youth...
Great Moody, I never had the Patience for models but they sure looked spiffy when built. Now the real question is, did you save them along with your Megos?
ReplyDeleteIf MM has the Megos, it's a rare person who still has the little, tiny blue communicators and phasers.
ReplyDeleteI mean those communicators were about the size of a Tylenol!