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Wolverine Epic Collection: Madripoor Nights (Wolverine (1988-2003)) Kindle & comiXology
He's the best there is at what he does -- but what he does isn't very nice. And now, Wolverine has broken out of the X-Men and into his own solo series! Feeling the urge to cut loose, Wolverine travels to Madripoor -- an East Indian island full of pirates, cutthroats and...just the way Logan likes it! There, he'll take on ruthless crimelord Roche, meet the cunning Tyger Tiger, wield the mystical Black Blade, battle superhuman enforcers Roughouse and Bloodsport, and contend with drug kingpin Nguyen Ngoc Coy and his niece -- the former New Mutant known as Karma! Plus: The Hulk comes to town, a formative battle with Sabretooth is revealed, and Wolverine hunts for the Gehenna Stone! Guest-starring Jessica Drew, aka Spider-Woman!
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMarvel
- Publication dateDecember 10, 2014
- Grade level4 and up
- File size1708468 KB
- Due to its large file size, this book may take longer to download
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Product details
- ASIN : B00P16G5OI
- Publisher : Marvel (December 10, 2014)
- Publication date : December 10, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 1708468 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Not enabled
- Enhanced typesetting : Not Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Sticky notes : Not Enabled
- Print length : 495 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #904,724 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #3,375 in Media Tie-In & Adaptation Graphic Novels
- #5,501 in Marvel Comics & Graphic Novels (Books)
- #5,702 in Media Tie-In Graphic Novels
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
Chris Claremont is best known for his work on Marvel Comics' The Uncanny X-Men, during which time it was the bestselling comic in the Western Hemisphere; he has sold more than 100 million comic books to date. Recent projects include the dark fantasy novel Dragon Moon and Sovereign SevenTM, a comic book series published by DC Comics. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.George Lucas is the founder of Lucasfilm Ltd., one of the world's leading entertainment companies. He created the Star Wars and Indiana Jones film series. Among his story credits are THX 1138, American Graffiti, and the Star Wars and Indiana Jones films. He lives in Marin County, California.
Photo by Alex Lozupone (Tduk) (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.
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That said, I loved Hugh Jackman's portrayal of the character enough to name a cat Logan. I thought this version was an anomaly and that's mostly because that version of Logan was more based on an earlier version of the character that I hadn't really gotten to know too well. I would dig into back issues but my Wolverine issues never dipped back to THIS version of the character.
And that's a damn shame because THIS. Is great.
Chris Claremont, man. That man could make Wolverine work in ways that other writers very much struggle with. I'm a little upset with myself for never searching out the books in this particular collection but not only do you get a great version of Wolverine but you also get some first appearances of core Marvel places and characters that I never really got to see forming. This is the first appearance of the Island Principality of Madripoor which features heavily in X-books to this day and has recently entered the Marvel Cinematic Universe in Falcon and the Winter Soldier. Several Madripoor characters also get first appearances within and some characters get redefined from earlier showings.
In short, you get a great Wolverine and great stories and learn about what are now classic locations and characters from the ground up. Almost all of it by classic X-Scribe Chris Claremont and legendary artist John Buscema. Inkers Klaus Jansen and Bill Sienkewicz are also amazing draws.
The bad news is that it seems like this book was forced upon an already overwhelmed writer. Wolverine was a solo series that was going to happen whether or not Claremont was involved and since Chris Claremont wanted to maintain creative control of the characters he had developed since the mid-seventies, he did his damndest to fit this book (and the newly developed EXcalibur) into his schedule. That was never going to last and by the end of this volume, he's left the title and Peter David pens a six parter to cap off John Buscema's run on the book. Be that as it may, Claremont's work is gold and, including the story from Marvel Comics Presents that starts off this volume, it makes an impressive start for Wolverine's solo title.
As a spin off from the main X-title, Wolverine's adventures are more self contained here. It's mostly taking place on Madripoor. Because the X-Men are all considered dead, Logan adopts another identity and wears another costume for most of the book. His other identity, Patch, is one of the most ridiculous attempts at a secret identity I've encountered (he wears an eye patch and... that's it) and when Peter David arrives, he doesn't take too long dismantling that identity (he still uses it occasionally but it's fun to know that everyone knows he's pretending and that no one is being fooled). The secondary costume gets pulled out occasionally but by Peter David's story arc, Logan is back in his traditional Wolverine costume.
John Buscema is not a name I typically associate with the X-books and whenever I see him on various X-projects from the past, I'm surprised. But it keeps happening so maybe I should just be content with the fact that Buscema was a prolific artist who would lend his talents to a TON of work. Regardless of his X-bonafides, this is some really solid art. By Peter David's story, Big Jon is partnered with Bill Sienkewicz and the two are producing magic together, aside from a few story-telling hiccups.
I keep mentioning Peter David's concluding story in this volume but I haven't mentioned his writing yet. That's because it wasn't very good. David will have his time to shine on the X-books (X-Factor) but this wasn't it for me. A lot of it is forcing a situation so that it'll lead to a witty one-liner or another and they aren't even that funny. His first issue is probably the best. The humor lands more often and it's subdued nature fits the title better. In all, it's a serviceable story that isn't Peter David at his best. The art is amazing, though.
As far as extras are concerned, you get two Marvel Age features on Wolverine: one for his Marvel Comics Presents story and the next for the start of his ongoing. There's also a lot of line art by John Buscema from various issues, a house ad from Marvel Age for the ongoing, two Marvel Fanfare covers, an Amazing Heroes cover advertising Marvel Comics Presents, a Buscema cover of the Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide featuring Wolverine and Punisher, an unused cover for Wolverine by Buscema, the reprint cover for Wolverine's story arc in MCP by Sam Kieth, and cover treatments from different versions of the first Wolverine Essential book. So there are some meaty extras!
This is a great collection and I'm embarrassed that as big of an X-Fan as I claim to be, I have NEVER read it before. I'm hoping reading Wolverine books with this volume to color my perspective will strengthen my enjoyment of a character that has never really worked THIS well for me. It's a great, weird start to Wolverine's first ongoing solo book.
Two final thoughts: Claremont brings in Jessica Drew (the original Spider-Woman) who was languishing in comic book limbo and she is great here. Fifteen years later, Drew would properly return to the role of Spider-Woman and Marvel Comics in a big way but it's nice to see Claremont, a former writer of her first ongoing, hadn't forgotten about her and found a good way to include Jessica in a book. It makes me with I could pick up some Spider-Woman Epic Collections. Maybe someday?
Finally, the cover treatment on this version of the book is stupid flawed. The front and back are fine but the spine has the "WOLVERINE" title located in a different location than every other Wolverine Epic Collection or any other Epic Collection I own. It looks wrong on a shelf and bothers me quite a bit. Presentation is everything, people. Hopefully this problem is corrected in future versions of this collection. I think there's a new printing coming out soon. This guy gets rereleased a lot.
OK! That's all I've got. It's a good book and you should read it!
Featuring Hulk and Jessica Drew, and his first battle with Sabretooth!
An excellent and necessary read. Solid artwork by John Buscema and fluid storytelling by Claremont, This is a can't miss collection.
Story: 8/10
Reprint Q: 9/10
The Wolverine comics has always had their ups and downs, but my favorites where the first ten issues in this monthly and the Claremont and Miller 4 part series when Wolverine wanted to hump the hell out of Mariko and whatever (not included in this collection). The Peter David stories were okay even though I hate that fat **** as a human being. The Marvel Comics Presents were good but the art was a little childish. Overall I enjoyed this collection.
I personally loved the story although some hate the "patch" identity. The classic art style is something to behold as well. Although, probably my only grip is the one filler story planted in the middle. That aside its a must have
Top reviews from other countries
Silver Samurai taucht natürlich auf, weil Asien, irgendwann kommt der damals graue Hulk als Mafia-Schläger "Mr. Fixit" (bwahaha! again) und logischerweise Sabertooth, just because we couldn`t think of anything else (Wolvie endlich mal wieder mit Maske!).
Die Zeichnungen von John Buscema und ein oder zwei Ausgaben von Gene Colan finde ich auch gruselig (im negativen Sinne) - ich weiß, Blasphemie - die Farben auch für die späten 80er ebenso gruselig.
Abschließend bleibt noch der Fairness halber zu erwähnen, dass ich nach Claremont's story arc aufgehört habe zu lesen, weil es mir echt zu blöd wurde. Möglicherweise waren Peter David's letzte sechs Ausgaben völlig visionär und lebensverändernd, aber ich werde es nie erfahren.
This volume collects both the introductory ten-part series from Marvel Comics Presents, as well as the first sixteen issues of the Wolverine series itself. Together, they take Wolvie out on his own (at this point in the comics, the X-Men were scattered around the world, having faked their own deaths), as he finds a new life in the lawless south-east Asian island of Madripoor.
Taking on the pseudonym of 'Patch' and attempting to conceal his mutant nature from the raucous locals, he finds himself caught up in the local criminal turf wars as well as taking part in some rather more esoteric adventures. In these pages you will meet crime lords Roche, Tyger Tiger and Nguyen Ngoc Coy, brutal enforcers Roughouse and Bloodsport, a visiting Hulk (in his Joe Fixit persona), ex-Spider-Woman-turned-private-eye Jessica Drew, ancient demon Ba'al, lethal mutant Silver Samurai and more.
The stories are nearly all penned by mutant maestro Chris Claremont, although Peter David scripts the concluding six-parter, and likewise are drawn by Marvel legend John Buscema, with a guest spot from Gene Colan. Claremont has always had a good fix on what makes Wolverine tick, and takes pleasure in exploring his ruthless, wry nature through laconic inner monologues and witty quips - this is a Marvel antihero who is more than willing to deal death to the deserving. Buscema, too, his art sketchier and rougher to match the setting, shows the mastery of visual storytelling that made his name.
As much as Wolverine is the protagonist, though, and as fun as his supporting cast is, the real star of this collection is Madripoor itself. With elements of Casablanca, eighties Daredevil and countless noir movies thrown into the mix, the city-island is a living, breathing cesspit where life is cheap and sudden violence mixes with sleazy glamour. It helps give these adventures very much a unique flavour.
As with a lot of the later material, extras abound in this Epic Collection. As well as plenty of pinups of Wolverine himself, there are Marvel Age articles on both series collected here, ads of the time, the covers of previous collections to collect this material, and lots of original Buscema art. All of which help to make this a definitive printing of Wolvie's original solo outings; why not pick them up and remind yourself what the fuss was all about. What he does might not be pretty... but it sure is fun.