shaxper
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Posts: 22,871
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Post by shaxper on Dec 15, 2020 7:23:52 GMT -5
On the third day of Christmas, Marvel Comics gave to me, An Avengers saga wilder than the Skrull/Kree... 10. Steve Englehart Primarily selected for Avengers and Doctor Strange (1972-1976) Admittedly, I haven't read anywhere near enough Englehart yet, but he makes this list for two reasons. One, he wrote my absolute favorite stretch of Avengers stories, in which both the characterizations and the concepts were an utter delight to absorb (seriously, did anyone ever use Kang better??), and two, he wrote possibly the most mind-bending Doctor Strange stories of all time, including one in which we witness the unexpected birth of the Judeo-Christian God. I have no words. And I have no excuse for not seeking out more of his work. I expect to finally get to his Batman stories in 2021.
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Crimebuster
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Making comics!
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Post by Crimebuster on Dec 15, 2020 7:35:55 GMT -5
10. Steve Englehart
(seriously, did anyone ever use Kang better??) Kang is my favorite supervillain, and though I really dig Englehart's work, for me Kurt Buisek's Kang is unmatched. Of course, he was building off of what Englehart had done, so there's that!
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Crimebuster
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Making comics!
Posts: 3,958
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Post by Crimebuster on Dec 15, 2020 7:43:58 GMT -5
10. Joe Simon
It can be a little hard to sort out some of Simon's long career in terms of what he wrote and drew, especially his early collaborations with Kirby since they both did both. But I'm including Simon for his bonkers 70's output, particularly Prez, The Green Team, The Outsiders, Strange Sports Stories, and more. I suspect he had a hand in some of the weirder Young Love and Young Romance stories of the early 70's as well when he was editing those titles. Just weird, bizarre, crazy comics at their best.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 15, 2020 7:58:01 GMT -5
10. Gail SimoneGail Simone is a writer I have tried to follow, no matter what book she is on. That’s the mark of a good writer for me. Hell, if I learnt she was writing “The History of Breakfast Cereals”, I’d buy it. Her passion shines through for me. And one reason I have chosen her is because she makes me interested in characters that I previously didn’t have an interest in. There are quite a few characters I didn’t have an interest in - but when Gail Simone wrote them, I was suddenly interested. And she didn’t disappoint me. I also appreciate how she has written Catman , one of my favourite Batman villains.
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Post by brutalis on Dec 15, 2020 8:24:14 GMT -5
10. Jason Aaron
Because of his epic Scalped. The depravity of living on the Rez! Getting dirty, trying to get out, the crime, the poverty, the gambling, the drugs, the sex, the killings, the blurring line of good/evil wrapped up in a brutally gritty real world. A life of desperation, shattered dreams, lost hope, lies, delusions and fractured humanity where souls are crushed, destroyed or used like pieces in a real life game of chance.
I stumbled upon this by accident browsing in the LCS and it was issue 3 and marked for $1 as the store would post worker comic book choices each week. It looked different and interesting. Picked up issues 1 and 2 along with 3 to read. It blew me away and it was on my pull list from there on in.
Aaron did his homework and didn't pull any punches in his writing. He showed the full dirty details with an emphasis upon a grit and brutality of growing up, living and leaving only to find yourself back on the Rez, a place you tried to get away from but is so deep in your blood that you can't. It is powerful writing that gained him great attention and brought him offers at the big 2 for doing his thing on superheroes.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Dec 15, 2020 8:43:22 GMT -5
Admittedly, I haven't read anywhere near enough Englehart yet, but he makes this list for two reasons. One, he wrote my absolute favorite stretch of Avengers stories, in which both the characterizations and the concepts were an utter delight to absorb (seriously, did anyone ever use Kang better??), and two, he wrote possibly the most mind-bending Doctor Strange stories of all time, including one in which we witness the unexpected birth of the Judeo-Christian God.
I have no words. And I have no excuse for not seeking out more of his work. I expect to finally get to his Batman stories in 2021. The way he finally made the Beyonder work as a Marvel character really impressed me. Englehart is the king of tweaking convoluted continuity until it finally makes sense, as far as I am concerned.
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Post by DubipR on Dec 15, 2020 8:45:26 GMT -5
#10- Gail SimoneSelected works: Birds of Prey, Secret Six, Wonder Woman, Batgirl I became a fan of Gail's work with her Women in Refrigerators website and her column Y'All Be Sorry! at CBR. When Bongo Comics picked her up to do stories for The Simpsons, the ball rolled and DC gave her Birds of Prey at issue 56 back in 2003 and it sealed it for me. Her flair for smart dialogue and banter mixed with super twisty plots makes for fascinating reading. Taking what Chuck Dixon did with Birds of Prey, Gail made it more feminine and gave the ladies a softer side that was sorely missing from the book. It was engaging with personal drama with the heroics thrown in there. Then it came to Secret Six; rebooting the concept of Grade Z heroes, and they were, into fascinating reads and characters you actually give a care for. Also, giving diversity to the characters; minority characters getting more spotlight. LGBTQ positive heroes, Gail's writing made her community of fan inclusive and a delight. She's crushing it on Red Sonja right now, but all of her books are a must read for me.
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Confessor
CCF Mod Squad
Not Bucky O'Hare!
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Post by Confessor on Dec 15, 2020 8:47:36 GMT -5
#10 - John Wagner ( Judge Dredd [various stories 1977-1987], Strontium Dog [various stories 1978-1984], Robo-Hunter [various stories 1978-1985], The Thirteenth Floor [1984-1985]) John Wagner co-created futuristic law-enforcer Judge Dredd and is also the person who has written more Dredd stories than any other 2000 AD contributor. It is primarily for his work on Dredd that I've chosen him as my #10 pick today. In particular, it's his tenure on the strip during the late '70s and 1980s that I'm citing here, because, to me, that's the golden age of Judge Dredd stories. Wagner wrote or co-wrote some of Dredd's most famous arcs, including such classics as "Robot Wars" (the first multi-part Judge Dredd story), "The Apocalypse War", "Judge Caligula", "The Judge Child Quest", "Judge Death", "Judge Death Lives", and "Oz". In doing so, it was Wagner who established Dredd's stern, yet heavily ironic personality and inserted the eminently British satire and all of that deliciously black humour into the strip. In doing so, he took the character away from the more humourless disciplinarian that writer Pat Mills had initially conceived. In short, it was Wagner who gave us Judge Dredd as we know and love him today. I also really enjoyed Wagner's Robo-Hunter and Strontium Dog stories in the pages of 2000 AD, the latter of which was actually co-written by Alan Grant and credited to Grant alone. In addition, Wagner's The Thirteenth Floor from the short-lived British horror comic Scream! was a firm favourite of mine. He's just a great writer who gave me some of my favourite British comic stories from back when I was a kid. From the Judge Dredd strip, 2000 AD, prog # (1982)...
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Post by MDG on Dec 15, 2020 9:26:23 GMT -5
Steve Englehart
I was really into Englehart after his Detective run and the truncated Mr. Miracle—probably the first mainstream writer I followed for any period. Reading his WCA concurrent with the Vision/Scarlet Witch mini was my first real dive into Marvel, and I appreciated the way he was able to provide history and exposition more naturally—even elegantly—compared to the way it was usually handled. I enjoyed his run on GL with Staton, but Millenium + New Guardians was disappointing and helped push me out of mainstream comics. It's a lot of fun, though, reading A Foozle knowing it was originally a Superman/Creeper team-up.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 15, 2020 11:10:27 GMT -5
10. Matt Wagner (Sandman Mystery Theater and Madame Xanadu) This is mostly on the basis of Sandman Mystery Theater, though I do think that Madame Xanadu is one of the better late era Vertigo titles. With SMT Wagner (along with great artists, though mostly Guy Davis) gave me everything I wanted in a comic book. Gritty noir tinged with just a touch of long-underwear heroism, a pinch of pulp and without a doubt the best female love interest/supporting character in the history of comics. Honestly, Wagner would make the list just for Dian Belmont. I will say that Wagner is a bit of a stand-in for the great writer/artists who were largely excluded from my list. He's almost certainly best known for Grendal and Mage. And the two Batman mini's he did are great. But I don't want to take away from Sandman Mystery Theater which is easily in my top ten comic series ever.
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Post by codystarbuck on Dec 15, 2020 13:09:03 GMT -5
#10 Chuck DixonLeaving out things he wrote that have nothing to do with comics, I loves me some Chuck Dixon. Not his Punisher stuff, as I loathe the character. His Batman is pretty good and he created Bane, but, no, not because of that or Tim Drake. He gave us the Birds of Prey; but, no, not that. I love Chuck Dixon for Skywolf. Who, I hear some of you ask? The Hillman aviation comic hero, featured as a back-up in Air Fighters and Airboy comics. In 1986, Eclipse Comics revived the public domain Air Fighters and Chuck Dixon soon took over the writing, from Tim Truman. Airboy was great, by itself; but, Skywolf was beyond great.....it was classic! In Chuck's hands, aided by a cast of great, but mostly unsung artists, Skywolf was a trip through the United States' post-WW2 history, from flying air support to the Nationalist Chinese, during the Chinese Civil War to flying F-86s in combat against Migs, in Korea, to being at Dien Bien Phu, in Vietnam. Skywolf took us through Occupied Japan, gangland Hawaii, the KKK in Texas, 50s Hollywood, the Himalayas, Saudi Arabia and more, in classic adventures that harkened back to the great adventure strips of the 30s and 40s, like Milton Caniff's Terry & the Pirates and Steve Canyon, or Frank Robbins' Johnny Hazard. However, Chuck used that template to highlight the history of this country you won't learn in school, like the CIAs involvement in Guatemala, to prop up the interests of the United Fruit Company or the seemier side of Hollywood, where a little creative theft is considered part of the business and Communist witch hunts destroyed careers. All of this from a guy who was pretty conservative, with a big C, writing for an editor who was deeply liberal, with a capital L. Politics were really only there in the morality of things: weaselly bureaucrats who would sell out an innocent man for political alliances or men of the cloth who use their position to incite hatred and murder. Skywolf was a two-fisted, John Wayne kind of guy, caught in a Jimmy Stewart world, as written by Dalton Trumbo. Chuck even dabbled with doomed romance, as Skywolf falls into the arms of Riot O'Hara, a damaged female pilot who has lost one love and finds herself alone and vulnerable, with a man who is alone and vulnerable and they reach out to one another. They try to make it the American dream and fail miserably. Chuck could do the wild action, the colorful characters; but, he made them real, flawed human beings.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Dec 15, 2020 13:18:31 GMT -5
10. Bill MantloMantlo wrote so many stories I loved back in the day, in his runs on Spectacular Spider-man, Marvel Team-up, Rom and, particularly, Incredible Hulk. I haven’t read most of that stuff since, say, the early-to-mid 1980s, so I don’t know what I’d think of it now (although I suspect my opinion wouldn't change too much). More recently, however, I have read one of my favorite stories penned by Mantlo: the first dozen or so issues of Micronauts. I still love it, and that’s why I thought it, and Mr. Mantlo, deserved a shout-out in this countdown of personal favorites. I really love the way he took a licensed property, based on a toy-line, and turned it into this really fun and exciting science fiction/action tale. I still think the first issue is simply amazing, in that it sets up the ongoing story and introduces all of the main characters in about 18 pages of non-stop action. (And yes, I realize a lot of this was helped along by Michael Golden’s exquisite art). And the action never let up for the next 10 issues, when it came to a very satisfying conclusion. I also really like the two epilogue-like stories that followed, one focusing on Acroyear and the other on Bug. Even the first annual, despite the rather lackluster art job by Steve Ditko, still featured some really solid stories that gave a little background on the various characters before the beginning of the series. I didn’t follow Micronauts as much after issue #14, even though I think there were some good stories there as well. But that first stretch of 14 issues and Annual #1 feature a complete saga that stands up to repeated readings.
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Post by EdoBosnar on Dec 15, 2020 13:32:33 GMT -5
Aaron came under serious consideration for my list as well, exclusively on the strength of Scalped - because I haven't read anything else by him. It's a really gripping, thought-provoking series.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Dec 15, 2020 13:40:21 GMT -5
Aaron came under serious consideration for my list as well, exclusively on the strength of Scalped - because I haven't read anything else by him. It's a really gripping, thought-provoking series. I'll get in to more detail in my recap, but read Southern Bastards. It is sooooo damn good. The only issue with it is I'm not sure it's going to ever get finished.
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zilch
Full Member
Posts: 244
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Post by zilch on Dec 15, 2020 14:43:42 GMT -5
Man, my just missed list just keeps on growing...
Day Three...
Jerry Siegel
If only for Superman (and the really fun stories through his run on the character), but there's Robotman, Star-Spangled Kid and Stripesy, Red White and Blue, Slam Bradley, Spectre... wow!
-z
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