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Ain't it Cool News (Free subscription) | 22/12/2008
Howdy folks, here with an extra special Q&@. In February, DC releases Peter Tomasi & Keith Champagne’s creator-owned series THE MIGHTY. I’ve had a chance to read the first four issues of this cool new series. It’s both refreshing and a step back to old school strong storytelling. The art from Peter Snejbjerg (STARMAN) makes this an instant classic and one you should seek out come...
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IGN (Free subscription) | 03/01/2009
January 2, 2009 - Shortly after reading Final Crisis: Secret Files, I put my ear up to my computer, and I could have sworn I heard DC fans crying foul. I know I cried foul when I realized what was inside the issue's glossy cover. I don't know about you, but I remember reading solicitation text for an issue featuring work from the likes of Grant Morrison, Peter Tomasi and, yes, even Frank...
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IGN (Free subscription) | 02/01/2009
Review Excerpt: "Shortly after reading Final Crisis: Secret Files, I put my ear up to my computer, and I could have sworn I heard DC fans crying foul. I know I cried foul when I realized what was inside the issue's glossy cover. I don't know about you, but I remember reading solicitation text for an issue featuring work from the likes of Grant Morrison, Peter Tomasi and, yes, even Frank...
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Shelly's Comic Book Shelf (Free subscription) | 16/12/2008
Nightwing 151 I'm really going to miss this book. Even if there's a new Nightwing title, as good as it might be, it won't be this book. Peter Tomasi is writing Dick/Nightwing as well as he's ever been written, and that includes the early years of this book. Tomasi gets it. He gets the character and he has the skill to put his understanding on the page. Previously, we got Dick dealing...
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IGN (Free subscription) | 18/12/2008
- Ever see an awards show, talent show or variety show in which a terribly untalented host or MC was forced to awkwardly kill time while the next act got ready to hit the stage? Ever since the start of this Batman RIP tie-in, that's exactly what has felt like. In the time between Chuck Dixon's aborted run and Peter Tomasi's upcoming new creative direction (the third in fifteen issues,...
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IGN (Free subscription) | 11/12/2008
December 10, 2008 - A perfect storm has been gathering around the Guardians of the Universe in the pages of Peter Tomasi's Green Lantern Corps, and it doesn't look like it'll end very well for our little blue men with big heads – or for the Green Lanterns, for that matter. The Zamarons, with their purple, love-based powers, are amassing an army in their corner of the DC Universe, a development...
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IGN (Free subscription) | 11/12/2008
- After reading Nightwing #151, I immediately logged onto DC's website to check if this was in fact the last issue in this series, because that would be the only plausible explanation for what transpired in these pages. Writer Peter Tomasi moves from closing the book on one past story thread to the next, and never bothers to provide a transition between each of the epilogue scenes. I'm...
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IGN (Free subscription) | 10/12/2008
... run on STARMAN opened the door for the JSA on a different level. How'd I get involved in this? Peter Tomasi and David Goyer. I was asked by them to come on and co-write JSA back in 1999 right when I got into comics. James had left the book after issue #2. David wrote #3 himself and I came in and wrote #4 with him, but without a credit. I got a special thanks to, but that was enough...
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comiXtreme (Free subscription) | 10/12/2008
... run on STARMAN opened the door for the JSA on a different level. Howd I get involved in this? Peter Tomasi and David Goyer. I was asked by them to come on and co-write JSA back in 1999 right when I got into comics. James had left the book after issue #2. David wrote #3 himself and I came in and wrote #4 with him, but without a credit. I got a special thanks to, but that was enough...
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GamersCircle (Free subscription) | 10/12/2008
... run on STARMAN opened the door for the JSA on a different level. How’d I get involved in this? Peter Tomasi and David Goyer. I was asked by them to come on and co-write JSA back in 1999 right when I got into comics. James had left the book after issue #2. David wrote #3 himself and I came in and wrote #4 with him, but without a credit. I got a special thanks to, but that was enough...