What I’m reading… Yes, I just got back from Comic Carnival

I read a lot of times to escape.  I have chosen comic books and graphic novels  (you say tomato…) because I enjoy the artwork and the varied styles. Here’s what I picked up today, most of my comics picks are rated “Teen” so somewhere around a PG-13 movie (like those ratings really help).  Anything I’ve marked as “All Ages” are comics I’ll bring into my classroom.  I’ve removed some comics that are a bit much for most audiences could be because of themes, language, or violence.  If you are looking for comics for your classroom or your child, go into a comic shop and ask and read whatever you want to buy, because only you truly know what is acceptable in your family or classroom.  I’ll pick a few to elaborate on the story especially since a lot of what was in my stack are things that the average person would have no idea about.  The “LEGO Variant” comics just have a different cover depicting the character as a Lego minifig I may have only picked up the comic because of that.

The Ordinary People Change the World Series, while not specifically comics, I'm really excited to bring these into my classroom to inspire my students!
The Ordinary People Change the World Series, while not specifically comics, I’m really excited to bring these into my classroom to inspire my students!

Tiny Titans Return to the Treehouse #6 of 6 (All Ages) – I really hope this continues, it’s a great series for kids with lots of inside DCU jokes for adults.

Over the Garden Wall Special #1 (All Ages)

Rocket Raccoon #5 “I am Groot” this was my winner for most amusing read in the stack.

Gotham Academy #2

Green Lantern #36 (LEGO Variant Cover)

Grayson #4 (LEGO Variant Cover)

Detective Comics #36 (LEGO Variant Cover)

Action Comics #36 (LEGO Variant Cover)

Fiction Squad #2 of 6  Detective story in fairytale land I’d almost say all ages, but the way they draw some of the female characters… not so much

Atomic Robo Knights of the Golden Circle #5 of 5 Kinda all ages – the older kids at my school enjoyed borrowing the trades and reading about Nazi zombie robots fighting a robot built by Nikola Tesla

Little Nemo Return to Slumberland #2 (All Ages) The return to the world created by Winsor McCay- a beautiful book

Penny Dora and the Wishing Box #1 (All Ages)

Rasputin #1

The Fuse #7  Detectives on a ginormous space station

Birthright #2 A young boy disappears & returns as barbarian warrior – lots of flashbacks to his time in a fantasy realm.

The Mercenary Sea # 7 1930’s adventure in a submarine – interesting artwork.

Tüki # 2  Jeff Smith’s life of a cave man

Wayward #3

Imperial #4 of 4

Tech Jacket #5

Tooth & Claw #1 Start of a massive fantasy story with animal people (which seems to be a trend in some comics) great artwork, and intriguing premise.

Velvet #8 Love this book!  Moneypenny was a better spy than Bond.  

 

Quick Update November 9

OK just went through some of the basic pieces with the next round of “Secret, Ultimate, Final, Crisis War” being put out by Marvel and DC in the coming months… this is why I have stopped buying most “mainstream comics” I’m tired of investing time into a character just to have it squished in some marketing scheme to gain more readers.  I really appreciate the folks at Comic Carnival for guiding me to new and cool titles- so I missed out on a bunch of epic universe altering crossovers.  I’ve found some great titles where the creators are telling good stories.  Someone asked the question “Which is important Continuity or Story?”  If you are telling a good story, continuity should be a part of it.  If the writers are thinking about the future they might not try some of the silly over-hyped stories that paint them into a corner so they have to reboot to fix it.