PREVIEWS: NOV20

Orders closed

MARVEL COMICS

MMW INCREDIBLE HULK HC #15

(W) Roger Stern (A) Sal Buscema (CA) Bob Layton

Roger Stern brings his timeless Hulk run to a close with an Incredible finish! With Hulk icon Sal Buscema at the drawing board, ol' Jade Jaws gets wound up in an epic four-issue struggle with Machine Man that'll test the limits of both man and, well, machine! The high-tech thief Goldbug is searching for a lost city of gold, and needs the Hulk to find it, but what is his connection to the enigmatic They Who Wield Power? And can Hulk stand up to a foe even bigger than he is? Find out when he takes on It the Living Colossus! Plus: It's Hulk vs. Canadian heavyweight Sasquatch in one extra-sized Annual, and the legendary STEVE DITKO is on hand to draw another! Collecting THE INCREDIBLE HULK (1968) #234-244, ANNUAL (1968) #8-9 and material from MARVEL TREASURY EDITION (1974) #20, #24. Rated T

MARVEL COMICS

MMW INCREDIBLE HULK HC #15

DM VAR ED 306

(W) Roger Stern (A) Sal Buscema (CA) Bob Layton

Roger Stern brings his timeless Hulk run to a close with an Incredible finish! With Hulk icon Sal Buscema at the drawing board, ol' Jade Jaws gets wound up in an epic four-issue struggle with Machine Man that'll test the limits of both man and, well, machine! The high-tech thief Goldbug is searching for a lost city of gold, and needs the Hulk to find it, but what is his connection to the enigmatic They Who Wield Power? And can Hulk stand up to a foe even bigger than he is? Find out when he takes on It the Living Colossus! Plus: It's Hulk vs. Canadian heavyweight Sasquatch in one extra-sized Annual, and the legendary STEVE DITKO is on hand to draw another! Collecting THE INCREDIBLE HULK (1968) #234-244, ANNUAL (1968) #8-9 and material from MARVEL TREASURY EDITION (1974) #20, #24. Rated T

UNIVERSITY PRESS OF MISSISSIPP

MYSTERIOUS TRAVELERS DITKO & SEARCH FOR NEW LIBERAL IDENTITY

(W) Zack Kruse (A) STEVE DITKO

STEVE DITKO is one of the most important contributors to American comic books. As the co-creator of Spider-Man and sole creator of Doctor Strange, Ditko made an indelible mark on American popular culture. Always inward facing, Ditko's narratives employed superhero and supernatural fantasy in the service of self-examination, and with characters like the Question, Mr. A, and Static, Ditko turned ordinary superhero comics into philosophic treatises. In this book, Zack Kruse argues that Ditko's philosophy draws on a complicated network of ideas that is best understood as mystic liberalism, and his comics provide a unique window into how such an ideology operates in popular media.