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#Crossroad series vol 1
sognareleggiesogna · 5 months
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RECENSIONE: Solo io e te di J. D. Blake
Cari Sognatori, Siria ha letto il primo volume della serie Crossroad scritta da J.D. Blake e pubblicata dalla Triskell Edizioni!!! SERIE: Crossroad vol 1 GENERE: young adult DATA DI USCITA 23 agosto 2023 Link d’acquisto Ebook / Cartaceo Trama Clarissa, costretta a chiudere per l’ennesima volta tutta la sua vita in degli scatoloni, dice addio ai suoi amici del Kansas e, quando atterra a El Paso,…
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shownohajimarida · 1 year
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(Magic Kaito, Vol. 1, Ch. 1: 蘇る怪盗)
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(Kid the Phantom Thief Special 01: 蘇る怪盗)
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(Magic Kaito 1412 Ep. 01: 蘇る怪盗KID)
Now presenting: Part 1/? of something to keep the motor running 'til next chapter's ready. Starring fandom's old favorite: overanalysis.
You can expect all these to start with a cross-comp of the manga and its anime counterpart (assuming there are any), but beyond that, anything's fair game. Some of them will be about plot, some about characters, some about all the crossroads that Kaito's thousand-and-one translators have taken over the years.
Today? Let's talk about first impressions.
Big surprise, our series about semi-international man of mystery Kaitou Kid is kicked off by semi-international man of mystery Kaitou Kid—Kid, but not Kuroba. Not fils, not père.
No, this man is one Konosuke Jii, the faithful, the felicitous, the... forever forgotten. Sources that give him so much as honorary Kid status can be counted one hand, but make no mistake, he's the one who sets the tone for What Kaitou Kid Is, who holds this whole premiere together on a plot and character level. In fact, on at least one front he upstages both the Real™ Kids: putting the phantom in phantom thief.
Look at frames above. This is not a man who's here to clown, to dazzle everyone in the room and leave with a smile. This is a thing, impossible and implacable, that comes out of nowhere and makes everyone deal on its terms; if there's a why to what it does, it's not telling you, not without a fight.
Alas, all glory is fleeting. The series isn't Magic Jii* after all, and for the most part it is here to clown, so sooner or later all this had to go pbbbt to let the actual hero shine. We'll have plenty room in later posts to talk about Kid the Son (and the Father), but for now, let us remember Kid the Middle, soon to be banished the Land of Background Cameos forevermore.
(Incidentally: note the mask. Now note that in the days of yore, one M. Arsene Lupin stalked Tokyo in a little tale called Gold Mask (黄金仮面), which has been getting covers like this—
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—since the 1950s, maybe earlier. Say what you will about Gosho Aoyama, he knows how to honor his precursors.)
* Know what, though? The timeline where it is probably kicks ass.
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sroloc--elbisivni · 7 months
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Ok you win! You win, I read your amazing RotTMNT AU and now I want to know more about Usagi Yojimbo!!! Do you have any recommendations and also I would love to read your bibliography for that fic 😭🙏 your writing is ~superb~ it's so poetic and evocative aaaagh
GOT ANOTHER ONE, BOYS
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welcome!! welcome!! come on in. Usagi canon isn't actually as intimidating as it looks--and I'm not saying this in the way often applicable to comics where that means 'only one flowchart is required to understand the reading order.' i think. There's only one major continuity, and two spinoffs in Space Usagi and Senso,* neither of which is required to understand the main order. Each issue is often overwhelmingly self-contained, so you can really pick up anything and start reading. The split comes in where the series being published at like. four different companies over the years. means that there are different publishing rights that change the way stuff comes out. technically we're at 38 trade volumes. thinking of it like that is the way madness lies.
The bulk of the series is collected in The Usagi Yojimbo Saga, a 10-volume set published out of Dark Horse. Each one is about as thick as a phonebook. This is not the beginning of the series, it technically starts with the overall series' volume 8, Shades of Death, but the first book of the Saga has a 4-page intro comic at the beginning that does very well setting the scene. This is where I started. I still think it's a great place to start because it's fun to go back to the origins with all the knowledge of the later books behind them. (Books 1-9 are in sequence; Usagi Yojimbo: Legends collects Senso, Space Usagi, and Yokai)
If you want to start at the very beginning, you need to look for Usagi Yojimbo, vol. 1: The Ronin. After Volume 7, Gen's Story, everything's published in the Saga.
The beginnings of the series are also collected in Usagi Yojimbo: Origins, which is a recent republishing of the early comics in full color. They've got four volumes--Volume 1,** Wanderer's Road, The Dragon Bellow Conspiracy, and Lone Goat and Kid. If you start here, you'll be switching over to series Vol. 6, Circles, after LGaK.
Once you get through the Saga, you're into IDW publishing territory, which so far has 5 trade volumes--Bunraku and Other Stories, Homecoming, Tengu War!, Crossroads, and The Green Dragon. That brings you up to the Ice and Snow issues, which just started publishing in September.
But quite honestly, given that the overall premise of the series is 'watch this man wander around the early Edo period experiencing Problems,' I really do think you can start anywhere in the grand tradition of 'what's at the library/comic shop' and have a good idea of the series.*** Have fun!
*Technically Chibi Usagi is a separate continuity, but I feel disingenuous putting it in the same category as Senso.
**No, it doesn't have a name. Yes, really.
***tbh between stories that are told As Flashbacks and how only about half the stories have things that squarely indicate exactly what the previous story was, I tend to assume that it goes in non-chronological order unless a story contains evidence otherwise. this opinion has gotten me booed. but i stand by it.
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HOPE ON THE STREET VOL.1
Release date: 29 March 2024
Official page
Video teaser
Photo teaser
Announcement
Pre-order notice
Promotion schedule
HOPE ON THE STREET VOL. 1 on delivery
Preview Cut
Album Preview: PRELUDE, INTERLUDE
Highlight Medley
Dance videos: HIP-POP, POPPING, HOUSE
Official Youtube playlist
Official merch
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The name is a reference to Hope On The Street, a series of videos where j-hope filmed himself dancing and talking about dance.
Here's the list:
Twitter (another one with Jaesang)
Youtube:
Hope on the street @150920
Hope on the street @151008 - 1
Hope on the street @151008 - 2
Vlive (now on Weverse):
160126 BTS Hope On The Street Live
160126 BTS Hope On The Street Live 2
160413 BTS Hope On The Street Live
The teasers for this project were released on j-hope's birthday, on February 18th. Concerning the picture, it's a photomontage notably using this stock picture taken in Itaewon and showing the Namsan tower. A plane has also been added as a nod to "Airplane" a song from j-hope's first mixtape Hope World.
Some text is also visible on the card box picture on the official page, a table of contents:
(Prologue) The beginning Chapter 1 Origin Chapter 2 Soul Chapter 3 Playground Chapter 4 Motivation Chapter 5 Art Just raw and real (Epilogue)
and a citation:
nobody came went up on stage just danced. moment was incredibly exhilarating and unforgettable. It was a great feeling to have all eyes and lights on me. And all reactions and cheers made my heart race. That moment led to where I am now
There are two versions of the album : Prelude and Interlude.
Tracklist
1. on the street (solo version)
Lyrics
2. i wonder... (with Jung Kook of BTS)
Lyrics
3. lock / unlock (with benny blanco, Nile Rodgers)
Lyrics
4. i don't know (with HUH YUNJIN of LE SSERAFIM)
Lyrics
5. what if... (dance mix with JINBO the SuperFreak)
Lyrics
6. NEURON (with Gaeko, yoonmirae)
Lyrics
NEURON (with Gaeko, yoonmirae)
Official Motion Picture teaser
Official Motion Picture
Docuseries
Release date: 28 March 2024
Teaser Poster
Announcement
Teaser trailer
Main Poster
Main Trailer
Preview: #1, #2
Collage Poster
Behind-the-scenes pictures: Billboard, Hypebeast
The docuseries follows j-hope around the world as he meets various dancers and shares moves with them.
Army Film Club pointed out that the camera they chose allowed dynamic movement, adapted for filming dance sequences.
In the teaser trailer, we see these locations:
- Seoul:
Common ground (website) (0:15)
- Osaka - Paris:
Rue Marietta Alboni (0:42, 0:57)
Pont Alexandre III (0:44, 0:58)
Place de Varsovie (0:56)
45 Rue Claude Bernard (Main Trailer 0:37)
9 Rue de la Corderie (Main Trailer 0:37, 1:23)
Café Philippe (Main Trailer 1:01)
Pont de Bir Hakeim (Main Trailer 0:39, 1:22)
- New York:
Crossroad between Union square and E 17th St (0:47, 0:58)
200 W 48th St (0:58)
- Gwangju:
5.18 democracy square (1:00)
Promotion, interviews, and performances
A pop-up shop was opened in Seoul, at a location hinted by QR codes. The shop appeared in Naver maps with more details.
A mural was painted in Bushwick, in New York, to promote the album. It's the same neighborhood where Jimin filmed "Closer Than This" (src #1, src #2).
Official album release parties have also been organized in the United States.
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haveyoureadthispoll · 19 days
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On the eve of her sixteenth birthday, the young sorceress Sabrina Spellman finds herself at a crossroads, having to choose between an unearthly destiny and her mortal boyfriend, Harvey. But a foe from her family's past has arrived in Greendale, Madame Satan, and she has her own deadly agenda. Archie Comics' latest horror sensation starts here! For TEEN+ readers. Compiles the first five issues of the ongoing comic book series Chilling Adventures of Sabrina.
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heavenboy09 · 11 months
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Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊 To You The Most Breathtaking & Superb Afro-American/ Caribbean Actress In The Acting World Today 🌎 Of The 21st Century
Hailing All The Way From Passaic, New Jersey 🇯🇪 
Her Roots are from The Dominican 🇩🇴 Republic & Puerto 🇵🇷 Rican Ancestry
She was born on June 19, 1978, in Passaic, New Jersey Her parents were Aridio Saldaña, who was Dominican, and Asalia Nazario, a Dominican with Puerto Rican ancestry. Nazario was living as a child with her mother in the Dominican Republic, but they migrated to New York to escape political unrest.
A trained dancer, She began her acting career in two 1999 episodes of Law & Order. Her first film role was in Center Stage (2000) in which she played a ballet dancer. She received early recognition for her work opposite Britney Spears in the road film Crossroads (2002). Beginning in 2009, She achieved a career breakthrough with her roles as Nyota Uhura in the Star Trek film series and Neytiri in James Cameron's Avatar film series. She portrayed Gamora in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, from Guardians of the Galaxy (2014) to Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023). In addition to franchise work, She has starred in the science fiction film The Adam Project and the romantic drama miniseries From Scratch, both for Netflix in 2022.
She is an American actress. Known primarily for her work in science fiction film franchises, she has appeared in the three highest-grossing films of all time (Avatar, Avatar: The Way of Water and Avengers: Endgame), a feat not achieved by any other performer. Films she has appeared in have grossed more than $14 billion worldwide and, as of 2023, she is the second-highest-grossing film actress, and the fourth actor overall. Time magazine named her one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2023.
Please Wish This Magnificent Brown Skin Goddess Of Afro-Latin / Caribbean Descent Actress Of Immeasurable Talent In Major Big Blockbuster Franchises, A Very Happy Birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊
You Know Her
You Have Seen Her
& You Can't Not Help But To Love Her ❤
The 1 & The Only
MS. ZOE YADIRA SALDAÑA - PEREGO AKA ZOE SALDAÑA 🇩🇴🇵🇷🤎
HAPPY 45TH BIRTHDAY 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊 TO YOU MS. SALDANA 🤎💙💚#ZoeSaldana #Uhura #Neytiri #Gamora
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vulcanhello · 2 years
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welcome to my star trek book club. i’m currently working my way through star trek the original series books and occasionally posting about them. \\//_
currently reading: star trek tos: ice trap
star trek books i’ve read:
star trek tos
the motion picture
my enemy my ally
spock’s world
the weight of worlds ✰
the wounded sky
doctor’s orders
first frontier
strangers from the sky
prime directive ✰
troublesome minds ✰
crisis of consciousness
mudd in your eye ✰
agents of influence
ex machina ✰
the final frontier
the tears of the singers ✰
twilight’s end
crossroad ✰
deep domain
the patrian transgression
wagon train to the stars
belle terre
miasma
how much for just the planet
the face of the unknown
the shocks of adversity ✰
the savage trade
the devil’s bargain
the latter fire
gemini ✰
that which divides
memory prime ✰
dreams of the raven ✰
renegade
crisis on centaurus ✰
shadow lord
web of the romulans
corona
the abode of life
chain of attack ✰
the new voyages vol 1 ✰
windows on a lost world ✰
shell game ✰
the last roundup
the new voyages vol 2 ✰
ghost walker
the cry of the onlies
star trek academy: collision course
the autobiography of james t kirk ✰
sarek
the autobiography of mr spock ✰
harm’s way
star trek tos comics
year four
year five vol 1
year five vol 2
year five vol 3
year five vol 4
leonard mccoy: frontier doctor ✰
star trek dsc
desperate hours ✰
dead endless
the enterprise war
wonderlands ✰
star trek dsc comics
adventures in the 32nd century vol 1
adventures in the 32nd century vol 3
adventures in the 32nd century vol 4
aftermath
star trek aos
more beautiful than death
the unsettling stars
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ex-shark-virtue-005 · 2 years
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A Comprehensive deep-dive into the only Gundam 00 Manga adaptation that was translated into English and why it sucks. Part 1
In this post I will be going through each volume of the English Gundam 00 Manga adaptation and why it sucks. It was licensed by Bandai Entertainment and was one of the very last series Bandai Entertainment localized before filing for Bankruptcy in North America. It was originally published in 2008 by Kadokawa Shoten Publishing and was written by Kouzoh Ohmori. The rest will be under a cut and done as concise as I can. I'll cover the first season in this one and the second season in another.
Vol. 1 (First season) Three chapters The First chapter basically covers the first episode of the anime and is pretty faithful. Chapter 2 covers the Ceylon conflict and the first battle between Setsuna and Graham Aker. Chapter three covers the Taribia conflict and the first half of the Moralia PMC conflict ending with Setsuna battling Ali Al- Saachez covering episodes 4 and 6. Content cut : All of episode 5 "Escape Limit Zone." So Allelujah never goes to oversee Soma Peries' performance test, so she never fires at the orbital station's gravity block and Dynames' surface-to-space firing capabilities are never shown.
Vol.2 (First season) Four chapters. Chapter 1: Covers the second half of the Moralia PMC conflict and the subsequent Tieria and Setsuna pulling guns on each other on the beach (episode 7). Chapter 2: Covers the indiscriminate terrorist attacks by La Edenra and how the conflict is resolved (episode 8). Chapters three and four: Covers the kidnapping of Massoud Rachmadi and the civil unrest in Azadistan and the rescue and resolution of the conflict. Chapter 4 ends with the introduction of the Trinities (episodes 12-13, 17). Content cut: The entirety of the HRL and Sergei Simrnov's plot to capture Kyrios and Virtue. Tieria is never forced to reveal the Nadleeh. And Allelujah is never shown destroying the HRL's Super Human Institute. (Episodes 9-11 are cut entirely).
Vol. 3 (First Season) Four chapters (this one's a doozy) Chapter 1: Covers the Thrones' brutal assault on various military bases, the attack on the Halevy family in Spain, the battle between Tieria and Setsuna and the Thrones, and the introduction of the GN-X units (episodes 17-20). Chapter 2: Covers the emergence of the GN-X units and their assault on the Trinities, the Gundams getting cut off from Veda's support, the death of Johann and Michel Trinity, and Lockon's injury (Episode 21).
Chapter 3 and 4: The Gundams get access to the Trans-Am system during the battle they were cut from Veda's support. The beginning of Fallen Angels However: Lockon sorties and is paired with Tieria and they battle Ali Al-Saachezs who badly damages the Virtue and knocks Tieria unconscious. Lockon defeats Saachez by self-destructing the Dynames, Lockon is then killed when he gets vaporized by the Alvatore. Tieria regains consciousness in time to see that unfold then he promptly loses his mind and uses the Nadleeh to take out as many of the GN-X units as he can. Ptolemaios' bridge is destroyed by the Alvatore, Feldt and Sumeragi get caught up in it but only Christina and Lichty die. Setsuna's and Allelujah's battles stay exactly the same. Content cut: The joint military operation in the Taklamakan desert (episodes 15-16 are cut entirely), Kinue Crossroad's death, the Trinities never board the Ptolemaios, they talk via video chat. Setsuna never "rescues" Nena from Saachez.
So yeah tl;dr: This manga cuts Allelujah rescuing the gravity block after Soma Peries shoots it, the HRL's attempt to capture Virtue and Kyrios, the destruction of the HRL's Super Human Institute, the joint military operation in the Taklamakan desert and the four Meisters getting rescued by the Trinities. Changes the final battle for Lockon and Tieria and completely changes the former's death. I'll post the second season's analysis in a few days.
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mangabookshelf · 2 years
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Bookshelf Briefs 7/22/22
Box of Light, Vol. 1 | By Seiko Erisawa | Seven Seas – The blurb for Box of Light promises a “delightfully creepy supernatural tale” that takes place at a “convenience store at the crossroads between life and death.” That sounds like a great premise for an episodic series, but Box of Light is sorely lacking in likable characters, memorable plot lines, or even a good old-fashioned jump scare. The…
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ufonaut · 3 years
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i’ve been making my way through green arrow vol 2 and i’ve read #0 twice before actually but never after reading the entire series up to that point in the right order (#1-90, #0, #91) and with the full context of zero hour & its tie ins and, having reached it again, the framing of it struck me as more stunning than ever before. in hindsight, this might be a very obvious interpretation of it but it’d never occured to me until now that ollie does, frankly, try to kill himself in the middle of his would-be breakdown and before reaching the monastery
first of all it’s the repeated focus on his mental health that stands out starkly
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(”no, i think he’s going to crack” // “[...] it’s made him self-destructive. i think we’re looking at a man who’s slowly falling apart”)
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(”a man like that can’t kill without consequences to his mind” -- during the final pre-zero-hour arc, crossroads, ollie goes on several killing sprees in the name of justice and seems startled by how desensitized hes grown in the absence of friends, family & a home)
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(”he’s alone and he’s unraveling. it’s just a matter of time until he breaks”)
and then there’s the act itself
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(note the ‘welcome to california’ sign as a reminder of coast city -- it’s the role he’s played in hal’s death that has him breaking down to this degree to begin with)
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(”he’ll be mourned, but not by many” -- the close-up on his face as he reads the sign and understands what he’s seeing)
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(the fact that he crashes the car for no apparent reason)
i think the insistence on ollie as a man on the brink after hal’s death & zero hour very evidently ultimately paints the car crash as a suicide attempt. i’d say green arrow #0 is definitely one of the best issues in this run in terms of characterisation and connor’s eventual introduction but especially as a story that doesn’t shy away from the very real consequences of the loss of ollie’s best friends at his own hands
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awpcomics · 3 years
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Small press Shack stock update 1
I'm opening up an online store soon and here's a look at the current stock of titles available. if interested in any of the books let me know. shipping costs vary.
Small Press Shack  comic stock listing (by Company)
36k  studios
Tru vibes
# 1 $5
# 2 $5
2000 A.D.
Scarlet Traces
vol. 1 $25
vol. 2 $25
Aam/Markosia
N-Guard # 1 $5
Ablaze
Unsacred
# 7 $5
Unsacred TPB 1 $25
Unsacred vol. 2
# 1 $5
Abstract Studio
Motor Girl # 1 $10
Rachel Rising
# 13 $4
# 14 $4
#15  $4
#16  $4
#17  $4
#18  $4
# 19 $4
# 20 $4
# 21 $4
#22  $4
# 23 $4
#24  $4
# 25 $4
#26  $4
# 27 $4
#28 $4
# 29 $4
#30  $4
# 31 $4
#32  $4
# 33 $4
#34  $4
# 35  $4
#36 $4
# 37 $4
#38 $4
# 39 $4
#40  $4
# 41 $4
#42  $4
Academy Comics
Robotech 2  The sentinels
book 4
# 13 $5
Action Lab
Adventure Finders vol. 2 #1 $5
Princeless
TPB 1 (small ) $80
part 2
# 1 $5
# 2 $5
#3 $5
part 3
# 1 $5
# 2 $5
# 3 $5
#4  $5
TPB $15
part 4
# 1 $5
#2 $5
#3 $5
#4 $5
TPB $15
part 5
#0  $5
#1  $5
#2  $5
#3  $5
TPB $15
part 6
TPB $15
part 7
# 1 $5
# 2 $5
# 3 $5
# 4 $5
# 5 $5
TPB $15
part 8
#1 $5
#2 $5
#3 $5
#4 $5
TPB $15
part 9
TPB $15
Raven : The Pirate Princess
# 1 $5
#2 $5
#3 $5
#4 $5
#5 $5
#6 $5
#7 $5
#8 $5
#9 $5
#11 $5
Action Lab- Danger Zone
Vampblade vol. 3 # 11 $5
ALC Publishing
Works vol. 1 $10
Alpha-Wave Productions
Ben Dunn Shorts
vol. 1 $20
Vol. 2 $40
Derp Dragons
vol. 1 $20
vol. 2 $20
Jenna & Ninja High School  TPB $15
Mighty Tiny: Lost Tails TPB $15
Ninja High School: Ultimate Perfect Memory $15
Ninja High School : Salusian Chess TPB $15
Quagmire U.S.A. TPB $20
Silver Cross TPB $15
Small Bodied Ninja High School TPB $30
Swimmer
vol. 1 $15
vol. 2 $15
vol. 3 $15
Tales From Quagmire U.S.A. TPB $20
Tiger-X TPB $20
Zetraman TPB $25
A.M. Works
Athena
# 1 $4
# 3 $4
#5  $5
#8  $5
Antarctic Press
Gold Digger
Gold Digger # 1 (35th anniversary special )  $15
collected gold digger vol. 3 $5
collected gold digger vol.4 $5
collected gold digger vol.6 $5
collected gold digger vol.8 $5
vol. 3 (color series)
# 3 $10
#4 $10
#13 $4
#14 $4
#15 $4
#17 $4
#43 $4
#56 $4
#60 $4
#62 $5
Gold Diger Gold brick # 6 (#'s 76-100) $50
#98 $2
#100 $5
#101 $2(fcbd ed)
#103 $5
#200 $5
#202 $5
#211 $5
#213 $5
#214 $5
#215 $5
#216 $5
#222 $2
#236 $5
#245 $5
#256 $5
#261 $2
#262 $5
#268 $5
#269 $5
#271 $5
#272 $5
#273 $5
#274 $5
#275 $5
#276 $5
#277 $5
GD – 18
# 1 $5
Gold Digger Perfect Memory
# 2  $10
Gold Digger Annual
#5 $4
#10 $4
#15 $5
#16 $5
#20 $5
Peebo Tales
# 2 $4
# 3 $4
#4 $4
Tangent
# 2 $4
Halloween
# 2 $4
#9 $4
Holidays Special
#2
Universe
# 19 $4
X-Mas Special
# 2 $4
#3 $4
#6 $4
#7 $4
#11 $5
#12 $5
Ninja High School
# 3 1/2  $4
#35 $8
#36 $25
#37 $50 (first warrior nun)
#39 $5
#40 $5
#41 $4
#42 $4
#44 $4
#46 $4
#47 $4
#48 $4
#50 $10
#66 $4
#68 $4
#71 $4
#75 $4
#76 $4
#77 $4
#78 $4
#79 $4
#80 $4
#83 $4
#89 $4
#90 $10
#91 $4
#94 $4
#95 $4
#96 $4
#97 $4
#98 $4
#99 $4
#102 $4
#104 $4
#130 $4
#149 $4
#177 (clr) $5
#177 (B&W) $3
#178 $5
Furry NHS
# 1 $50
# 2 $25
Ninjas vs Aliens
# 2 $5
NHS in Color
# 3 $5
#6 $5
NHS Indie Wars vol. 1 $40
NHS V.2
# 1 $5
# 4 $2
#10 $2  
#12 $2
Benzine
# 3 $8
Jenna & NHS
# 2 $10
Hitomi & Her Girl Commandoes
#1 $5
part 2
#5 $5
#6 $5
NHS Annual
# 1 $10
#4 $5
#7 $5
#8  $5
#9 $9
#10 $5
#11 $5
#15 $5
Girls of NHS
# 1 $10
#2 $5
#3 $5
#7 $5
NHS/ GD Maidens of Twilight
TPB  $10  
NOT Ninja High School
# 1  $100
# 2  $100
# 3  $100
Perfect Memory
# 3 $10
# 4 $15
NHS Swimsuit
# 1 $20
#3 $10
#4 $5
#7 (2001) $80 (first art by Dan Mendoza- Zombie  Tramp)
Quagmire USA (Dave Matsuoka)
# 1 $5
# 2 $5
# 3 $5
SB NHS
#2 $5
# 3 $5
NHS Spotlight
# 1 $5
Zetraman
# 1 $5
# 2 $5
# 3 $5
part 2
# 1 $5
# 2 $5
Absolute Zero # 1 $20
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2 notes · View notes
atinytokki · 5 years
Text
Writing Masterlist
Tumblr media
Treasure Series 🏴‍☠️
Summary (and Profiles)
All to Zero (Ep 1)
Chapter 1: Rain and Fire
Chapter 2: New Quarters
Chapter 3: Smokey Island
Chapter 4: Cursed Gold
Chapter 5: The Kraken
Chapter 6: Loose Lips
Chapter 7: The Doldrums
Chapter 8: Extremes
Chapter 9: No Way Out
Chapter 10: Maddox
Chapter 11: Alone
Chapter 12: The Sunken Island
Zero to One (Ep 2)
Chapter 1: The Ghost Ship
Chapter 2: Mutiny
Chapter 3: The Fortress
Chapter 4: Glass Boxes
Chapter 5: Sold
Chapter 6: Blood in the Water
Chapter 7: Junyoung
Chapter 8: Second Mutiny
Chapter 9: The Escape
Chapter 10: Northern Waters
Chapter 11: Dreams Are Everywhere
Chapter 12: Treasure
One to All (Ep 3)
Chapter 1: Wonderland 
Chapter 2: Babylon 
Chapter 3: I Love My Desire 
Chapter 4: The Trap 
Chapter 5: Infiltration
Chapter 6: Eden’s Confession
Chapter 7: Daybreak
Chapter 8: A Requiem
Chapter 9: Ghosts and Shadows
Chapter 10: Crossroads Pt. 1
Chapter 11: Crossroads Pt. 2
Chapter 12: The Execution
All to Action (Ep 4)
Chapter 1: Beginning of the End 
Chapter 2: War
Chapter 3: Welcome Aboard
Chapter 4: Allies
Chapter 5: Return to the Maze
Chapter 6: Friendly Fire
Chapter 7: Lucky
Chapter 8: The Black Crow
Chapter 9: Long Journey
Chapter 10: Wave
Chapter 11: Call to Action
Chapter 12: Destiny 
Action to Answer (Ep 5)
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Backstory Spinoffs
My Way (Hongjoong)
i. The Morning on the Beach | ii. Enemies at Jangwon | iii. The Tidal Stranger | iv. Best Case Scenario | v. Social Graces | vi. Dreams of Stardust | vii. Setting Sail | viii. The Voyage
Across the Night (Seonghwa)
i. Mother’s Cooking | ii. Doljeon | iii. The Truth | iv. The Monarch Embarks | v. Learning the Ropes | vi. Hostage | loading...
Distant Daylight (Yunho)
i. Two Bodies and the End of the World | ii. Welcome to the Orphanage | iii. First Days, First Fights | iv. Apprenticeship | v. A Royal Parade | vi. The Treasure Trove | vii. On the Streets | viii. New Strategy
Walking in the Darkness (Yeosang)
i. Kang Estate | ii. Memoirs from Geobugi | iii. Navigating the World | iv. The Party | v. Kidnapped | vi. Last Hour | vii. An Arrangement Between Gentlemen | viii. The Turning Point
Paradise (San)
i. Growing Up | ii. Namhae | iii. Pirate Stories | iv. The Pearl in the Oyster | v. Haneul’s Relapse | vi. Bad Habit
The Windy Road (Mingi) 
i. The Ghost Home | ii. Diary Pages | iii. A Market Chase | iv. Hongjoong | v. Roots | vi. The Folded Bluebird | vii. A Triumph and a Tragedy | viii. Alone | ix. The Ghost Friend | x. Mission One
Blinded by Desire (Wooyoung)
i. A Rainbow in the Water | 
Dreamer (Jongho)
i. The Cliffs of Ulso | ii. Mermaid Song
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Horizon Series 🌌
Summary (And Profiles)
Horizon (Vol 1)
Chapter 1: Seoulites
Chapter 2: The Exam
Chapter 3: Orientation
Chapter 4: Launch Sequence
Chapter 5: Round One
Chapter 6: Error: Communication Failure
Chapter 7: Overdrive
Chapter 8: Rocket Fuel to the Fire
Chapter 9: Xeno 12
Chapter 10: Liftoff
Horizon: Sunrise (Vol 2)
Chapter 1: Welcome to the Citadel
Chapter 2: Mu Ryool: The Wild West
Chapter 3: Source Unknown
Chapter 4: loading...
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The Illusion Post ✨
Episode 1: All is Good in the Sorting Room
Episode 2: The War of the Toothbrushes
Episode 3: Holiday Craze
Episode 4: A Trip to the Getaway House
Episode 5: Memory Lane
Episode 6: The Wilting Cactus Plant
Episode 7: Shortcuts to Shadow Town
Episode 8: Keep Your Head
Episode 9: All Aboard to Escape the Headlines
Episode 10: Of Treasures and Tragedies
Episode 11: The Eleventh Hour
Episode 12: Strawberry Yogurt
Episode 13: loading...
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Mechanosis ⚙️
Summary
Chapter 1: 구름 (cloud)
Chapter 2: 불 (fire) 
Chapter 3: loading...
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Orbit 🪐
Summary
Chapter 1: SS Aurora
Chapter 2: loading...
506 notes · View notes
dudedrops319 · 4 years
Text
Dooley Noted - A musical journey through the mojo of a Toledo bluesman
(original version can be seen at https://toledocitypaper.com/feature/dooley-noted/)
Dooley Wilson is frustrated.
It’s 9:57 am on a cold Saturday in December and he is supposed to start playing at 10 o’clock. He has only just now stumbled out of the Toledo tundra into the cozy confines of the Glass City Cafe, which has booked him for its popular Bluegrass Breakfast music series.
“I’m so sorry I’m late,” he cries out in the direction of restaurant owner Steve Crouse, who assures him everything is fine. Wilson looks pained as a brief flash of flame passes over his smoldering dark brown eyes. No, it’s not fine. He was scheduled to start playing the blues at 10 sharp, and now he’s going to start late. And a professional should always be punctual.
Undaunted, he swallows his disappointment and, within 10 minutes, he has everything set up at the front of the restaurant which serves as the stage. Upending his battered Cunard Queen of Elizabeth canvas bag, he sorts through the contents— Halls menthol cough drops, a bottle of slippery elm supplements (“Just in case my voice goes out”), a bottle of Deja Blue water, a glass vase that serves as a tip jar and a power strip.
He plugs the power strip into his amp, a well-loved 1965 Fender Bandmaster. And then out comes the artisan’s tool— his Jay Turser electric guitar. It doesn’t have a name or anything; it’s a utensil to serve the stew of blues (“It’s a cheapo guitar, but it’s MY cheapo guitar,” he muses). He’s almost ready. He asks, and a cup of hot black coffee is delivered. After the obligatory microphone check, he sits on the edge of a worn tan suitcase and readies his guitar. It’s time to go to work.
Soon the Glass City Cafe fills with the sound of the blues— and Wilson is lost in ecstasy. He’s sitting atop the worn tan suitcase, choking the guitar neck, his angular carved-in-stone features a mask of concentration, fingers and knuckles gnarled from a lifetime of plucking strings. There’s no setlist, no backdrop, no real plan. Just a working man with an instrument sharing the gospel of what he believes is the greatest music that exists. Wilson plays the blues as if his life depends on it.
And maybe it does.
From C.J. to Dooley
Dooley Wilson does not take toast with his mozzarella cheese omelet, favoring potatoes instead. Sitting in the Glass City Cafe months later— this time as a patron— he is a bit more relaxed than he was when he played here. He still doesn’t smile much. Wilson isn’t grumpy, he just carries himself with an intensity that’s disarming. You get the feeling that he doesn’t want to be here. That’s because he lives to do one thing: Play the blues. And when he’s not playing the blues, by gum, he wants to be playing the blues.
But for now, he’ll tell his story. Now 45 years old, he was born C.J. Forgy, in West Lafayette, Indiana to James and Sandy Forgy. His parents split when he was two years old and he went to live with his maternal grandmother in Maumee. An only child, Wilson describes himself as an “artsy kid” who spent hours in his room drawing and writing.
“Everyone thought I was going to be a visual artist,” says Wilson, taking a sip of his coffee. “But along with writing, over the years I’ve let those skills atrophy,” he says, with a regretful sigh. “But I don’t know; I’m thinking about taking up drawing again for its therapeutic value.”
So what sparked his obsessive devotion to the blues? It started as musical hangups often did in the ‘80s— with a cassette. At 15, Wilson, who was teaching himself guitar and whose musical tastes at the time ran towards Led Zeppelin, walked into Camelot Music in the now-long-gone Southwyck Mall and spied a tape from Columbia Records called Legends of the Blues Vol. 1. There was something about that tape that spoke to him.
He picked it up and looked at the back. As-yet unfamiliar names like Bo Carter, Blind Willie Johnson, Charley Patton, and Leroy Carr stared out at him from the tracklisting. Robert Johnson— he knew that name from an interview he’d read with Jimmy Page and he was fascinated by the infamous story about Johnson reputedly getting his blues talent while making a deal with the devil at a crossroads. Maybe it was the ghost of Johnson himself speaking to Wilson that day in Camelot Music. All he knew is that he had to buy it.
When he got home, he popped the tape into his boom box, and something in the universe shifted. At that moment, C.J. Forgy ceased to exist and the bluesman named Dooley Wilson was born.
“That anthology started this mystique and passion I had for this music,” says Wilson, in between forkfuls of omelet. “It just spoke to my angst-ridden soul at the time and I had never heard anything so authentic, so human, so real. Take Son House’s song ‘Death Letter,’ which is on that anthology. It’s taken from his 1965 Columbia session and it’s just this amazing song about how a man gets a letter saying that the woman he loves is dead. It’s just…” Wilson often trails off when he talks about the blues; yet another reason why he’d much rather play you a song than talk about it.
From that fateful moment, the blues wasn’t just a preferred style of music to listen to or to learn to play… it became, at that time, a life choice.
“I decided I’m going to devote my life to being some kind of bluesman like Fred MacDowell or Son House,” says Wilson. “It became much more important to me than making a living. If you weren’t dead and black, I couldn’t be bothered to listen to you.”
Henry & June
By the way, where did that name Dooley Wilson come from? Wilson smiles broadly with a touch of sheepishness. He was setting up one of his earliest gigs, at the famous East-side haunt Frankie’s, and his buddy Lance Hulsey (currently the leader of Toledo rockabilly outfit Kentucky Chrome)— who Wilson played with his first band, a heavy metal project called Harlequin— said that the promoter needed to know what to call him… and C.J. Forgy didn’t exactly sound bluesy. So the young musician, right there, decided on the name Dooley Wilson in homage to the actor and musician of the same name, famous for playing the character Sam in Casablanca. Dooley Wilson is now his legal name. He cashes checks with that moniker.
With a new name under his bluesman’s belt, the then-recent Maumee High School (Class of 1992) graduate needed a band that would let him explore the blues the way he wanted to. The result was Henry & June, a heavy blues ensemble that Wilson formed with his good friend Jimmy Danger. They got the band name from a recently released biopic of Henry Miller, one of Wilson’s favorite authors.
“I was obsessed with the blues at that time, but I’m still incapable of playing it correctly,” says Wilson, draining his coffee cup. “I was really struggling to learn how to play blues the way it was meant to be played.”
But even as he worked to unravel the mysteries of Deep South blues, Wilson was experiencing something unexpected: Success. Henry & June had released a single called “Going Back to Memphis” on Detroit label Human Fly Records, and the song was attracting a lot of heat. The popular band The Laughing Hyenas— which featured former Necros member Todd Swalla, who would go on to play with Wilson in his later outfit Boogaloosa Prayer— were big fans of the song and were trying to get Henry and June signed to Touch and Go Records. Some cat named Jack White, who had a little band called The White Stripes, also was a big Henry and June fan and began covering “Going Back to Memphis” in concert.
“We were kind of a hot, cult thing on the scene in Detroit,” says Wilson, thanking the Glass City Cafe waitress as she refills his coffee. “Jack White wasn’t the only cool person in Detroit who knew who we were though, of course, he became the most famous one. Judah Bower of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion put out a cover of the single on his side project called 20 Miles. I heard The Von Bondies used to cover ‘Going Back to Memphis.’ It’s a really fun, simple, dumb song.”
And then right when things started to go well for Henry & June, it all went wrong. The blues were supposed to feel like freedom and suddenly Wilson and the rest of the band began to feel decidedly trapped.
“Jimmy in particular felt like things were getting stagnant,” says Wilson. “Things were going good for us but it started to feel like we were just going through the motions. It was creative claustrophobia.” And so the band, at its peak, unceremoniously broke up.
“We were just dumb kids. We had no idea what we were doing with our little garage band. Looking back, that may have been the worst decision of my career. But when you’re young and dumb, you don’t realize that; you just think ‘Well, I’ll just do the next thing that comes along.’”
Today, Henry & June is fondly recalled as an early part of the Detroit music resurgence of the latter 20th Century. While The White Stripes, Kid Rock, The Detroit Cobras, and various Detroit rappers, from Eminem to Insane Clown Posse, put the Motor City musically back on the map, Henry and June remains a small part of that legacy. Copies of “Going Back to Memphis” routinely go for more than $100 on eBay, and the song was recorded live by The White Stripes for their DVD concert film, Under Blackpool Lights.
And no, Wilson hasn’t received any royalties. It all worked out for the members of Henry & June, though. Drummer Ben Swank is now the top A&R guy at Third Man Records, Jack White’s label. The band did a well received reunion back in 2010 in Toledo and everyone is still cool with one another. But in rock-n-roll and the blues, time waits for no one, so Wilson was off to new projects and new adventures.
And those adventures would lead to him nearly lose his mind.
On a wing and a Boogloosa Prayer
Brushing off the ashes of Henry & June, Wilson decided to further buckle down and get more “authentically bluesy.” He quickly formed a new band with Ben Swank and guitarist Todd Albright, that went through various names such as Dime Store Glam and Gin Mill Moaners. They sat in for many nights at the long-gone-but-never forgotten Rusty’s Jazz Cafe.
“I was spending all of my disposable income on that watered down whiskey at Rusty’s,” said Wilson. “Rusty’s was an amazing little place.” After a while though, he got restless and decided he would get as real as the blues could get and move to New Orleans.
“I wanted to see if I could live as a street performer,” said Wilson. “I had this rather naïve idea that I could possibly make a living at it in that town. I suspected it was the place on Earth where you might encounter people doing this kind of music.”
So Wilson moved to New Orleans, virtually homeless, busking on the streets of NOLA. Meanwhile, The White Stripes were starting to get their first big taste of international notoriety and began introducing “Going Back to Memphis” to a whole new audience due to their frequent covering of the song in live gigs.
“There I am trying to get lunch money down in New Orleans, and suddenly The White Stripes and the whole Detroit thing started to blow up and I’m trying to be Mr Authenticity down in effing New Orleans,” says Wilson, shaking his head incredulously. “My career is awful. I always zig when I should have zagged.”
But New Orleans proved to be an artistically fruitful time for Wilson. He met true, dyed-in-the-wool blues players who were playing incredible music from their souls. Nobody had record deals or anything that could get in the way of making direct, honest music. Many of these men and women were homeless or living off the grid; something Wilson describes as “an anti-American dream.” He talks enthusiastically and excitedly about that time in his life.
“These were some of the greatest living blues artists. There was a guy named Augie Junior who was simply incredible. I had never heard anything like him. There was this woman named Lisa Driscoll who played the washboard. People called her Ragtime Annie. And…”
Suddenly Wilson stops in mid-sentence and a hollow expression crosses his face. He stands up, sets his coffee cup down, excuses himself with a hurried “I’m gonna step out for a minute” and before uttering another word, he’s left the Glass City Cafe. A few minutes pass and he returns, wiping his forehead.
“I’m sorry,” he apologizes, sitting back down. “It’s just…it’s hard talking about this. I just got a little overwhelmed talking about some of my departed friends.”
He steadies himself with a sip of coffee that’s starting to go cold, as he’s eager to move on to talk about his other great band, Boogaloosa Prayer. Formed after moving back to Maumee fresh off a year in New Orleans, Boogaloosa Prayer, which Wilson says “was one of the best things I ever did artistically” came after stints in short lived bands like The Young Lords, and The Staving Chain.
Boogaloosa Prayer, an aggressive blues rock outfit featuring in part his old friend Jimmy Danger and Maumee drumming legend Todd Swalla, garnered quite a devoted following, playing in both Toledo and Detroit. The band had momentum behind them that recalled the Henry & June days. Then one hot summer night in 2006 at the now-shuttered Mickey Finn’s Pub, Wilson’s demons got the better of him.
Sporting a shaved head and a sickly frame that was skinny even by his normally lithe, sinewy standards, Wilson cracked onstage during the show. He ranted incoherently, couldn’t perform any songs, and couldn’t remember any lyrics. To everyone who was there, it was a harrowing experience.
Today, Wilson is reluctant to talk about the incident but he acknowledges it happened.
“I can say that I had a horrible psychotic breakdown and it had an impact on my life,” says Wilson, a bit guardedly. “At the time I had several severe emotional stressors in my life. A toxic woman in my life was stalking me. I had a business deal that was crushing me under the pressure. Plus, Boogaloosa Prayer was breaking up at the time because Swalla was moving to California. It all led to that time in my life.”
Following his breakdown, Wilson spent some time in a psychiatric ward, and lived in his aunt’s attic as he attempted to rebuild his fragile psyche. He eschewed traditional psychotherapy and refused meds because he’d seen too many of his friends “get hooked on those damned things.” Through a lot of hard work, meditation, and support from his friends, Wilson says he “totally got well again” and he hasn’t had any mental health issues since— thank goodness.
“Losing your sanity really puts a damper on your life.”
Still walkin’ down that road…
Wilson now lives in what he calls “a shack,” though it’s actually a carriage house out on a property in Maumee. The place smells of incense, a bit cramped but cozy abode, filled with guitars, amps, books on Buddhism, and novels by Charles Bukowski. Exactly how you would expect Wilson to live. This is not the living quarters .of a typical 45 year old, but it is definitely the home of a bluesman— and that’s all Wilson ever wanted to be. He plays gigs around the region and works as a “factotum” (his term) helping out family members and friends with projects. He’s completed an album and is currently trying to figure out how to release it. Love? Not interested.
“I have the kind of personality where I just do better alone,” he says simply. He may be alone but he’s not lonely. He has the best friends in the world in his life, even if most of them are dead. Son House. Sonny Boy Williamson. Bo Carter. All those great blues artists of yesteryear he counts as his personal friends, and by playing their music and his own songs inspired by their influence, Wilson is a happy man.
On that cold December day at the Glass City Cafe, Wilson utters a line that captures his essence: “Oh, I’m Dooley Wilson. Don’t mind me.” But, about that, he’s wrong. Mind him. Pay attention to Dooley Wilson. Pay close attention.
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thehifiproject · 5 years
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1989: a vintage year for classic albums
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What was in the water 30 years ago? Today, in 2019, a surprising number of artists and bands are celebrating the 30th anniversary of some of their greatest albums. Sure, 1988 and 1990 have their fair share of significant releases, but 1989 was a stonker of a year. 
Read on to discover our favourite ‘Big Albums’ from 1989.
The decedent 80s drew to a close with landmark releases across all genres. The ‘second summer of love’ had pushed dance music and rave culture into the mainstream, whilst indie guitar upstarts suddenly found themselves playlisted on daytime Radio One. As these contrasting acts rubbed shoulders on TOTP and across NOW compilations, influences began to cross-pollinate, lighting the touch paper for Madchester and beyond.
In the studio, samplers and digital recording kit had become more affordable. Artists could realise ideas without the mortgage-scale budgets of the Fairlight pioneers earlier in the decade (Bush, Gabriel, Horn, Clarke et al).
At home, the CD format was firmly established but still in its infancy compared to its dominance in the late-90s. Cassette tapes sold more than vinyl in 1989, mainly driven by the US market. 1989 was also the year Comet Group bought up all 31 branches of the Laskys hi-fi chain – remember Laskys? You could still buy hi-fi separates in stores like Boots, but the masses mainly wanted neater ‘stack’ or ‘midi’ systems from brands like Aiwa, Kenwood, Technics and Sony.
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So, what were we playing on these systems?
If we squint our rose-tinted vision just beyond hits by Jive Bunny, Kylie & Jason and, ugh, Band Aid II, 1989 offers a plethora of genre-defining debut LPs alongside creative peaks from established artists.
Before I ruffle anyone’s feathers, I admit this is a totally subjective piece. I have not been studying sales figures or cross-referencing reviews in Q Magazine, but many ‘89 albums pop up in the ‘Top 10’ lists of Pitchfork, NME or Rolling Stone etc, and they’re frequently referenced as key influences by artists and producers today.
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Here’s a selection of my favourites. It’s by no means exhaustive.
Which albums were you cueing up on your Technics linear-tracking deck in 1989, and what type of TDK tape were you recording them onto?
Let us know in the comments.
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1. The Cure – Disintegration
Last week the band completed a five-night run of gigs at Sydney Opera House, celebrating 30 years since the release of their landmark Disintegration album. No doubt many of its tracks will also feature when they headline Glastonbury this summer.
I was a big Cure fan as a teenager. I nipped out of school at lunchtime to buy Disintegration on the day it was released. It was a hot, sunny day and I drew the curtains to listen in the dark.
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2. The Stone Roses – The Stone Roses
Before Spike Island or even Fool’s Gold, 1989 introduced us to this genre-defining eponymous Mancunian debut. Nothing quite chimes and grooves like the Roses’ early output and its unrivalled sing-along nostalgia.
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3. De La Soul – Three Feet High & Rising
Rhymes, skits and daisies. This funky and humorous collage of samples from the NY trio has been referred to as “genius”, “a hip-hop masterpiece”. It was reissued by Vinyl Me, Please as a double LP in their Essential series earlier this year.
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4. Kate Bush – The Sensual World
How do you follow a career-defining work like Hounds of Love? It seems you turn inwards, re-write the closing passages of Ulysses and employ a Bulgarian male choir. You also deliver one of the most heart-breaking performances committed to tape in This Woman’s Work.
The Sensual World may not reach the heights of its predecessor (it was one of the albums Kate reworked significantly for the Director’s Cut project), but it remains a convincing release from such an enigmatic creative talent. It earned her Brit Award nominations for both Best Album and Best Producer.
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5. New Order – Technique
Ibiza, Factory, The Hacienda, ecstasy, even sheep sound effects. The stories behind this album have sold thousands of books for each member of the band. It was their first LP to reach No 1 in the UK and still sounds magnificent today.
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6. Tears For Fears – The Seeds Of Love
The band’s third studio album took almost two years and £1million to make. Considering the hugely successful Songs From The Big Chair cost nearer £70,000, this could have led to the end of their record contract and career! Luckily, they had the chutzpah to see it through. Seeds reached No 1 in the UK and achieved platinum status in numerous territories across the globe.
Sadly, the album took its toll on Orzabal and Smith’s relationship. It was the last one they could work on together for over a decade.
Immaculately produced, the album features many established session players (including Phil Collins on drums, who himself released But Seriously… in 1989), but is most noted for introducing the world to the voice of Oleta Adams.
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7. Neneh Cherry – Raw Like Sushi
If you came to Raw Like Sushiexpecting nine more tracks like the huge hit Buffalo Stance, you would have been disappointed. The album stood out for its range of styles and depth of influence. When you reflect on Cherry’s debut as an album envision by a ‘musician/artist’, rather than fronted by the ‘rapper/singer’ Buffalo Stancesuggests, it’s no surprise that she is still recording and performing today.
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8. Pixies – Doolittle
Back in the late 80s, nothing else sounded quite like The Pixies. With their second full-length, the band perfected their loud-quiet-loud pop blast, offering up a key blueprint for Nirvana’s looming commercial breakthrough Nevermind.
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9. Tom Petty – Full Moon Forever
Louder Sound describes Petty’s ’89 release as“a remarkably consistent collection of wonderfully constructed rootsy rock songs. Petty teams up with ELO guru and fellow Travelling Wilbury Jeff Lynne, who does an immaculate production job as well as co-writing the album’s standout tracks, Free Fallin’ and I Won’t Back Down.”
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10. Soul II Soul – Club Classics Vol 1
In the summer of 1989, the single Back To Life and its accompanying MTV-friendly video took Soul II Soul’s London slant on R&B/Soul around the world. The album goes deeper (Back To Life features only as an acapella) but brings underground club vibes to the mainstream, going triple-platinum in the UK and Top 20 in the US (No 1 in the R&B chart).
“A happy face, a thumping bass for a loving race.”
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11. Paul’s Boutique
Sorry! I couldn’t keep this list to just ten albums! The Beasties’ now-beloved second album was considered a flop at the time, but, in the ensuing years, has been embraced as a landmark of sample-based hip-hop.
The Best Of The Rest
It doesn’t stop there. The list of landmark 1989 albums rolls and rolls.
What have we missed in the list below?
10,000 Maniacs, Blind Man’s Zoo
Elvis Costello, Spike
NWA, Straight Outta Compton
Tracy Chapman, Crossroads
Eurythmics, We Too Are One
Simply Red, A New Flame
Ian McCulloch, Candleland
Lenny Kravitz, Let Love Rule
The Beautiful South, Welcome to the Beautiful South
The Jesus and Mary Chain, Automatic
Nirvana, Bleach
The B-52s, Cosmic Thing
Queen, The Miracle
Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Mother’s Milk
Lou Reed, New York
The Cult, Sonic Temple
The The, Mind Bomb
The Wedding Present, Bizarro
Pop Will Eat Itself, This Is the Day…This Is the Hour…This Is This!
Throwing Muses, Hunkpapa
The Wonder Stuff, Hup
Julee Cruise, Floating into the Night
Simple Minds, Street Fighting Years
The Primitives, Pure
Jesus Jones, Liquidizer
Tin Machine, Tin Machine
Kirsty MacColl, Kite
808 State, 90
Kitchens of Distinction, Love is Hell
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theboywhocriedbooks · 6 years
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The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina by Aquirre-Sacasa, Hack (Vol: 1)
[Goodreads]
On the eve of her sixteenth birthday, the young sorceress Sabrina Spellman finds herself at a crossroads, having to choose between an unearthly destiny and her mortal boyfriend, Harvey. But a foe from her family's past has arrived in Greendale, Madame Satan, and she has her own deadly agenda. Archie Comics' latest horror sensation starts here! For TEEN+ readers. Compiles the first six issues of the ongoing comic book series Chilling Adventures of Sabrina.
Thoughts: 
Wow oh wow. I loved this! How many of you were big Sabrina the Teenage Witch fans growing up? I sure was. I watched the show all the time, though I never could catch it in order. Still! I loved her. So when I heard about this I was definitely interested but also hesitant. Its a darker version of the Sabrina we know and love. In the end, I really loved it. I think it did so well, it was dark in the best ways and it was drawn really beautifully. The art! It just entirely fit the mood of the story. I loved seeing familiar characters and I loved seeing how different they were in this rendition. Whats really exciting is that this was made into a Netflix series that is coming out really soon! So definitely give it a read and check out the series, especially because I’m going to go on about in in spoiler-y detail below!
 I’ve always loved witches and Sabrina was one reason. It was just a really cute and funny show. It was lighthearted but magical. Plus, I loved Salems little dramatic feline self. I’ve been wanting to go back and watch the series because I think it’s on amazon prime but it would require so much time... Regardless, I love it and it’s definitely a part of my childhood. That’s why when I heard about this comic I was really interested and even more so when I realized it was going to be a darker spin on it. 
Not to be blunt but Harvey! Oh my god! I was not expecting that ending for him, I mean he was just... #dead. I loved it, though. It really set the tone for the rest of the story and how it is not the same as the original show. I think I was okay with them killing him off though because it also set the bar for some more horrible things to happen.
I obviously can’t help comparing it to the 90′s show, it’s just my sole personal reference. There are, however, the original Archie comics that introduced Sabrina to the world. After the show, animated series and movies, the Archie Horror division of Archie comics published the Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. I think the title is fitting because it is definitely chilling. 
I enjoyed the darker take on familar characters, I think I was surprsied at how much actually. I love the sitcom aunts so this version of them was very different but I think worked well. I always want darker witch stories, where the magic and the history of it all is rooted in something a little... wicked. Thats what these witches are like. I think they still hold a similar air about them though, witty and sweet but in a almost twisted way. 
I don’t remember if we see Sabrina’s parents in the original show but that was a cool insight in this one. Aside from that, which was a little tragic on the moms part, I was really interested in the woman who was referred to as Madam Satan.  The art of her, especially of her rising in the night, was enticing and (again) chilling and just awesome. I’m always down for wild demon witch lady who is out for revenge.  
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I think I want to know more, I think I want to see more and maybe could have done with a little more action. Like, in general. I wanted to see more stuff happen, though I guess that comes with another volume etc. There’s just so much that could be done with this and so I wanna see it all. Thats why the fact that Netflix picked it up, created a show from it and is releasing it this month will be exciting. I’m hoping to see a little more of a fleshed out story but the almost-funny chilling aspects definitely. 
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1980-2011 (Before the New 52 took place)
Comics that Deathstroke had physically appeared in, but not listed in narrative order due to the stories overlapping each other or not connecting at all. No annuals except one is included. Also no series similar to Teen Titans go!, the newest Teen Titans go!, and Tiny Titans.
Also if you might notice a comic missing in the list, please tell me!
1980: New Teen Titans Vol. 1 #2 (December 1980): "Today... the Terminator"
1981: New Teen Titans Vol. 1 #9 (July 1981): "Like Puppets on a String" New Teen Titans Vol. 1 #10 (August 1981): "Promethium: Unbound"
1982: Uncanny X-men and the New teen Titans #1 (January 1982): ""
1983: New Teen Titans Vol. 1 #34 (August 1983): "Endings... and Beginnings!"
1984: New Teen Titans Vol. 1 #39 (February 1984): "Crossroads" Tales of the Teen Titans #42 (May 1984): "The Judas Contract, Book One: The Eyes of Tara Markov" Tales of the Teen Titans #43 (June 1984): "The Judas Contract, Book Two: Betrayal!" Tales of the Teen Titans #44 (July 1984): "The Judas Contract, Book Three: There Shall Come a Titan" Tales of the Teen Titans Annual #3 (1984): "The Judas Contract, Part 4: The Finale"
1985: Tales of the Teen Titans #53 (May 1985): "Devil on the Wing!" Tales of the Teen Titans #54 (June 1985): "Blind Justice!" Tales of the Teen Titans #55 (July 1985): "Shades of Gray" Crisis on Infinite Earths #5 (August 1985): "Worlds in Limbo" Crisis on Infinite Earths #9 (December 1985): "War Zone"
1986: 1987: 1988: 1989:
1990: New Titans #62 (January 1990): "Titan Plague" New Titans #63 (February 1990): "Into the Darkness" New Titans #64 (March 1990): "Scourge!" New Titans #65 (April 1990): "Dejavu" New Titans #70 (October 1990): "Clay Pigeons" New Titans #71 (November 1990): "Beginnings... Endings... and (We Promise) New Beginnings!"
1991: New Titans #72 (January 1991): "Death of a Hero!" New Titans #73 (February 1991): "Paradise Lost" New Titans #74 (March 1991): "When Pantha Strikes" New Titans #75 (April 1991): "Countdown to Doomsday!" New Titans #76 (June 1991): "Tower of the Damned!" New Titans #77 (July 1991): "Red Star Rising" New Titans #78 (August 1991): "Mind Over Machine" New Titans #79 (September 1991): "Prelude..." New Titans #81 (December 1991): [No Title] Deathstroke, the Terminator #1 (August 1991): "Full Cycle, Chapter One: Assault!" Deathstroke, the Terminator #2 (September 1991): "Full Cycle, Chapter Two: Kidnapped" Deathstroke, the Terminator #3 (October 1991): [No Title] Deathstroke, the Terminator #4 (November 1991): "Full Cycle, Chapter Four: ...Bombs Bursting in Air!" Deathstroke, the Terminator #5 (December 1991): "Revelations and Revolutions" War of the Gods #4 (December 1991): "In the beginning...there was the end"
1992: Wonderwoman Vol. 2 #61 (January 1992): "To avenge an Amazon" Wonderwoman Vol. 2 #63 (June 1992): "operation: cheetah part 2" New Titans #82 (January 1992): "The Jericho Gambit, Part 1: The Saviors!" New Titans #83 (February 1992): "The Jericho Gambit, Part 2: A Thousand Souls!" New Titans #84 (March 1992): "The Jericho Gambit, Part 3: Endings... and Beginnings!" New Titans #85 (April 1992): "Dirge" Superman Vol. 2 #65 (March 1992): [10] "Panic In the Sky! Second Strike: Head Man" Adventures of Superman #488 (March 1992): [11] "Panic In the Sky! Third Strike: Counter Strike!" Action Comics #675 (March 1992): [12] "Panic In the Sky! Fourth Strike: Divide and Conquer" Superman: The Man of Steel #10 (April 1992): [13] "Panic In the Sky! Fifth Strike: Tidal Wave!" Superman Vol. 2 #66 (April 1992): [14] "Panic In the Sky! Final Strike: Our Army At War" Adventures of Superman #489 (April 1992): [15] "Panic In the Sky! Epilogue: Hail the Conquering Heroes" New Titans #86 (May 1992): "If This Be Chaos!" Superman Vol. 2 #68 (June 1992): [22] "Sins of the Father" New Titans #90 (September 1992): "That Which Lurks Within A Star!" Team Titans #1/2 (September 1992): "Childhood's End" Eclipso: the darkness within #2 (October 1992): "" Deathstroke, the Terminator #6 (January 1992): "City of Assassins, Episode One: The Offer" Deathstroke, the Terminator #7 (February 1992): "City of Assassins, Episode Two: The Rival" Deathstroke, the Terminator #8 (March 1992): "City of Assassins, Episode Three: The Allies" Deathstroke, the Terminator #9 (April 1992): "City of Assassins, Episode Four: The Resurrection" Deathstroke, the Terminator #10 (May 1992): "The Loneliest Number, Part One: " Deathstroke, the Terminator #11 (June 1992): "The Loneliest Number, Part Two: Crimes and Commitments!" Deathstroke, the Terminator #12 (July 1992): "Sympathy for the Devil" Deathstroke, the Terminator #13 (August 1992): "Terminator Hunt: The Powers That Be!" Deathstroke, the Terminator #14 (September 1992): "Child's Play" Deathstroke, the Terminator #15 (October 1992): "Escape From New York!" Deathstroke, the Terminator #16 (November 1992): "Terminated: The Death of Slade Wilson (Part Seven of Total Chaos)" Deathstroke, the Terminator #17 (December 1992): "The Nuclear Winter Chapter One: DNA"
1993: Deathstroke, the Terminator #18 (January 1993): "The Nuclear Winter Part Two: A Question of Brotherhood" Deathstroke, the Terminator #19 (February 1993): "The Nuclear Winter Part Three: Invasion" Deathstroke, the Terminator #20 (March 1993): "The Nuclear Winter Part Four: Heatwave" Deathstroke, the Terminator #21 (April 1993): "Love and Death" Deathstroke, the Terminator #22 (early May 1993): "The Quality of Mercy, Part One: Fire and Blood" Deathstroke, the Terminator #23 (late May 1993): "The Quality of Mercy, Part Two: The Cold Game" Deathstroke, the Terminator #24 (early June 1993): "Into the Black Dome" Deathstroke, the Terminator #25 (late June 1993): "Escape From the Black Dome" Deathstroke, the Terminator #26 (July 1993): "Gauntlet" Deathstroke, the Terminator #27 (August 1993): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter One: England" Deathstroke, the Terminator #28 (September 1993): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter Two: Versailles" Deathstroke, the Terminator #29 (October 1993): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter Three: Hong Kong" Deathstroke, the Terminator #30 (November 1993): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter Four: China" Deathstroke, the Terminator #31 (December 1993): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter Five: India" Showcase '93 #6/3 (June 1993): "Village Green Preservation Society" Showcase '93 #7/2 (July 1993): "The Kobra Kronicles, Part 2: Acute Schizophrenia Paranoia Blues" Showcase '93 #8/2 (August 1993): "The Kobra Kronicles, Part 3: Brainwashed" Showcase '93 #9/2 (September 1993): "The Kobra Kronicles, Part 4: Get Back in Line" Showcase '93 #10/2 (October 1993): "The Kobra Kronicles, Part 5: Big Black Smoke" Showcase '93 #11/2 (November 1993): "The Kobra Kronicles, Part 6: I'm On An Island" Bloodbath #1 (December 1993): "" Bloodbath #2 (December 1993): ""
1994: Deathstroke, the Terminator #32 (January 1994): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter Six: Paris" Deathstroke, the Terminator #33 (February 1994): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter Seven: Dallas" Deathstroke, the Terminator #34 (March 1994): "Deathstroke's World Tour, Chapter Eight: Egypt" Deathstroke, the Terminator #35 (April 1994): "To Thine Own Self..." Deathstroke, the Terminator #36 (May 1994): "War Crimes" Deathstroke, the Terminator #37 (June 1994): "Sins of the Father" Deathstroke, the Terminator #38 (July 1994): "Land of Milk and Blood" Deathstroke, the Terminator #39 (August 1994): "The Death Doctor" Deathstroke, the Terminator #40 (September 1994): "Wedding in Red" Deathstroke, the Hunted #0 (October 1994): "The Hunted, Prologue" Deathstroke, the Hunted #41 (November 1994): "Deathstroke, the Hunted: Killers" Deathstroke, the Hunted #42 (December 1994): "Deathstroke, the Hunted, Part 3: Warriors!" Green Arrow #84 (March 1994): "Strange attractions" Green Arrow #85 (April 1994): "Chaos Theory"
1995: Deathstroke, the Hunted #43 (January 1995): "Bird of Prey" Deathstroke, the Hunted #44 (February 1995): "Deathstroke, the Hunted, Part V: Roses are Blodd Red" Deathstroke, the Hunted #45 (March 1995): "Deathstroke, the Hunted, Part VI: The Road to Salvation..." Darkstars #32 (March 1995): "The Night They Burned Ol' Dixie Down" Deathstroke, the Hunted #46 (April 1995): "Connections" Deathstroke, the Hunted #47 (May 1995): "Conversion" Deathstroke #48 (June 1995): "Third Strike" New Titans #122 (June 1995): "" Deathstroke #49 (July 1995): "All the King's Men" Deathstroke #50 (August 1995): "Revelations" Deathstroke #51 (September 1995): "" Deathstroke #52 (October 1995): "" Deathstroke #53 (November 1995): "" Deathstroke #54 (December 1995): ""
1996: Deathstroke #55 (January 1996): "" Deathstroke #56 (February 1996): "" Deathstroke #57 (March 1996): "" Deathstroke #58 (April 1996): "" Deathstroke #59 (May 1996): "" Deathstroke #60 (June 1996): ""
1997: Detective Comics #708 (April 1997): "The Death Lottery, Part One: Heart of Glass" Detective Comics #709 (May 1997): "The Death Lottery, Part II: Heart of Stone" Detective Comics #710 (June 1997): "The Death Lottery, Part Three: Heart of Ice"
1998: Nightwing Vol. 2 #17 (February 1998): "The Stalking Skies" Nightwing Vol. 2 #18 (March 1998): "The Hunting Moon" Teen Titans Vol. 2 #22 (July 1998): "Titans Hunt, Part 2: Shades of Glory" Robin Vol. 4 #55 (July 1998): "Brotherhood of the Fist, Part Three: Monkey Fist" Nightwing Vol. 2 #23 (August 1998): "Brotherhood of the Fist, Part Four: Paper Revelations" Green Arrow Vol. 2 #135 (August 1998): "Brotherhood of the Fist, Part 5" Azrael #45 (September 1998): "Angel and the Beast: Deathstroke!" Azrael #46 (October 1998): "Guardian Angel"
1999: JLA vs Titans #2 (January 1999): "The Generation Gap" Titans #9 (November 1999): "Limbo" Titans #10 (December 1999): "The Immortal Coil, Part One"
2000: Titans #11 (January 2000): "The Immortal Coil, Part Two" Titans #12 (February 2000): "The Immortal Coil, Part Three" Action Comics #767 (July 2000): "Critical Condition, part 4: Death's door" Adventures of superman #580 (July 2000): "Critical condition, Part 2 of 4: green universe" Superman: man of steel #102 (July 2000): "The enemy within! Critical condition, part 3 of 4" JLA 80-Page Giant #3 (October 2000): "The Century War II" Birds of Prey #22 (October 2000): "The Hostage Heart, Part One" Birds of Prey #23 (November 2000): "The Hostage Heart, Part Two" Birds of Prey #24 (December 2000): "The Hostage Heart, Part Three: Conclusion" Titans #21 (November 2000): "The Trial of Cheshire, Part One: The Eva Brown Complex" Titans #22 (December 2000): "The Trial of Cheshire, Part Two: Know When to Quit"
2001: Birds of Prey #25 (January 2001): "Old Habits" Catwoman Vol. 2 #94 (July 2001): "" JSA #28 (November 2001): "Face-Off" Wonderwoman Vol. 2 #174 (November 2001): "The witch & the warrior - part 1" Wonderwoman Vol. 2 #175 (December 2001): "The witch & the warrior - part 2: Girl frenzy"
2002: Birds of Prey #43 (July 2002): "Blind Spot" Birds of Prey #44 (August 2002): "Deadly Convergence" Birds of Prey #45 (September 2002): "The Killing Ground" Birds of Prey #46 (October 2002): "Cretaceous Picnic"
2003: Nightwing Vol. 2 #79 (May 2003): "No Son of Mine" Nightwing Vol. 2 #80 (June 2003): "Venn Diagram, Part 1: Close Encounters" Nightwing Vol. 2 #81 (July 2003): "Venn Diagram, Part 2: Friends under fire" Nightwing Vol. 2 #82 (August 2003): "Venn Diagram, Part 3: That and a buck fifty" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #2 (October 2003): "Child's Play" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #3 (November 2003): "A Kid's Game" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #4 (December 2003): "Breaking the Rules" Avengers/JLA #4 (December 2003): "The Brave and The Bold"
2004: Teen Titans Vol. 3 #1/2 (Janurary 2004): "The Ravager" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #5 (January 2004): "Clash of the Teen Titans!" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #7 (March 2004): "Wednesday" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #8 (April 2004): "Family Lost" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #9 (May 2004): "First Blood" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #10 (June 2004): "Raven Rising" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #11 (July 2004): "Raven Rising" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #12 (August 2004): "Raven Rising" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #17 (December 2004): "Titans Tomorrow (Part I of III) - Big Brothers and Sisters" [Ten year future Deathstroke] Identity Crisis #2 (September 2004): "House of Lies" Identity Crisis #3 (October 2004): "Serial Killer"
2005: Teen Titans Vol. 3 #18 (January 2005): "Titans Tomorrow (Part I of III) - Tales of the Titans" [Ten year future Deathstroke] Identity Crisis #6 (January 2005): "Husbands and Wives" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #22 (May 2005): "Lights Out, Part Two: War and Peace" [Disguised as Batman] Teen Titans Vol. 3 #23 (June 2005): "Lights Out, Part Three: Secrets and Lies" [Disguised as Batman] The Outsiders #21 (April 2005): "Silent Partner" The Outsiders #22 (May 2005): "Deep throat" JSA #70 (April 2005): "JSA/JSA, Chapter III: High Societies" Batgirl Vol. 1 #62 (May 2005): "The Hood (Part III of III)" Batgirl Vol. 1 #63 (June 2005): "Sex, thugs and rock n' roll" Batgirl Vol. 1 #64 (July 2005): "Blade of the Ravager" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #50 (July 2005): "New Business Part All Together Now" Batgirl Vol. 1 #69 (December 2005): "" Countdown to Infinite Crisis #1 (2005): "Countdown to Infinite Crisis" Villains United #1 (July 2005): "Villains United, One: And Empires In Their Purpose" Villains United #3 (September 2005): "Privileged To Spill Her Blood" Batman, Gotham Knights #66 (August 2005): "Job Termination" Batman #646 (December 2005): "Franchise, Part 1: Supply Side Economics" Villains United #5 (November 2005): "Villains United, Part Five: Victims of Aggression" Villains United #6 (December 2005): "Villains United, Part Six: At the End of All Things" Nightwing Vol. 2 #111 (October 2005): "Signed, Sophia" Nightwing Vol. 2 #112 (November 2005): "The Devil you know" Nightwing Vol. 2 #113 (December 2005): "The Scorpion and the frog" Birds of Prey #87 (December 2005): "Perfect Pitch, Part 1" Infinite Crisis #1 (December 2005): "DC Comics Presents Infinite Crisis"
2006: Nightwing Vol. 2 #114 (January 2006): "Cowboys and Indias" Nightwing Vol. 2 #115 (February 2006): "No-fly zone" Nightwing Vol. 2 #116 (March 2006): "Marathon" Nightwing Vol. 2 #117 (April 2006): "Fix you" Batman #647 (January 2006): "Franchise, Part 2: The Away Team" Infinite Crisis #2 (January 2006): "The Survivors" Infinite Crisis #7 (June 2006): "Finale" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #57 (February 2006): "Heading into the light part 4: House warming" Birds of Prey #89 (February 2006): "Perfect Pitch, Part 3" Birds of Prey #90 (March 2006): "Perfect Pitch, Part 5" Adventures of superman (April 2006): "Superman, this is your life, part 3" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #60 (May 2006): "Crawling Through the Wreckage, Part One: New Sheriff in Town!" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #61 (June 2006): "Crawling Through the Wreckage, Part Two: Green Party Agenda" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #62 (July 2006): "Crawling Through the Wreckage, Part Three: An Eye For An Eye" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #63 (August 2006): "Wild, Part One: Busted!" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #64 (September 2006): "Wild, Part Two: Odd Pairings" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #65 (October 2006): "A Kick to the Front, then a Kick to the Back, the a Good Side Kick"
2007: Green Arrow Vol. 3 #69 (February 2007): "Seeing Red, Part One: Out of Town Guests" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #71 (April 2007): "Seeing Red, Part Three: Change Partners" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #74 (July 2007): "Jericho, Part Two: Seems Like Old Times" Green Arrow Vol. 3 #75 (August 2007): "Jericho, Conclusion: And the Walls Came Tumbling Down" The Flash: The fastest man alive #7 (February 2007): "Speedquest, Chapter 1: Angel City" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #43 (March 2007): "Titans Easts (Part I of IV)" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #44 (April 2007): "Titans East (Part II of IV)" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #45 (May 2007): "Titans East (Part III of IV)" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #46 (June 2007): "Titans East (Part IV of IV)" Justice League of America Vol. 2 #12 (October 2007): ""
2008: Justice League of America Vol. 2 #15 (January 2008): "Unlimited, chapter 4: Unleashed" Trinity #14 (September 2008): "So what now?; Let the burning begin" Batgirl Vol. 2 #3 (November 2008): "Redemption road, chapter 3: daughters" Batgirl Vol. 2 #4 (December 2008): "Redemption road, chapter 4: daddy issues"
2009: Trinity #38 (February 2009): "Who are you?; the last stand" Trinity #39 (February 2009): "Metropolis; the power you deserve" Faces of Evil: Deathstroke #1 (March 2009) The Outsiders #15 (April 2009): "The deep, part 1: origins & omens" The Outsiders #17 (June 2009): "The deep, part 3" The Outsiders #18 (July 2009): "The deep, part 4" The Outsiders #19 (August 2009): "the deep, part 5" Final Crisis #2 (June 2009): "" Booster Gold #22 (September 2009): "Day of Death, Part 2 of 4; armor-plated; part 2: silver spoon" Booster Gold #24 (November 2009): "Day of Death, Epilogue; black and blue, part 1 of 2" Booster Gold #25 (December 2009): "Day of Death, Aftermath; Black and blue, part 2 of 2" Final Crisis Aftermath: Ink #6 (December 2009): "Footprints"
2010: Teen Titans Vol. 3 #77 (January 2010): "A family Affair" Teen Titans Vol. 3 #78 (February 2010): "Tortured Souls" Justice League of America Vol. 2 #44 (June 2010): "Devil in the details" Batman and Robin #11 (June 2010): "Batman Vs. Robin, Part 2: Boneyard" Batman and Robin #12 (July 2010): "Batman Vs. Robin, Part 3: Mexican Train" Titans #24 (August 2010): "Rude Awakenings" Titans #25 (September 2010): "Darkness Falls" Titans #26 (October 2010): "Suffer the Children" Titans #27 (November 2010): "Lost and Found" Titans #28 (December 2010): "Family Reunion, Part 1: Past Sins" Action comics #891 (September 2010): "The black ring, part 2" Action comics #892 (October 2010): "The black right, part 3; a look at things to come in...superboy" Secret Six #24 (October 2010): "The Six-Guns Blazing"
2011: Titans #29 (January 2011): "Family Reunions, Part 2: Clear and present danger" Titans #30 (February 2011): "Family Reunions, Part 3: The future's so dark..." Titans #31 (March  2011): "Family Reunions, Part 4: The fate we make" Titans #32 (April 2011): "Family Reunions, Part 5: Inheritance" Titans #33 (May 2011): "Broken Promises, Part 1: An eye for an eye" Titans #34 (June 2011): "Broke Promises, Part 2: Divided we fall" Action Comics #900 (June 2011): "The black ring, final: reigh of doomsday; life support; autobiography; friday night in the 21st century; the incident; only human; the evolution of the man of tomorrow" Titans #35 (July 2011): "Broken Promises, Part 3: Under Siege" Titans #36 (August 2011): "Broken Promises, Part 4: No way out" Titans #37 (September 2011): "The Methuselah Imperative, Part 2 of 3" Titans #38 (October 2011): "The Methuselah Imperative, Part 3 of 3" DC Universe Online Legends #1 (April 2011): "Legendary"
53 notes · View notes