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A superhero (also known as a "super hero" or "super-hero") is a fictional character "of unprecedented physical prowess dedicated to acts of derring-do in the public interest." [ 1 ] Since the debut of Superman in 1938 by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, stories of superheroes — ranging from brief episodic adventures to continuing years-long ...
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Written in 2005 for an early 2006 release to be published by iBooks, book was put into limbo by death of iBooks publisher Byron Preiss on July 9, 2005, and subsequent Chapter 7 bankruptcy of iBooks on February 22, 2006, until finally self-published by author in November 2020. Originally planned to be book one of JSA trilogy.
DC Comics is one of the largest comic book publishers in North America.DC has published comic books under a number of different imprints and corporate names. This is a list of all series, mini-series, limited series, one-shots and graphic novels published under the imprints DC or AA, and published by National Periodical Publications, National Comics Publications, All-American Comics, Inc ...
La Caste des Méta-Barons written by Alejandro Jodorowsky, artwork by Juan Gimenez; César and Jessica; Le Cycle de Cyann written by François Bourgeon; Dungeon written by Lewis Trondheim and Joann Sfar, drawn by Lewis Trondheim, Joann Sfar, Christopher Blain, Manu Larcenet, Phillipe Bercovici, Andréas, Blanquet, Boulet; Fanfoué des Pnottas ...
Lists of banned books; List of books written by children or teenagers; List of book titles taken from literature; List of books by year of publication; List of children's books made into feature films; List of Christian novels; List of comic books; Lists of dictionaries; Lists of encyclopedias; List of fantasy novels; List of gay male teen novels
In the April 1988 edition of Dragon (Issue #132), Jeff Grubb found that this book was "usable, fun and enjoyable." Grubb liked its completeness, "running the gamut from the funny-book heroes (Superman and Spider-Man) to the heroes of the pulps (Doc Savage and G-8), cartoons (Roger Ramjet and Fearless Fly), and legend and literature (Heracles and Tarzan)."
Some X-Books feature mutant superhero teams while others feature solo adventures of characters who became popular in Uncanny X-Men or another X-Book. Occasionally, X-Books use mutants as a metaphor for racial, religious and other minorities oppressed by society. For the purpose of this list, "X-Men Comics" will be defined by the following criteria: