While there are a lot of other heroes I'd have liked to have showcased this time around, I couldn't do DC Archives Month without one volume dedicated to the Golden Age Batman. It wasn't easy deciding which one, but Volume 2 of Batman: The Dark Knight Archives, reprinting Batman #5 - 8, won out.
(Originally posted on Channel Awesome on December 22, 2014)
While there are a lot of other heroes I'd have liked to have showcased this time around, I couldn't do DC Archives Month without one volume dedicated to the Golden Age Batman. It wasn't easy deciding which one, but Volume 2 of Batman: The Dark Knight Archives, reprinting Batman #5 - 8, won out.
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The INCspotlight: DC Archives Month, Part 3 - The Golden Age Doctor Fate Archives, Vol. 112/15/2014 (Originally posted on Channel Awesome on December 15, 2014)
DC Archives month continues with the first volume of the Golden Age Doctor Fate Archives. Actually, it's the only volume, because it contains the entire Golden Age run of Doctor Fate's adventures, from More Fun Comics #55 - 98. The INCspotlight: DC Archives Month, Part 2 - Superman: The Action Comics Archives, Vol. 312/8/2014 (Originally posted on Channel Awesome on December 8, 2014)
DC Archives Month continues this week with a far more familiar face than Starman's - Superman! (Originally posted on Channel Awesome on December 1, 2014)
Once again because I felt like it, I'm doing another themed month of reviews - DC Archives Month! First up is the first volume of the Golden Age Starman Archives, reprinting his adventures from Adventure Comics #61 - 76. (Originally posted on Channel Awesome on September 29, 2014)
Hercule Poirot joins forces with three other detectives to solve a daring murder in Cards on the Table, a brilliant novel by Dame Agatha Christie. Poirot made his debut in Agatha Christie's first published novel The Mysterious Affair at Styles, which was written in 1916 but didn't see print until 1920. A former Belgian policeman with a reputation for his crime-solving abilities, Poirot emigrated to England during World War I as a war refugee. He established a private detective business and would spend the next few decades solving crimes around the world across 33 novels and over 50 short stories, Cards on the Table being the 20th Poirot novel. His final literary appearance (sorta) was in the novel Curtain (1975), in which the great detective passed away. The New York Times went so far as to write an obituary for Poirot, the only fictional character they've ever done this for. (Sophie Hannah has written a new Poirot novel, The Monogram Murders, which was released just a couple of weeks ago, but I haven't read it yet.) |
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