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Ennis Garth

Battlefields HC

Dynamite Entertainment

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Product Details

  • ISBN13: 9781606900796
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Description

Late summer, 1942. As the German army smashes deep into Soviet Russia and the defenders of the Motherland retreat in disarray, a new bomber squadron arrives at a Russian forward airbase. Its crews will fly flimsy wooden biplanes on lethal night missions over German lines, risking fiery death as they fling themselves against the invader- but for these pilots, the consequences of capture will be even worse. For the pilots of the 599th Night Bomber Regiment are women. In the deadly skies of the Eastern front, they will become a legend- known, to friend and foe alike, as the Night Witches. Dynamite presents the first stories of the acclaimed Battlefields series in one massive, oversized hardcover - Night Witches, Dear Billy, and Tankies. This edition features some ever-so-slight tweaks the creators have meticulously restored, plus bonus art material including a complete cover gallery and a special look at the making of the stories.

Customer Reviews

The War Reflected Through Blemishes - the closest thing we have to Reality
Battlefields, a collection of three miniseries perhaps best described by other reviewers here and not by the editorial itself, is one of the most harrowing displays of graphic novel depictions showcasing WW2. The first one I had the luxury of reading was Dear Billy, which depicted the account of a nurse that had been raped, shot and left for dead by the advancing Japanese. This was followed by Night Witches, which tales the story of female pilots on the Russian front and what they encountered, and finally The Tankies. Each of these is a great story and something that deserves your time because of how well it was written. Honestly, I have loved a lot of World War 2 tales that ranged from ghosts leading tanks into battle to Sgt. Rock and his exploits. Still, I had never seen something that showcased the pain that existed in that hail of bullet and bodies like Battlefields has.

As far as the stories go, I really found myself drawn in by Dear Billy. It follows a woman by the name of Carrie, who finds herself considered "one of the lucky ones" because she didn't die on some foreign in a blaze of automatic gunfire. The pictures depicting this moment are heart wrenching, too, because you see everything that can cut a person in two: there is the blood rolling down trembling legs as they are marched into the ocean with the knowledge that they are going to their deaths, and you could see every led singularity as they tear into more than flesh. "Lucky" for Carrie is the fact that she is discovered by a scouting expedition that takes time to bring her in, however, and recovery leads to her finding someone to love amidst all that blood and chaos. Recovery is an odd word, however, and placed into the backdrop of warfare it can have outcomes that become blurred and muggy and, most of all, hard to truly define.

Out of all of the tales here, this was perhaps the most touching and the most heartbreaking for anyone reading along because you - the reader - really found yourself feeling for Carrie. You see the events that sculpt her and you see the events that threaten to destroy everything she is. You also see the spectrum of emotions that she has, the love and the loathing that exist in the same framework, and it all cries out distinctly. This makes her more than just a cardboard imitation of life but was instead someone you wanted to like and understood whenever she acted - even if her actions were a bit drastic here and there, it was all understandable. From angel with a halo to person haunted by the complexities of the human psyche, I honestly thought that breaking was the easiest part of the tale for her to live with.
And I normally have a heart of stone when it comes to characters, too, so this was a rarity for me.

Night Witches was a great tale as well, and mainly because it dealt with something I was not accustomed to. People hear tales about pilots and what they did, but female pilots taking on Nazis? That is rare to here - and rarer still when those pilots have something to say and things to give. I enjoyed this - it was not Dear Billy but comparing the two is not really fair. And The Tankies took a look at armor as it rolled across the battlefield and saw so many different things, and it was faced with the adversities that exist outside of the constructed box we like to think of as warfare. In a lot of ways I suppose that was the whole point to all of these tales, too, making us think of this generations in terms that dismissed the greatest generation and simply made them human in our eyes. We see the fear that existed there as one person tries to replace another person after something horrible happens, and we see a lot more of the human spectrum played out in this somewhat overlooked theatre of combat.

Closing, I say you should buy this and enjoy the well-constructed stories here. Dynamite has done a great job - is continuing to do a great job because there are new tales coming out as well (so pick them up!) - and you would do yourself a great service by picking up these gems. I love the fact that there are more words than explosions, that the things that happen make you think about just what you would do if placed in that situation, and because they defy convention. It is amazing work and will amaze you - you really need these if only to read them and say "I have seen the struggles on a personal level now." After Dear Billy, I will never look at the conventional war love story the same. You should read it and see just how much it impacts your way of thinking as well.

A Direct Hit!
Battlefields is Garth Ennis' welcome return to World War II. His fabulous "War Stories" volume 1 and 2, published under DC's Vertigo imprint, revived a noble topic for graphic art: the Second World War. This is truly "superheroic" courage.

Battlefields offers three distinct vignettes, completely separate from each other. "Night Witches" depicts the savage combat on the Eastern Front. No other warfare in human history is as gruesome and intense as that waged in Russia by the Nazis. The first mass killings of Jews occurred there. Enslavement, starvation and genocide were outright aims of the Nazi invader.

The Russian resistance to the German-Nazi onslaught is truly mindboggling. 20-25 million dead soldiers and civilians. A colossal 25 million men and women mobilized for combat. By comparison, America fielded 14.9 million combatants over the course of the war.

Defending Leningrad during a nearly 3 year siege cost the Soviets 900,00 lives. Or more lives than ALL of America's wars combined; from the Revolutionary War to the War of 1812 to the Civil War, Spanish-American War, WWI, WWII, Korea, Viet Nam, Gulf Wars I & II. That statistic is for just ONE Russian city.

Ennis' other features, about a physically and mentally damaged nurse and of a British tank crew in the bocage country, are well written and excellently drawn.

I hope Garth Ennis recruits legendary combat artists Sam Glanzman (The Haunted Tank, A Sailor's Story) and Russ Heath (the greatest of ALL combat artists and a collaborator with Ennis on Enemy Ace: War In Heaven).

To truly convey the global nature of WWII, Ennis should feature stories of the other allies, especially Britain's colonial subjects.
A classic collection of WWII stories
This is a really good collection. Night Witches, Dear Billy & The Tankies are really good WWII stories. Night Witches is interesting and quite brutal at times. Dear Billy is the best of the 3 stories with a strong poignant story at its heart. The Tankies is a good story but probably the weakest of the 3 simply because there's no main character and feels a bit like The Longest Day. There's a lot going on but not enough being shown. Possibly needed more issues to delve more into this area. Overall this book is well worth a read for any Ennis or WWII story fan.
Ennis' best work in years.
Garth Ennis is a writer of two modes: on the one hand, there is the bitter grouse who resent the pre-eminence of the superhero genre in comics and takes every opportunity to make known his dislike of them (except Superman) whenever he writes their comics, or comics mocking them (ha ha, remember the time Kyle Rayner was drugged and molested by Bueno Excellente?); on the other hand, there is the Garth Ennis who writes things like the "Battlefields" series of miniseries for Dynamite (one of the numerous small publishing labels that largely subsists on creator-owned projects), where he shows his tremendous talent for writing interesting stories. This hardcover collection brings all three "Battlefields" miniseries together in a single package, a great value (and, indeed, it's rare enough for material published by indie companies to get such treatment). Some spoilers follow.

"Night Witches" (illustrated by Russ Braun), the first of the three "Battlefields" miniseries (the original run, anyway; a second set of three has been ordered, including a sequel to "Night Witches"), takes place on the Russian front (the lone of the original three with not a Brit in sight). This was, almost without question, the most brutal front of the war. Armies numbering in the millions clashed in a war of extermination, with civilians squarely in the line of fire and the weather frequently as big an enemy as any bomb. The title characters are the female Russian pilots recruited to fly semi-obsolete aircraft on dangerous night bombing runs. The main characters are Captain Anna Kharkova and Kurt Graf, a young German soldier whose units travels across Russia, ending up in Stalingrad in winter. Dramatic logic dictates that Anna and Kurt must cross paths at some point, which will put Kurt in the crucible. And there, Ennis being Ennis, he introduces a particularly brutal turn of events that avoids the easy of way of ending such a story.

"Dear Billy" (illustrated by Peter Snejbjerg) is the story of Carrie Sutton, an English girl whose longing to see the Orient led to her taking a job as a nurse in Singapore - this turns out to have been a spectacularly bad idea, as the year is 1942, and she finds herself smack dab in the middle of one of the greatest debacles in British imperial history. Fleeing Singapore following General Percival's surrender to the Japanese invasion force, she and her fellow nurses are intercepted, gang-raped, and then machine-gunned and left for dead in the waters. The sole survivor, Carrie is rescued by a passing RAF flying boat, and ends up working at a hospital in Calcutta, keeping the details of her rape a secret from everyone else. She enters into a romantic relationship with the titular Billy, a pilot who ends up in the hospital before rejoining the front. But when Japanese POWs begin arriving at the hospital for treatment, Carrie embarks on a bloody course of action.

For "The Tankies" (illustrated by Carlos Ezquerra), he has chosen to give us an in-depth look at the men of Britain's armoured regiments. The story begins with a text prologue establishing the setting in Normandy, a detail that the previous two series didn't bother with for whatever reason (odd, given that this would be the theatre most familiar to readers). As the Anglo-Canadian forces hammer through bocage country to reach Caen, Britain's fleets of Churchill and Sherman tanks grapple with the superior German armour and deadly anti-tank guns. After one tank commander is gorily decapitated, one Corporal Stiles is assigned to take over his command temporarily, and leads the lost tank in search of its fellows (who have, unbeknownst to them, had a bad encounter with a Tiger). All the while, various other dramas play out with the infantry the tanks are meant to be supporting, and at the command post.

Of these three stories, my favourite by far was "Dear Billy", one of the strongest things that Ennis has ever written. His main character, Carrie, is poignantly realized, communicating quite a bit about the difficult plight of women in a war zone, and how social mores prevent her from getting the kind of help that she needs. More broadly, he addresses the question of how anyone can really manage to put aside the kinds of things that are done in war in order to make the peace work. "Night Witches" rivals "Dear Billy" for bleakness, and gives us a similarly credible female protagonist, as well as a nicely-rendered German soldier in Kurt. Its somewhat choppier structure marks it a bit lower than "Dear Billy" - alone of the three, it feels like it could have been at least an issue longer. "The Tankies" is the least of the three; a competent rendition of the difficulties of the tank corps, but it is a lot ropier in its plot, and doesn't have a central character to match Carrie or Anna.

Overall, an excellent collection.

Back To Brooklyn Volume 1

Image Comics

List Price: $14.99
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Description

The controversial, over-the-top crime-thriller, Back to Brooklyn, is finally collected! Big Bob Saetta made the biggest mistake of his life by pissing off his brother, one of the biggest and most brutal crime bosses in New York City. This is the story of two brothers at war, wrapped in a special package of extreme language and hardcore violence. Join award-winning writer Garth Ennis (Preacher, The Punisher), Jimmy Palmiotti (Jonah Hex, Painkiller Jane), and artist Mihailo Vukelic on an adrenaline ride that rips the roof off Brooklyn's criminal underworld!

Customer Reviews

Good entertainment
Like the majority of Garth Ennis' writing, it's a page turner. Don't buy it if you are looking for some sort of enlightenment on the human condition. Just some very solid, very violent, entertainment. My only small complaint would be the references to Sariavo and Robert E. Lee. None of the characters in this story strike me as people with a likely interest in world politics or history. Those two references took me out of the story a bit. Still, a very solid read.
This is the reason I love comics!
Having loved The Pro, which also teamed up Ennis and Palmiotti, I knew I had to check out Back to Brooklyn. Turns out this was a good move on my part.

This book has it all; great dialogue, great story and a great amount of violence. Don't take that violence part the wrong way though. This story is smart and has a couple of excellent twists and turns to keep both comic fans and non-comic fans thoroughly entertained from the first issue until the last.

Additionally, after you're done with the comic, there are a pair of articles penned by Palmiotti entitled "What Brooklyn Did to Me." The brutal honesty of these articles are as enjoyable as the comic itself.

If you're looking for a great read and want to know that you're purchasing a book you'll read on more than one occasion, this is the book for you. In case you couldn't tell, I strongly suggest Back to Brooklyn!
Back to Brook-hell-yn
Bob Saetta would like to make a deal with cops and feds, meaning by that selling his whole mafia family. But his big brother, Paul the Wall, call him to say hello (and that he has Bob's wife and son), the young Saetta asks a week-end to get his family back. Cops and feds accept but still wonder why Bob xould sell his Family ?

Back to Brooklyn is a hardcore thriller about mafias in Brooklyn. It's also a love declaration from Palmiotti to his neighboorhood even if it's a special one, covered in blood. But actually, Back to brooklyn is about payback of course but also about love, fidelity, loyalty, and what you're ready to accept in the name of those.

So if bloodbaths don't scare you (ah, by the way, Mihailo Vukevic's art si really superb) and you like dark thriller, then don't hesitate and buy this book, you won't regret it.
Awesome
This is a sweet read. I don't even know comics all that well but I came across this cool book and just read it cover to cover. It was intense! Really cool story. Great bad guys. Great set up and all around fun read. Big recommend.
Wildly entertaining story!!!
I love those good stories that use NYC as a backdrop when done right. Most times, people who guess at what NYC is come off as forced and fake. With Back To Brooklyn, both Garth Ennis and Jimmy Palmiotti know what NYC is all about. This isn't a easy go lucky tale of a scorned family. This is a twisted family with an even more twisted tale. That's what is great about it. A clever tale using unique characters. Mihailo Vukelic's art gives you the gritty look you'd expect out of a tale like this. It was great to sit back and try to figure out where the story was headed. Pure fun!!!
Garth Ennis Dicks Volume 1

Avatar Press

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Description

Good lord, it's Garth Ennis and John McCrea, the creative team behind "Hitman", unleashing their sick, twisted minds and bringing to life Dougie and Ivor, the rotten scoundrels who fancy themselves private investigators known as the Dicks. This super-engorged trade paperback features the original four issue "Bigger Dicks" series, the totally depraved back-up stories, and also includes an all-new guide to the terms, words, and phrases that are used in the series so you can actually finally understand what the Hell is being said! Garth and John swear this book has assured their place next to the Dark Lord in the eternal flames of Hell, so c'mon and join the evil party! No semi-turgid comics here, just full-on, over-the-top, certain-to-offend-everyone humor that only these two bollockses could get away with!

Customer Reviews

Demented and delirious
It's no secret that Garth Ennis (Preacher, Punisher, Hitman, The Boys) has never been the most subtle when it comes to sick and twisted humor, and Dicks has it in spades. Dicks tells the incredibly vulgar adventures of wanna-be private detectives Ivor and Dougie: two Northern Ireland natives who hang with a motley crew and get themselves into all kinds of mayhem. Naturally, there is much vulgarity and release of bodily fluids, as any reader of Ennis would come to expect. Avatar Comics truly lets Ennis and artist John McCrea go wild with no restraints whatsoever. At the end of every issue, we are treated to single to double page spreads involving certain moments in history, and a charming girl named "Trio". Ennis knows how to shock and amuse at the same time, but there are plenty of times when it just feels like too much being thrown at the reader. This is helped by the black and white artwork of his longtime collaborator John McCrea, who manages to do his work free of consequence or restraint as well. As you can tell by now, Dicks is not for all tastes to be sure, and even some fans of Ennis' more sophisticated work may find this TPB to be too much as well. Despite that though, Dicks is a wonderful celebration of the uncensored comic form, from one of the most notably darkly humerous writers to ever grace the comic book medium.
If You Get Offended By This Book, Your DICKS
This is one of the wildest books I have ever read...EVER. I don't think I've ever read so many occurances of the "f" word, or laughed so hard, or out load, doing it. To say the content in this book is for mature readers is both true and false. I think it would be better to say: "for immature mature readers."
Dicks is the story of two lads from Belfast, Dougie and Ivor. After accidently killing his Uncle Shuggie, Ivor inherits his house, along with his problems. Mainly an order for moonshine to a mobster. Finding his uncle's recipe, he fills the order, and the mobster decides to continue buisness with Ivor. Needless, to say Shuggie's ghost, who shows up from time to time just to yell and curse, is not pleased.
Dougie moves in with Ivor after leaving his wife. Aside from the moonshine, Ivor gets it in his noggin that he wants to start a private detective buisness. They shall be called "The Dicks."
Dougie doesn't think this is such great idea, bringing up the point they have no experience, and they don't know how to find a case. Well, this is easily solved by way of a man at the front door with a knife in his back. He instructs our heros of secret meeting and dies.
At the meeting our heros stumple across a drug deal with THEM ending up with it. Ivor comes up with the idea to sell the drugs to the mobster, instead of the moonshine, not knowing they were the mobster's to begin with.
It should be noted that a good ninty percent of this book is written so that the characters speek in an Irish dialect, but it just adds to the charm. You quickly get accustomed to it. If there's something you don't understand, look in the back, a glossery is provided, along with probably the sickest pictures in the book.
This is definatly not a book for anyone who gets offended easily, or even not so easily. You have to just keep reminding yourself: "IT'S JUST A JOKE!" If it's true that everyone has a limit, "Dicks" aims to find it: either with the language, the art, "The History of Wanking," or maybe even with "Trio:The F-ing Whore" who can't help but take on three guys at once.
Yest, it is over the top. Yes, it is dis-tasteful. Yes, it is crude and vulgar...BUT THAT'S THE WHOLE POINT! It tries to find every button it can, and like that annoying little kid at the elevator, it just keeps pressing that button. I've never been a fan of the term "pushing the envelope," but this, my friends completely sherds and spits on it.
On the back of the book it says that this guarentees it's creaters Garth Ennis and John McCrea (The team that brought us Hitman from DC Comics) a place in hell, and if you read it you'll be sent there too. Well...I've read it, I loved it, I hope theres more some day. If that condems me to burn in a lake of fire, then I hope I get to meet those two.
Sick does not even begin to describe this tale...
... of two Northern Irish reprobates, Dougie and Ivor, who decide to become (hopeless) private detectives, and along with their friends Willy, Spence and Wanker, get into a hell of a lot more trouble than they bargained for, thanks to their acquaintance Big Billy, a mysterious man called Bell, and Ivor's ex-uncle (I say ex-uncle because he appears as a ghost... but you can find the details out for yourself).

I've never seen a comic so depraved. Then again, I've never seen a comic so funny! Excellent stuff, but definitely NOT for the easily offended.


fun and wicked!
garth ennis rocks!no other author,except neil gaimen and john irving,makes me feel all giddy inside when i read their books.ennis is hilarious and very creative when he comes up with jokes. read this wacked out tale of two best friends and explore the zaniness of ennis' world.
The Boys Volume 3: Good For The Soul Limited Edition HC

Dynamite Entertainment

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Price: $21.89
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Description

This volume collects issues #15-22 of The Boys by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson.

Customer Reviews

Terrible. Go re-read Preacher instead.
Is it the bad art, the sloppy writing, or the blithering, juvenile idiocy of the Fanboys that bugs me most about this series?

I'm going out on a limb and saying "all three". This is a book where the plot drives the characters, instead of the other way around. Nobody acts even remotely like humans act. Instead, they do silly, pointless things so that the book can leap from one vile, sexist, misogynist, homophobic, racist scene to another. Scenes of sex with dogs vie with pointless violence until anyone with any sort of humanity left in them at all will just say "enough already" and go find something better to do with their time.
Enjoyable for mature readers
Well written for the mature audience, not over the top in the violence or sexual scenes compared with Ennis' other title "Preacher" (also a very good read if you can handle the graphic nature).
Downward slide continues
The Boys Vol. 3: Good for the Soul

The Boys just haven't been the same since Book 1, Name of the Game. Moving the comic from DC to Dynamite seems to have reduced its quality and momentum noticebly, to the point where the wicked humor just feels forced and lifeless. There seems to be little overall vision to the tale; instead, a bunch of stuff happens.

The story is flat (few genuine shocks or surprises), the love stories go on and on, the dialogue is limp, and the art looks hastier and hastier. If I were Ennis, I'd just give this one up.
Back
After a so so second collection, this 3rd trade puts the Boys back on track. Especially with Robertson on full art duties. This collection really explains a lot about the Boys and the Seven and a bit of the history of Garth's anti superhero universe. Lots of cursing, sex and adult situations all around, so keep this one away from the kids. Things are getting good as the Boys get close to the halfway point of their projected run.
The Boys are at it again
Garth Ennis continues to write a funny, in your face, and imaginative collection. The concept of keeping over the top super heroes under control is good, but the way the concept develops gives it teeth. Robertson's art work is gritty enough to enhance the story, without being primitive. The match between artist and writer is nearly as good as the Ennis/Dillon match up in the Preacher series. While I give The Boys five stars, I would give the Preacher series six if I could. I highly recommend anything by Garth Ennis.
Battlefields Volume 5: The Firefly and His Majesty SC

Dynamite Entertainment

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Description

The Tankies' Sergeant Stiles returns, recently promoted and angrier than ever! He's got a new crew and a new tank - a Sherman Firefly with a high-velocity gun capable of taking out even the fearsome German Tiger. Too bad the enemy have a new tank of their own - the mighty King Tiger, with twice the armor and firepower of the original. As Stiles and his men join the Allied advance into the Nazi homeland, they soon realize that every inch of ground will be bitterly contested by the foe... and that there are worse horrors than Tigers lurking in the gloom of the last German winter. Reprinting issues #1-3, with a complete cover gallery.
The Boys Volume 1: The Name Of The Game Limited Edition HC

Dynamite Entertainment

List Price: $29.99
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Description

This is going to hurt! In a world where costumed heroes soar through the sky and masked vigilantes prowl the night, someone's got to make sure the "supes" don't get out of line. And someone will! Billy Butcher, Wee Hughie, Mother's Milk, The Frenchman, and The Female are The Boys: A CIA-backed team of very dangerous people, each one dedicated to the struggle against the most dangerous force on Earth - superpower! Some superheroes have to be watched. Some have to be controlled. And some of them, sometimes, need to be taken out of the picture. That's when you call in The Boys! Collecting the first six issues of the controversial series from Garth Ennis (Preacher) and artist Darick Robertson (Transmetropolitan)! This limited edition hardcover features an introduction by writer, actor, and producer Simon Pegg (Shaun of the Dead, Spaced) and over 50 pages of never-before-printed bonus materials!

Customer Reviews

Crass, ugly, and lazy. Odd that some folks consider these words compliments.
Some say The Boys is strictly for mature readers. More accurately, The Boys is strictly for extremely immature readers, just not kids. You know that in-between age where boys have seen their first pair of boobies in their first dirty magazine? That mean age where snuffing out frogs and anthills with firecrackers and magnifying glasses is the height of hilarity? That disillusioned age where "antihero" may not have entered their vocabulary, but all the same they decided they like Vegeta better than Goku, Wolverine better than Superman, Lobo better than Wolverine? That's the maturity level best-suited to appreciate The Boys.

I rank Garth Ennis' Preacher as a masterpiece of the medium, thus it's disappointing that as years pass, Ennis has become content to lazily snipe at the low-hanging fruit. This series presents the misadventures of a covert team of operatives that police the superhero community, and while Ennis and his fans preen The Boys as a testosterone-fueled polemic with a bold lack of inhibitions, the execution is actually rather like a baby-in-a-microwave joke: a fourteen-year-old kid might be delighted by its "shocking" cruelty and "twisted" humor, but grown-ups just find it stupid in its one-note crudeness.

The Boys sticks to the basic formula one has come to expect of the "British Comics Invasion". We get iconic superheroes depicted as sociopathic sexual deviants. We get a sophomoric straw-manning of the evil conspiracy known as the American government. And we get lots of swearing, bodily-function humor, and exploding flesh, all of which serves as a substitute for compelling storytelling or engaging characters. It's a dusty well that's been drained relentlessly by the likes of Wanted, The Authority, Top 10, The Ultimates, and many derivative works penned by authors who claim to hate the complacency of the supehero genre, but themselves can't seem to defy the inexorable gravity of cranking out yet another by-the-numbers Superman or Batman pastiche.

Perhaps that's the one true insight that The Boys has to offer amidst its unremittingly mean-spirited uglyness: the hypocrasy of it all. For all the hatred that the British Billy Butcher and his crew have for the spandex-donning degenerate yanks of Ennis' lampooniverse, they're every bit as unlikable and deserving of contempt. There's nobody worth rooting for, nothing worthwhile at the heart of all of the nastiness.

If you're still on the fence, if the weight of all the five-star rave reviews are tempting you to doubt my words, then use Look Inside feature to check out the very first line of dialogue in The Boys. It sums up the crass, ugly, and unclever nature of the entire series. Then when you're done, get your hands on Pat Mills' trade paperback, Marshall Law: Fear and Loathing. Based on a comic series published twenty years before The Boys, you'll have a firm grip on exactly how little Ennis' ups the ante.

One final nail in the coffin: 168 pages book does not warrant a hardcover edition.
Perhaps Super but barely Heroes
Superheroes - how wonderful are they, really? We see a man with a woman at a fairground, and their lips lock. It is a beautiful thing for the two of them, and you can sense that. Then two people rush in at speeds that are like lightning and the result is a man with two limbs still locked in his own, but with two lips crushed against a brick wall.

Apparently this is a problem that some people want dealt with and, apparently, they are willing to bring in some terrible souls. Enter "The Boys," a group that is a mixture of people with talents and isn't all Boys. They are good at what they do, have a deal of talent at taking down the people in spandex, and have a way of doing that. They also have a really odd habit of doing one other thing (left out for fear of spoiling) and I found that pretty.

In this first book we see some motive and some of the players, although some people don't get described until much later in the stories. That's fine, too, because this could go on for a while. I personally like the way this story takes off, with the style having a way of saying "this is what convention looks like and this is what is behind the ugly walls." The things heroes do to women, hurting them when having relations at parties, plus their other habits.

They are as vile as the man in charge suggests.

The start introduces a group to you as well, and shows you what they want. One person is brought onto the team and you expect handshakes and whatnot. Sadly, the hand is not the thing that is thought about and it shows you just how bad the good guy is.

This is not a kid's book but it is a book for people that love something sexy in its own right. Just like the people in spandex do, you should not. so don't underestimate the book , buying the things that show you a wardrobe full of fun styles in which superheroes live, breath through bubbling blood, and die.
Its a party and a half.
Took a chance and came out on top.
Never heard of the Boys, until another comic reader told me. Glad I took a chance and bought this graphic novel. Turned out to be one of best reads I've had in a while.
The Boys volume one
has interesting plot and great set up for what is an end that most people would not expect or be disappointed by it is a great start to a interesting comic series
So so so good
If you hate superhero comics
if you love garth ennis
if extreme violence makes you smile
BUY THIS BOOK

Ennis Garth News




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Garth Ennis' Battlefields: The Tankies #2by Chad Nevett Garth Ennis has carved out his own little niche of war comics, delivering interesting and engaging stories that aren't afraid to center on harsh truths or transcend accepted perceptions of the parties involved. They're usually quite good

Garth Ennis' Battlefields: Dear Billy - Comic Book Resources
Garth Ennis' Battlefields: Dear Billy can win – but you still might not get the things you truly want. A tale of romance and tragedy set during the savage conflict between the western allies and the Japanese, written by Garth Ennis (The Boys) and drawn by Peter Snejbjerg (Light Brigade).

'Wanted' Producers Pick Up Option To 'Dear Dracula' Comic
'Wanted' Producers Pick Up Option To 'Dear Dracula' Comic Other comic book properties currently housed at Kickstart include Garth Ennis' classic, extremely mature Vertigo series “Preacher,” as well as his current Dynamite series “The Boys.” They also have the rights to “The Red Star,” “Monster Attack Network

Pixar's 'Up' Launches Today — Here Are Comics' Five Best Aerial ...
Pixar's 'Up' Launches Today — Here Are Comics' Five Best Aerial ... DISHONORABLE MENTION - HEAVEN: As God's Holy Kingdom, Heaven is the host of an extraordinary amount of characters throughout the comic book kingdom, most notably in Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon's “Preacher.” Still, while it might have been a cool

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Garth Ennis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Garth Ennis on Seven Brothers, interview with Newsarama ... Garth Ennis Takes to the "Battlefields", Comic Book Resources, August 21, 2008 ...

The Continuity Pages: Garth Ennis
A study of works by Garth Ennis. Written by Julian Darius. ... The following are projects by Garth Ennis, a good Irish writer who can't resist ...

Garth Ennis
... series, this next chapter in Garth Ennis' wickedly funny tale about the ... Unless otherwise noted, all content on this site is © Garth Ennis. ...

Amazon.com Books Bestsellers: The most popular items in Ennis ...
Bestsellers in Ennis, Garth ... Preacher Vol. 8: All Hell's A-Coming by Garth Ennis, Steve Dillon ... Fear and Loathing by Garth Ennis (4 customer reviews) ...

Ennis, Garth - Literature & Fiction / Authors, A-Z / ( E ...
Buy Ennis, Garth Used Books, New Ennis, Garth Books ... Home / Literature & Fiction / Authors, A-Z / ( E ) / Ennis, Garth. Lists. Oprah's Book Club ...