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Drew Geraci

Autor von JLA, Vol. 7: Tower of Babel

5+ Werke 420 Mitglieder 13 Rezensionen

Werke von Drew Geraci

JLA, Vol. 7: Tower of Babel (2001) — Illustrator — 273 Exemplare
Birds of Prey: Old Friends, New Enemies (2003) — Illustrator — 100 Exemplare
Birds of Prey, Volume 2 (2016) — Illustrator — 44 Exemplare
Birds of Prey: The Ravens #1 (1998) 2 Exemplare
JLA #14 (1998) — Inker — 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Infinite Crisis: DC Comics (2006) — Illustrator — 550 Exemplare
52, Vol. 2 (2007) — Illustrator — 299 Exemplare
52, Vol. 4 (2007) — Illustrator — 255 Exemplare
Legion of Super-Heroes: Teenage Revolution (2005) — Illustrator — 137 Exemplare
Teen Titans Vol. 05: Life and Death (2006) — Illustrator — 127 Exemplare
Teen Titans Vol. 06: Titans Around The World (2007) — Illustrator — 103 Exemplare
Legion of Super-Heroes: Death of a Dream (2006) — Illustrator — 97 Exemplare
The Starman Omnibus, Volume Three (2009) — Illustrator — 96 Exemplare
Young Avengers: Ultimate Collection (2010) — Illustrator — 94 Exemplare
The Starman Omnibus, Volume Four (2010) — Illustrator — 90 Exemplare
Infinite Crisis Companion (2006) — Illustrator — 89 Exemplare
Birds of Prey, Volume 1 (2015) — Illustrator — 58 Exemplare
Superman: Infinite Crisis (2006) — Illustrator — 58 Exemplare
The Pulse, Vol. 3: Fear (2006) — Illustrator — 55 Exemplare
DC: World War III (2007) — Inker — 54 Exemplare
DC One Million Omnibus (2013) — Illustrator — 41 Exemplare
The Amazing Spider-Man 2: Fully Charged (2014) — Illustrator — 34 Exemplare
Absolute Final Crisis (1600) — Illustrator — 34 Exemplare
52 Omnibus (2012) — Inker — 33 Exemplare
Enterprise Experiment (2008) — Illustrator — 32 Exemplare
Justice Society of America: A Celebration of 75 Years (2015) — Mitwirkender — 19 Exemplare
Team 7, Volume 1: Fight Fire with Fire (2013) — Illustrator — 17 Exemplare
Marvel's Iron Man 3: Prelude #1 (2013) — Inks — 6 Exemplare
Legion of Super-Heroes [2005] #10 — Illustrator — 2 Exemplare
Legion of Super-Heroes [2005] #12 — Illustrator — 2 Exemplare
Superman: The Man of Steel #105 (2000) — Umschlagillustration — 1 Exemplar

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Part of my massive Barbara Gordon Re-read which I had a glorious amazing time with. Birds of Prey, under the hands of Chuck Dixon, got it's first big push into existing, gorgeously, and I continue to love it deeply!
 
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wanderlustlover | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Dec 26, 2022 |
Borrowed it as well from my local public library. Since I mostly borrow these, I have not always been able to read them in order.

See my short note on the book:

[http://gypsylibrarian.blogspot.com/2006/12/short-notes-on-graphic-novels-8.html]
 
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bloodravenlib | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 17, 2020 |
Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

DC Comics has been re-collecting the original Birds of Prey comics from the beginning. They're chunkier than the old collections, which means that Volume 1 of these new collections contained all the comics previously collected in href="http://lessaccurategrandmother.blogspot.com/2013/01/faster-than-dc-bullet-birds-of-prey.html" rel="nofollow" target="_top">Black Canary/Oracle/Huntress: Birds of Prey and some of those in Old Friends, New Enemies, while Volume 2 contains the balance of issues from Old Friends, plus a number of issues that have never been collected before at all, so that's were I'm starting in these new collections.

Birds of Prey as originally conceived is undeniably a fun concept: Black Canary and Oracle, both characters with somewhat rocky pasts, moving on with their lives and kicking butt. During this period of the book, they've never met in person (well, not since Barbara Gordon became Oracle); Oracle's identity is a secret from Dinah, and there's also an online relationship brewing between Barbara and the mysterious "Beeb." What we end up with here are a variety of exciting, action-based stories by Chuck Dixon (undeniably an expert at exciting, action-based stories, but Birds of Prey is probably him at his best) and Greg Land and Drew Geraci (who draw attractive women without being sleazy). I already reviewed the first couple stories in this book in my review of Old Friends, New Enemies, so here I'll focus on what was new to me, though suffice it to say that I found the story where Black Canary and the Ravens both end up on vacation in Minnesota and a dinosaur comes through a time portal to be immense fun.

First off, there's "S.I.M.O.N. Says Armageddon," focused entirely on the Ravens, who are kind of the evil Birds of Prey: Cheshire, Pistolera, Vicious, and Termina. The first two are preexisting characters; the latter two original to this book. This issue vaguely sets the stage for the Ravens encountering Black Canary in the next issue, but it's somewhat silly, and Nelson DeCastro's costumes for the Ravens are quite frankly terrible, as evidenced by the fact that when they reappear exactly one issue later, Greg Land has given each one a totally new and much better look.

The next new story is "The Villain," where Dinah has to protect a former dictator from assassins so that he can stand trial. It's a serviceable enough action piece, but the characterization here isn't quite interesting enough to make the point Dixon wants to make (the dictator might not be as bad a guy as Dinah thought) come across with any real meaning.

One of the book's real highlights is "On Wings," which tells a story of Barbara Gordon and her on-again off-again flame, Dick Grayson. This story is sweet-- or maybe bittersweet. Barbara and Dick go on what is essentially a date, with dinner and a night at the circus, and Dick really sweetly gives her the ability to fly again despite her paralysis on the circus trapezes. Their physical proximity and emotional intimacy intermix, but Barbara can't bring herself to go further; her damage from being shot by the Joker is more than just physical. She accuses Dick of pushing her, but I feel like she's sending off signals of wanting something more herself; it seems cruel to accept Dick's invitation when she knows he wants something she can never give. But if she didn't accept him, who would she have at all, given she keeps all her other friends and acquaintances even further away?

The last story here is a three-parter: "Girls Rules"/"The Wrong Guy"/"State of War," where an attempt by Dinah to extract a captive scientist ends up with her discovering a long-lost clone of Guy Gardner, former Green Lantern. I think this guy turned up in The Darkstars, but here he is for some reason. (Actually, the reason is that Chuck Dixon once wrote the inexplicable Guy Gardner ongoing.) Anyway, this story has its moments-- I liked the recurring gag about the Iron Brigade and the pompous way it would introduce itself, and here Barbara's communications with "Beeb" begin to heat up-- but at three issues, the thin premise outstays its welcome. And Guy isn't as funny as he should be, even if he's a fake Guy.

Overall, though, this is a fun, exciting set of adventures. Well-written attractive women on exciting adventures, and they're two of my favorite versions of my favorite characters in the whole DC universe. What else could I want?

Birds of Prey: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »

P.S. Can I just say that Birds of Prey, Volume 2 is a terrible title? There's one other DC book with that on the title page (Birds of Prey, Volume 2: Your Kiss Might Kill) and two others that go by that title on Amazon (Birds of Prey: Sensei & Student and Birds of Prey: The Death of Oracle). It's bad enough to have four books called "Birds of Prey, Volume 2," but to have the fourth one be the one with no clarifying subtitle seems an attempt at being deliberately obscure.… (mehr)
 
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Stevil2001 | Oct 29, 2016 |

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