Comixology (at Amazon) Sales: Sin City, Concrete, Dragon Age, Supergirl

In this week’s Comixology (at Amazon) sales, Dark Horse issues discounts for Sin City, Concrete and Dragon Age.

Where did the New Releases and Sale pages go?

(Disclosure: If you buy something we link to on our site, we may earn a commission.)

In case you’re having troubles with the new UIX (a LOT of people have been):

Unannounced Sales

  Concrete  Sin City: The Hard Goodbye  Dragon Age

As always, it isn’t clear when the unannounced sales will end.

Dark Horse drops three new sales this week:

Also on sale:

Discounts of Steel

Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow  Superman Love and Mercy  Lobo

The DC Summer of Supergirl Sale runs through Monday, 7/6.

We’ll repeat Tuesday’s Supergirl sale, just for giggles.

Supergirl

Something about a film…

First, the one that seems most directly related to the film: Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow by Tom King & Bilquis Evely.

Superman

Lobo

Something about that same film.

  • Lobo (’90) Alan Grant / Keith Giffen / Simon Bisley

One of the somewhat rare ’80s reprints that we’ve enjoyed is Superman: The Phantom Zone by Steve Gerber and Gene Colan. This is a very odd, horror-flavored Superman tale as he confronts something unnatural that’s been living in the Phantom Zone… but you weren’t expecting Gerber & Colan to give you the ’50s TV version, were you?

Superman Smashes the Klan has Gene Yang and Gurihiru revisiting and revising the original Superman radio show arc, “Clan of the Fiery Cross.” It’s on the YA side of Superman, but has picked up a LOT of good reviews.

Superman, the current series by Josh Williamson and Jamal Campbell is also on sale and it’s a good one.

Lobo by Giffen/Grant/Bisley is really good stuff… as long as you have a dark sense of humor and aren’t easily offended.

Marvel

Invincible Iron Man Omnibus  Rom: The Original Marvel Years Omnibus  Wolverine Omnibus

Marvel seems to be standing pat with the “early” Prime Day Sale they released at the beginning of the month. We anticipate it ending sometime Friday evening, so it may or may not still be up when you’re seeing this. It’s a holiday-level sale with plenty of Omnibuses and Epic Collections. We looked at it more closely here.

And have a look at the $5 and under page.

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Comixology (at Amazon) Sales: DC Shows Up For Prime Day w/ Supergirl

In this week’s Comixology (at Amazon) sales, DC drops a Supergirl sale on Prime Day.

Where did the New Releases and Sale pages go?

(Disclosure: If you buy something we link to on our site, we may earn a commission.)

In case you’re having troubles with the new UIX (a LOT of people have been):

Is DC finally taking part in Prime Day, or is it merely a coincidence and their Supergirl tie-in sale was going to drop on a Tuesday, regardless? If we had to bet, we’d go with the latter… and yet, here we are.

Discounts of Steel

Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow  Superman Love and Mercy  Lobo

The DC Summer of Supergirl Sale runs through Monday, 7/6.

Yes, DC’s having another corporate synergy sale as the movie release is imminent. And if you look at the content, it’s as much a Superman sale as a Supergirl sale. “House of El” and all. The sale prices are a little more “normal” than some of the previous sales, so we’ll take that as a positive.

Let’s break it down:

Supergirl

Something about a film…

First, the one that seems most directly related to the film: Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow by Tom King & Bilquis Evely.

Superman

Lobo

Something about that same film.

  • Lobo (’90) Alan Grant / Keith Giffen / Simon Bisley

One of the somewhat rare ’80s reprints that we’ve enjoyed is Superman: The Phantom Zone by Steve Gerber and Gene Colan. This is a very odd, horror-flavored Superman tale as he confronts something unnatural that’s been living in the Phantom Zone… but you weren’t expecting Gerber & Colan to give you the ’50s TV version, were you?

Superman Smashes the Klan has Gene Yang and Gurihiru revisiting and revising the original Superman radio show arc, “Clan of the Fiery Cross.” It’s on the YA side of Superman, but has picked up a LOT of good reviews.

Superman, the current series by Josh Williamson and Jamal Campbell is also on sale and it’s a good one.

Lobo by Giffen/Grant/Bisley is really good stuff… as long as you have a dark sense of humor and aren’t easily offended.

Marvel

Invincible Iron Man Omnibus  Rom: The Original Marvel Years Omnibus  Wolverine Omnibus

Marvel seems to be standing pat with the “early” Prime Day Sale they released at the beginning of the month. It’s a holiday-level with plenty of Omnibuses and Epic Collections. We looked at it more closely here.

Unannounced Sales

  Superman The Ultimate Guide Cat's Eye Omnibus Volume 2

As always, it isn’t clear when the unannounced sales will end.

Also on sale:

And have a look at the $5 and under page.

We’ll be back at the end of the week for the usual wrap up when the dust has cleared.

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Still on Sale

Comixology (at Amazon) Sales: Cat’s Eye, Fowl Language, Non-Sequitur

In this week’s Comixology (at Amazon) sales, everything waits on Prime Day.

Where did the New Releases and Sale pages go?

(Disclosure: If you buy something we link to on our site, we may earn a commission.)

In case you’re having troubles with the new UIX (a LOT of people have been):

It’s the lull before Prime Day. What’s happening then? We don’t know. Possibly nothing.

The first question is whether that Pre-Prime Day Sale we talked about earlier ends on the Monday the 22nd or runs through 26th? We don’t see it lasting longer than that, so we encourage you to have a peek at it over the weekend.

 

Unannounced Sales

  Superman The Ultimate Guide Cat's Eye Omnibus Volume 2

As always, it isn’t clear when the unannounced sales will end.

Looks like there’s still an unannounced sale on Dark Horse’s Cyberpunk 2077. A video game adaptation with an interesting award to its credit.

The first five collections can be found here.

After which, the property went to the album format Dark Horse sometimes uses for titles with a higher bookstore profile, which are listed with the single issues:

There’s also The World of Cyberpunk 2077.

Also on sale:

And have a look at the $5 and under page.

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Comixology (at Amazon) Sales: Iron Man, Punisher, X-Men, Cyberpunk 2077, My Friend Dahmer

In this week’s Comixology (at Amazon) sales, Marvel drops another 7 sales. Plus, Cyberpunk 2077 and more Calvin and Hobbes.

Where did the New Releases and Sale pages go?

(Disclosure: If you buy something we link to on our site, we may earn a commission.)

In case you’re having troubles with the new UIX (a LOT of people have been):

[Housekeeping]: We’re not sure how long that Marvel early Prime Day sale is running, but check out last week for a rundown.

Does Whatever An Iron Can…

Iron Man: The Man Who Killed Tony Stark  Iron Man: Heroes Reborn  Iron Man: Big Iron

The Marvel Iron Man Sale runs through Monday, 6/29.

This would be one of those sales where most of the hero’s run is on sale, so we’re going to follow our usual protocol and start out by breaking out the primary titles and volumes. Iron Man isn’t as goofy to follow as, say, Spider-Gwen… but there are “quirks.” Oddly, this time out, titles with a word other than “Invincible” in front of “Iron Man” are omitted. (Infamous, International, etc.) Intentional or the new digital guy is from a film background and unfamiliar with the catalog? We’re not sure.

  • Tales of Suspense – Iron Man debuted here in what was a split book with Captain America for most of the run. (The Epic Collections have been redirected to the next link)
  • Iron Man ’68-’96 – The original solo run in the era before constant relaunch gimmicks. This is now the Epic Collection link and all other collections from this run appeared to be floating on Amazon, untethered to a series.

OK, sit tight. The ’98 -’04 run is collected in VERY odd ways and poorly cataloged for browsing.  The truly excellent Kurt Busiek/Sean Chen/Patrick Zircher run lasts from 1-25. We can’t find 15-25 collected? (That entire run should be!)  You can catch 1-14  in cheap omnibus form here.  (No idea why the Mike Grell omnibus isn’t on sale.) You can catch Joe Quesada’s scripting run (26-32) and the Avengers: Disassembled tie-in late in this run in single volumes here. (But get the omnibus version for Busiek.)

  • Iron Man ’04-07 – Best known for launching with the “Extremis” storyline
  • Invincible Iron Man ’08-’12 – The excellent Matt Fraction / Salvador Larroca run. Save some money with the omnibus collecting the first 3 volumes.
  • Iron Man ’12-’14 – The Kieron Gillen run with Greg Land as initial artist
  • Invincible Iron Man ’15-’16 – Brian Bendis and David Marquez/Mike Deodato, Jr. start out with Tony Stark in the armor
  • Invincible Iron Man ’16-’18 – Brian Bendis and Stefano Caselli with Riri Williams/Ironheart filling Tony Stark’s shoes (yes, parallel substitute Iron Man runs)
  • Iron Man ’20-’22 – The Christopher Cantwell / Cafu run.
  • Invincible Iron Man ’22-’24 – Gerry Duggan / Juan Frigeri
  • Iron Man ’24-’25 – Spencer Ackerman / Julius Ohta

So what’s good?  We haven’t read ALL the Iron Man out there, but we’ve read a lot of them.

In our opinion Iron Man starts hitting it’s stride when Archie Goodwin arrives toward the end of the Tales of Suspense run and then is pure gold through issue 28 of the ’68 Iron Man series. Artists for this run include Gene Colan and George Tuska. Iron Man Epic Collection: The Man Who Killed Tony Stark collects most of that.

The next “all-star” run is #116-157 of the original Iron Man, that’s the David Michelinie / John Romita, Jr. / Bob Layton run that’s most famous for the “Demon in a Bottle” alcoholism arc, but there’s more to the run than just that arc.  The Denny O’Neil / Luke McDonnell run that follows is solid (make sure you get a collection that includes #200!!!), then Michelinie & Layton return for #215-250 with a few artists, including Mark Bright and Jackson Guice… with Layton even switching to penciller, instead of his usual inking post, for parts of it.  This second run is most famous for “Armor Wars” (originally known as Stark Wars).

When Heroes Return hits, Kurt Busiek and Sean Chen are pop in for the excellent 1998 run, of which only 1-14 are currently collected.

The ’08 – ’12 run by Matt Fraction and Salvador Larroca is particularly good. You know how modern Marvel titles can get sidetracked by Events? Fraction and Larroca lean into it and produce a lengthy and self-contained arc with Tony Stark on the run and attempting to overwrite his brain to keep everyone’s secrets out of the hands of Norman Osborn. Yes, an honest to goodness great Event tie-in arc. It’s a rare thing.

We were quite happy with the  Christopher Cantwell/Cafu run. Tony Stark chases Korvac into outer space and meditates on the nature of godhood, good intentions and addictions. Lots of character work and action.

Crime and Punisher-ment

Punisher: Circle of Blood   Punisher: The Resurrection of Ma Gnucci  Punisher

The Marvel Punisher Sale runs through Monday, 6/29.

Gosh, you’d think Frank Castle had been on streaming or something…

First, the “general audience” Punisher:

  • The Punisher ’87-’95 – Note that the first Epic Collection here collects the ’86 Steven Grant/Mike Zeck Circle of Blood mini-series that kicked off the Punisher’s rise to prominence. Yes, Whilce Portacio drew Punisher before X-Men
  • Punisher War Journal ’88-’95 – This volume is notable for the Carl Potts / Jim Lee work. Yes, Jim Lee drew Punisher War Journal before X-Men.
  • Punisher War Zone ’92-’95 – Yes, Frank Castle was holding down three titles/month in the early ’90s! Collected here are a pair of Chuck Dixon tales with John Buscema and Joe Kubert as the respective artists.
  • Punisher War Journal ’06-’09 – Probably best known for Matt Fraction and Ariel Olivetti
  • Punisher ’00 – Garth Ennis / Steve Dillon; Collects the immortal “Welcome Back, Frank”
  • Punisher: The Resurrection of Ma Gnucci (Punisher War Zone) ’08-’09 – Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon team for a sequel to Welcome Back, Frank
  • Punisher ’09-’10 – The Rick Remender run, for which the third volume is Franken-Castle
  • The Punisher ’11-’12 – The Greg Rucka / Marco Checchetto (now more associated with Daredevil) run
  • The Punisher ’14-15 – Nathan Edmondson / Mitch Gerads. Yes, Mitch Gerards as in Mister Miracle and Sheriff of Babylon
  • The Punisher ’16-18 – Starts out with Becky Cloonan / Steve Dillon
  • The Punisher ’18-’19 – Matthew Rosenberg / Szymon Kudranski
  • Punisher ’22-’23 – Jason Aaron / Jesus Saiz / Paul Azaceta
  • Punisher War Journal ’22-’23Torunn GrØnbekk / Djibril Morissette-Phan

What’s good? Actually, we like the original Marvel Super Action magazine version by Archie Goodwin and Tony DeZuniga, but that’s not on the menu.

Our favorite run of the above is probably the Ennis/Dillon “Welcome Back, Frank.” We also were pretty fond of the Rucka / Checchetto run when it was coming out. It’s also worth going back and seeing where all the fuss started with the Grant/Zeck mini and the Baron/Janson/Portacio ongoing.

Then there’s the Max line. “Mature Readers” Punisher, if you will.

Punisher Max: The Complete Collection is the ’04-’09 run that’s most associated with Garth Ennis returning to the character (with art by Darick Robertson, Leandro Fernendez, Doug Braithwaite and Goran Parlov, among others). This is Ennis doing the serious Punisher, as opposed to the hilarity of Welcome Back, Frank. Mike Benson, Victor Gischler and Jason Aaron pop up at the end of the run. There’s also an omnibus available.

Ultimate… Everything?

Ultimate Spider-Man The Ultimates Ultimate Black Panther

The  Marvel Ultimate Universe Sale runs through Monday 6/29.

Yes, this is pretty much EVERYTHING Ultimate – old and new universes. Perhaps it’s less clunky if we break this into segments?

The New Ultimate Universe

The setup for the new Ultimate Universe is Ultimate Invasion by Jonathan Hickman & Bryan Hitch. The original Ultimate Universe was destroyed, but not everyone from that dimension was destroyed. Miles Morales survived and moved over the “616” or main Marvel universe. As did Reed Richards… except the Ultimate Reed Richards went bad and has been calling himself “The Maker.” That’s the setup before Invasion where The Maker escapes captivity, escapes into the multiverse and causes the origins of a new world’s heroes not to happen. Peter Parker is never bitten by a radioactive spider for instance. He’s just a photographer with a family by the time this series hits and this sets up the new line of titles.

Ultimate Spider-Man is a definite contender for the best thing Marvel’s putting out right now and we’re big on Ultimates, too.

Ultimate Spider-Man

Ultimate Spider-Man   Ultimate Comics Spider-Man   Ultimate Comics Spider-Man: Death of Spider-Man Fallout

This is the original Brian Bendis/Mark Bagley Ultimate Spider-Man. The first Ultimate title and (along with Daredevil) what originally made Bendis his reputation at Marvel.  And it’s a good run, too. Afterwards… enter Miles Morales, who’s become celebrated in his own right.

Ultimate X-Men

Ultimate X-Men  Ultimate Comics X-Men

Over on the mutant side of the street, the spread looks like this:

The original Ultimate X-Men run has a very interesting writer rotation. Mark Millar begins and ends it. In between are runs by Brian K. Vaughan (Saga / Y – The Last Man) and Robert Kirkman (Walking Dead). The artist rotation includes Adam Kubert, Andy Kubert, Chris Bachalo, David Finch, Brandon Peterson, Stuart Immonen, Tom Raney and Salvador Larocca… among others.

Ultimate Comics X-Men was written first by Nick Spencer and later Brian Wood. Artists included Paco Medina, Carlo Barberi, Mahmud Asrar and Alvaro Martinez.

The Ultimates, Ultimate FF and the greater Ultimate Universe

Ultimates Ultimate Fantastic Four Ultimate Comics - The Ultimates

There a bit more to the sale, but that’s the bulk of the highlights. What’s good? The Millar/Hitch Ultimates are hugely influential (especially to the film world). Ultimate FF absolutely has it’s moments. Not everybody realizes that the Marvel Zombies debuted in V. 3 (omnibus version) and are not played for laughs.  Now, we don’t often issue “avoid” warnings around here, but there are a couple things here that we’ll advise against. The Orson Scott Card Ultimate Iron Man? Don’t bother. It’s awful. Ultimatum? Nope! That very nearly killed the line. There are MUCH better things to read in this imprint than those two.

Red… Like a Valentine

Red Hulk Scorched Earth  Fall of the Hulks - Red Hulk  U.S.Avengers

The Marvel Red Hulk sale runs through Monday 6/29.

The main title is the ’08 – ’13 Hulk series. 17 years after the series launched, we’ll risk the spoiler of the opening arc and say this is where Thunderbolt Ross becomes the Red Hulk. (There’s also an Epic Collection available.)

You might want to add Fall of the Hulks: Red Hulk and read it before you get to issue #18. It’s part of the larger “Fall of the Hulks” event that’s not totally collected in the Hulk series. This is by Jeff Parker and Carlos Rodrigues.

After Loeb leaves, Jeff Parker takes over writing and we actually prefer the Parker take on the character. The artists move around a little (it’s that era of Marvel) but Gabriel Hardman / Patrick Zircher / Dale Eaglesham is a pretty good rotation. (And you should have a look at Zircher’s Solomon Kane over in the recent Savage Sword of Conan.)

The more recent title is Red Hulk by Benjamin Percy &Geoff Shaw.

The Hela You Say…

Thor Modern Epic Collection  Journey Into Mystery  Thor Epic Collection: The Fall Of Asgard

The Marvel Hela Sale runs through Monday, 6/29

Hela as in Marvel’s version of Hel, the Norse goddess of death. What we have here is largely a set of Thor collections (a ton of those between this sale and the Pride sale).

Some highlights:

Living in the Past

X-Factor  X-Force  X-Factor by Peter David

The Marvel X-Men ’97 Sale runs through Monday, 6/29.

This… is perhaps a misnamed sale. X-Men ’97 is a continuation of the ’90s cartoon. In this sale we find everything for the ’24-’25 X-Factor by Mark Russell & Bob Quinn (which we liked) to the first adventures of The New Mutants from the early 80s. It’s worth browsing for your mutant fix.

Also of note:

Kitty’s Name Is Spelled Differently

The Marvel Pride Sale runs through Monday 6/29.

Unusual to see Marvel having a Pride Month sale and DC not. My, how the times are changing.

This is a wide-ranging sale and not everything in it is particularly Pride-centric (like every appearance of Hercules going back to the 60s). There’s a LOT of books here, so take a browse at your leisure. We’ll be pointing out some books that are a little more appropriate for the sale and are good reads.

Unannounced Sales

Cyberpunk 2077 Big City Dreams  My Friend Dahmer Homicidal Psycho Jungle Cat: A Calvin and Hobbes Collection

As always, it isn’t clear when the unannounced sales will end.

Looks like there’s an unannounced sale on Dark Horse’s Cyberpunk 2077. A video game adaptation with an interesting award to its credit.

The first five collections can be found here.

After which, the property went to the album format Dark Horse sometimes uses for titles with a higher bookstore profile, which are listed with the single issues:

There’s also The World of Cyberpunk 2077.

Masters of the Universe (otherwise known as He-Man) is still on sale.

Also on sale:

And have a look at the $5 and under page.

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Still on Sale

Comixology (at Amazon) Sales: Marvel’s Early Prime Day Omnibus / Epic Collection Sale

In this week’s Comixology (at Amazon) sales, Marvel hits Prime Day early with plenty of Omnibuses and Epic Collections. Plus, Calvin and Hobbes.

Where did the New Releases and Sale pages go?

(Disclosure: If you buy something we link to on our site, we may earn a commission.)

In case you’re having troubles with the new UIX (a LOT of people have been):

Marvel Celebrates Prime Day Early?

Spectacular Spider-Man By Dematteis & Buscema Omnibus  Avengers Omnibus  Wolverine Omnibus

OK… there’s a page for this sale, but it’s not the Deals page. It appears to be an early Prime Day sale (Prime Day is towards the end of the month). We have no idea at all how long this one is going to last, so this week we’re publishing early! (And you can guess how we were spending our evening.)

Here’s the Marvel Page in question.

[UPDATE: They put a Deals page link up, and it’s even less organized!]

All sorts of interesting things. Omnibuses, Epic Collections and everything in between. Looks like over 800 items. Kind of a June holiday sale, really. You’ll want to browse through it at some point, but let’s try to put some order to Amazon listings chaos:

Omnibuses

Starting at $11.99

Epic Collections

Starting at $5.99

Masterworks

Starting at $5.99

Plenty more comics, including a lot of “regular” collections if you care to browse.

Unannounced Sales

The Indispensable Calvin and Hobbes: A Calvin and Hobbes Treasury Masters of the Universe: Revelation DC Encyclopedia New Edition

As always, it isn’t clear when the unannounced sales will end.

Masters of the Universe (otherwise known as He-Man)

Dark Horse still has a big block of Brian Bendis titles on sale. Jinxworld, if you prefer. Let’s hit the numbers first:

We encourage you to give the crime/thriller work of Bendis a look. Scarlet has gotten more relevant since it came out and Goldfish is really what got him started. Yes, he got famous doing capes, but he’s a Mamet guy at the end of the day.

Also on sale:

And have a look at the $5 and under page.

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Still on Sale