Genres Books
Related Subjects: Superhero Comedy
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Used price: $37.50

so many lives touched ...Review Date: 2003-12-24
Book of the year.Review Date: 1999-08-29
Book of the year.Review Date: 1999-08-29
I haven't read it yet, but I know it's going to be excellentReview Date: 1999-12-22
Unique, inspiring - Revelation of Michael's MastershipReview Date: 1998-01-29

Used price: $5.50

PerfectReview Date: 2007-12-25
Two-fisted action, '40s styleReview Date: 2008-07-13
Milton Caniff had developed Steve Canyon shortly after WWII, and unlike his previous strip - Terry and the Pirates - he was able to assert more creative control over Canyon The collection of 1947 strips presents the first year or so of Steve Canyon's adventures. And "adventure" is the right word, because this was an adventure strip, focused on intrigue and action.
As Canyon is introduced, he is an ex-WWII fighter pilot who has now runs a struggling operation called Horizons Unlimited, which specializes in charter flights, particularly for moving cargo. His first client in the comic strip is the wealthy and beautiful Copper Calhoon, who like many of the characters, have rather unique names. Copper wants Canyon to fly her to her various properties, where she suspects shenanigans are going on. She's right. Like almost every woman in the strip, she also has a romantic interest in Canyon, who generally stays detached from any love affairs, though one woman will appear later in the year that he is attracted to.
Though this considered a classic strip - and it is well-drawn and written - it also is not at the top tier of the older comics. To me, the significant flaw is the occasional bits of silliness that distract from, rather than enhance, the storyline. Nowhere is this more obvious than the character of Happy Easter who can be annoying at times. Canyon himself is an okay character, but often bland compared to the characters around him. Overall, Steve Canyon the comic strip, at least in its first year, is a decent but not exceptional work.
A hard copy of the late fortiesReview Date: 2006-12-08
The post-war years had their special appeal, reflected in the visual arts - and especially Hollywood, with its Lauren Bacalls, Bette Davises, Katharine Hepburns, Agnes Mooreheads, Joan Crawfords, and scores of other individuals and femmes fatales, and the leading men of the time, and secondary characters and sidekicks - there is something about the visual style of the people, cars, planes, design and architecture of the time that is very pleasing. The look of those times is stunningly captured in Caniff's panels, little chiaroscuro masterpieces (Caniff was called the Rembrandt of cartooning), with the artist's own stable of femmes fatales, villains and supporting characters issuing from his imagination, complemented by gripping plots.
This Checker restoration is well-bound and well-printed on glossy paper, and the art comes through in delicious detail, though it is admittedly a little small, due to the need to fit enough of it on each page. The panels are all beautiful and some are masterpieces so detailed that it is worth looking at them with a magnifying glass. The balloons are very wordy, however, and crowd the art. The pacing and imaginativeness of the adventures is superb. There is more depth to the stories than one would find in any of the superhero comics past or present (possibly a very few exceptions nowadays). You will find strategy and planning, tactical execution to get out of situations, technical knowledge, plot twists, and very little deus ex machina. The femme fatales have distinct personalities; Caniff did not get them all from the same mould.
Obviously, one does not discuss matters of taste, but if the chiaroscuro renderings of a very special era by a recognized master appeals to you, then by all means get this hard copy of the late forties.
Caniff was such a master!Review Date: 2006-05-14
I want to give praise to the publishers of this book, too: Checkers. Some reprints of cartoons lately have gone to such lengths to present the strips in a large format that the cost of the volumes became prohibitive. Especially for people who aren't comicphiles. Checker has done a great job of presenting the cartoons in a crisp print that's readable and affordable. I can't want to get more editions!
Steve Canyon was a classic stripReview Date: 2005-08-22
All but a few years of Steve Canyon have already been reprinted, by Kitchen Sink, in the Menomonee Falls Gazette, in Comics Revue monthly, and in Carl Horak's Caniffites, but it is good to have the beginning of the strip back in print from Checker Books. Until his support of American troops in Vietnam lost him many of his readers, Milton Caniff was one of the most popular cartoonists in the world. His snappy dialog and interesting characters, especially his female characters, make his strips well worth seeking out.

Used price: $20.30

All Praise for Eileen SouthernReview Date: 2007-03-08
ExcellentReview Date: 2003-01-25
Kimberly :-)
Recensione in italianoReview Date: 2001-11-04
Personalmente non avrei molti dubbi: credo che l'opera più completa che esiste sul mercato e che associa alla competenza una buona leggibilità anche per chi non è di madre lingua sia proprio questo.
Eileen Southern è Professor Emerita di Musica e Studi Afro-americani alla Harvard University di Boston, fondatrice ed editrice della rivista The Black Perspective in Music, che è stata pubblicata dal 1973 al 1990, e autrice, coautrice ed editrice di numerosi volumi sulla musica e la cultura afroamericana.
Il libro in questione, di 678 pagine, ripercorre tutta la storia della musica afroamericana dalle origini (1619) fino all'ultimo decennio del XX secolo. L'opera è suddivisa in 14 capitoli ed è completata con un'accurata bibliografia e discografia e un indice dei nomi e dei temi.
Il linguaggio è piano e comprensibile anche a chi non abbia una quotidiana familiarità con l'americano scritto.
Il libro della Southern affronta tutti i diversi generi musicali dei neri americani, dal canto in congregazione alla musica urbana del primo ottocento, dai worksongs ai traveling road shows, dal blues al ragtime, ecc..
Il taglio critico trasversale, che analizza l'emergere della musica nera all'interno della più ampia realtà sociologica e culturale dell'America Settentrionale, consente di cogliere con chiarezza le fasi dell'evolversi della cultura afroamericana, non solo musicale. Si tratta di un'opera più descrittiva che interpretativa, in tal senso più adatta a chi, volendo avviare la propria conoscenza del fenomeno musicale afroamericano, non è interessato all'analisi del significato profondo della musica e dei testi e a conoscere i diversi modelli interpretativi proposti dagli studiosi.
Fondamentale!
Great source on the subject!Review Date: 2003-07-29
An invaluable reference work --Review Date: 2001-01-23
This 3rd edition was done in 1997, thus it is quite up-to-date in its coverage of classical, jazz, rock, pop, gospel, swing, ragtime or blues. If it is music as practiced, performed or composed by people of color, this is where you'll find valuable information about it. Beginning with Africa and continuing to the present day, the four sections detail this rich history: Song in a Strange Land (1619-1775); Let My People Go (1776-1865); Blow Ye the Trumpet (1865-1919) and Lift Every Voice (1920-1996). The latter section is particularly informative reading with sections on Jazz, The Harlem Renaissance, and the Mid-Century Decades. It is these years in which artists of color finally took their well-deserved place on the musical stages of the world. Of course, they had been visible in their own world, and the popularity of such major composers as Scott Joplin and Duke Ellington allowed them to more or less effortlessly cross-over to the 'white' world. Lena Horne, the Mills Brothers, Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway were--and still are--names to be reckoned with in any list of fabulous performers.
And then there was Marion Anderson who finally made her way to the Metropolitan Opera at the very end of her career, making way for Robert McFerrin, Leontyne Price, Jessye Norman, Simon Estes and George Shirley, who were very much pioneers in their respective repertoire. Today, thankfully, artists of color are not at all rare on the concert and/or opera stages of the world. But lest we forget the individual trauma these artists suffered in order to be able to compete in this way, we need to remember the past while we are glorying in the present. This book will, if you let it, open your mind and your ears to wonderful, glorious sounds, without which our world would be a much quieter and poorer place.
The author of this book is the renowned Eileen Southern (Professor Emerita of Music and Afro-American Studies at Harvard University) who is herself a musician as well as a writer, and is eminently qualified to illuminate The Music of Black Americans to the world in general.
Pages 613 through 646 comprise a rich bibliography and discography; the index takes up 41 pages. NO music lover should be without this invaluable reference work.

Used price: $0.32

Best Jazz Book EverReview Date: 2004-03-15
I even learned things I did not want to know about my idols. That is a must read book for anyone who has any warm corner in his heart for the "classical music of America."
A Jazzy Trip Down Memory LaneReview Date: 2003-05-21
The Father of all Music Festivals SpeaksReview Date: 2004-08-28
This is a very entertaining book for music lovers of all stripes but will have special significance for the jazz lover since George Wein is clearly a jazz lover and speaks the language. A great book.
JazzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzReview Date: 2003-07-17
From the "cat houses" of Storyville, to Newport society,Review Date: 2003-09-20
George knows the territory very well. As a teenage fan, very competent pianist and singer , jazz night club entreprenuer, and promoter of the "daddy" of the outdoor music festivals, "The Newport Jazz Festival", and oh yes, lecturer at Harvard, in his custom designed jazz course, dare anyone tell George anything about jazz, and the wonderful lunatics that people the jazz world?
Here is what it's like to do business with artists worshipped the world over, like Louis Armstrong, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Benny Goodman, Dizzy Gillespie, Woody Herman, Stan Kenton, Chet Baker, Count Basie, Stan Getz, Thelonious Monk, Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus. Space precludes naming them all. In addition to dealing with these "darlings", were the torrential rains at outdoor perfomances, political opposition from irrate townspeople, and the piece de resistance of booking concerts, other promoters dissapearing with George's money.
Maybe the presence of a natural built in Prozac machine kept George sane through this craziness, but I have another theory. His passion for the music. When you are hearing a Louis Armstrong, or a Charlie Parker and you truly "get it", there is something that goes beyond mere entertainment, or an expert improvisor. I can't even find adequate words to describe it, but when these men improvise on a popular song, it becomes like a classic solution to a philosophic, or mathematical theorum. It's hard to state the "problem" to be solved, but the true jazz fan knows that Louis, and Bird, and the other masters, came up with incredibly beautiful solutions night after night, year after year.
If you love jazz, and the artists, this book is a must.


CorrectionReview Date: 2001-05-25
(I) miss HarryReview Date: 2007-08-18
I Love HarryReview Date: 2000-01-20
SongwritersReview Date: 2002-03-08
Tom Evans and Pete Ham wrote "Without You."
Harry was an amazing talent. The world is worse off Without HIM. Enough said.
Nilsson did NOT lack focus!Review Date: 2002-02-09

Used price: $1.25

Pretty straightforward story on Evanescence ....Review Date: 2006-08-24
A must-have for the die-hard fans.
PICTURES ARE WORTH MORE THAN THOUSANDS OF WORDS. Review Date: 2006-06-28
Excellent bookReview Date: 2005-08-31
Great BookReview Date: 2005-01-07
Something for everyone!Review Date: 2005-01-16
I'm a knowledgeable fan of Evanescence I was very happy to find a few tidbits here and there I didn't know already. If you're like me, you're tired of reading/hearing "Ben and Amy met at summer camp" and "Bring Me To Life is about this" etc. The book had some great light reading covering the bands humble beginnings all the way thru the last stop of their tour. It's very easy to read and the pictures included are quite nice. I was hoping for some rare images, maybe like some early photos of Ben, Amy and David but no luck there. Most of the photos are recents, in black and white and a few color photos are thrown into the middle of the book.
My favorite part was the timeline in the back. Here the reader can see specific albums, track listings, locations of shows etc. Pick this book up if you like Evanescence, it's like having your own Evanescence scrapbook.

Used price: $12.76

Beautifully written and illustratedReview Date: 2003-11-16
Music to my eyes....Review Date: 2003-10-28
The Orchestra, The Orchestra!Review Date: 2003-10-23
My 7 year old's FAVORITE book!Review Date: 2003-10-30
A Thunderous Applause!Review Date: 2003-10-28


Shadow Scourge: Facts or fictionReview Date: 2000-05-19
I cannot describe the total uniqueness in these novels. While most future books are man books straight sci-fi, this isnt. If you look at a catagory this book is in in the store its catagory is Western/Men's Adventure. Yet this book had fantasy, humor, facts, sociology, history, romance, friendship, drama and BRILLIANT storyline. Everything is in these books that anyone could want to read about. Therefore it isn't western or men's adventure.
In this particular book, the group journey to South America where they encounter the descendents of the Mayan Empire that headed south after their descendants were murdered by Hernan Cortes. Their culture is still the same after 700 years. These characters which take place 200 years into the future expierience things not seen in 500 years. Anyone into history would enjoy this book.
Also, In other comments you hear about vampires and this and that. Im not a fan for vampires but they play a small part in it. Anyone that likes horror would like this.
Anyone into romance, friendships, tension, aliens. you name it, its in this book as well as all the Outlanders Series.
The author is very intelligent and thats no lie.
Despite what the author thought....Review Date: 2000-05-18
Sure, it was more combat oriented than most of the previous novels and there was a creature that may or may not have been a vampire, but the rest of the novel more than made up for that.
The story centered more around Brigid and Dafore. It was great to see these two characters getting more attention than ever and learning more about the medic from the Cerberus redoubt. That alone makes the novel worth while picking up.
Then there is the scientific explination on the swampies, as well as the vampire family from Bloodlines, and a re-visit to South America and the natives that were encountered in Emerald Fire.
I was told that Science Fiction and Horror do not mix. Sometimes it's true, other times, take the Alien movie series, it works. As long as the writer takes the time to explain things, it will always work out.
And there is an added bonus that we learn more about the Magistrate training as well as what happened to the installation where the Aurora crashed in Armageddon Axis.
Worth while reading folks!
Creeped outReview Date: 2000-05-11
Surprisingly scaryReview Date: 2000-06-06
Deviltry and derring-doReview Date: 2000-06-13

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Masterful StorytellingReview Date: 2004-08-24
Even though I read Nightmare Passage several years ago and liked it, I am angry with Gold Eagle for what seems like the "Deathlandization" of Outlanders with the two very substandard entries by another writer over the last year.
But Mask Of The Sphinx is a truly excellent book with vivid, vibrant characters, a great storyline and an exotic locale full of mystery and intrigue. Quite fortunately, the Cerberus heroes--who I buy the series to read about, not substitutes, take note, Gold Eagle!--are back in full character. I enjoyed seeing everyone getting out into the field.
The jumping-off point for the plot deals with helping Quavell, the pregnant hybrid who has been living in Cerberus for quite some time, and who oddly, wasn't mentioned as even existing in what I read of the previous book, Sun Lord.
It was a nice change to see the characters embarking on a mission that was basically benign for once...even though circumstances changed pretty quickly--as usual!.
It was also interesting to see Kane forced to exercise his new diplomat's muscles, particularly when he comes face-to-face with an old enemy--who actually shows she's not quite as one-dimensionally evil as the Cerberus warriors thought.
Although Mask Of The Sphinx won't make my top five favorite novels in the series, it's still a masterful piece of adventure storytelling, full of all the qualities that have made Outlanders so praiseworthy over the years.
This reads like The Mummy meets The Outlanders!Review Date: 2004-08-10
Why cannot Hollywood turn this series into a major motion picture, which has multiple, endless sequels, is beyond me.
Very cool indeed!Review Date: 2004-08-12
All the cool and competent characters we know are back and no "liberties" are taken with them.
The Cerberus crew find a city modeled after ancient Egypt hidden in the California desert, ruled over by a babecilious telepathic queen. There's a revolution going on and she wants the help of both the Cerberus crew and the forces of Sam the imperator to defeat it. The reader never knows if she's playing one side off against the other to gain her own ends.
And when mutants patterned after Egyptian gods show up as well as walking mummies--Yeesh!
'Mask of the Sphinx' is one very cool book!
The biggest problem - I couldn't put down!Review Date: 2004-10-15
The heart and soul of Outlanders returnsReview Date: 2004-08-17
I don't think "Sphinx" is one of the top ten of the series but at least it doesn't seem like it takes place in an alternative reality as in the previous book and that earns it a lot of points as far as I'm concerned.
The threads of continuity as woven by Mark Ellis has been one of the more enjoyable points of reading Outlanders for all these years. It's always enjoyable to find the recurrence of locales, good guys and bad guys from the past. In "Mask Of The Sphinx", we have a couple of returnees.
It was also great to find that the plot basically revolved around Quavell, the pregnant hybrid who has been a resident of the Cerberus redoubt for a couple of years at this point--but who was mysteriously missing from "Sun Lord".
"Mask of The Sphinx" also had enough mayhem to satisfy action fans, but without the gross misogyny so often used in this genre, particularly by the fill-in author "Sun Lord".
All the female characters are portrayed as multi-dimensional, suprisingly even a returning one who up to this point was depicted as a scheming, narcissistic witch.
There are no bimbos or sluts in "Mask of The Sphinx", only intelligent women who the reader has to decide are good, bad or somewhere in between.
I won't give the details away, but "Mask of The Sphinx" works on every level, from fast-paced adventure, violence, suspense, mystery, vivid characterizations and most importantly--the heart and soul of the Outlanders series has been returned to it.


Excellent!!!!!Review Date: 2007-09-25
Another WinnerReview Date: 2007-09-17
The action throughout the book is varied and exciting. Giant battles against hopeless odds with high tech weaponry? Yup. Up close and personal battles with nothing but primative tools? Yeah, that too. Beautiful princesses, ancient civilization, high technology disguised as artifacts... it's all there.
I am being deliberately vague, because there are just too many fun surprises for me to spoil them here. Suffice to say, the book is high adventure at its finest and stands proudly with other classics of the series like Tomb of Time and Mad God's Wrath.
A rousing adventure!Review Date: 2007-05-28
The Cerberus warriors team up with an old enemy to face down Overlord Nergal. In the process the reader is introduced to the newly formed Cerberus Away Teams and goes on a vivid and colorful trek through the Amazon rain forest.
As always, Mark Ellis mixes myth with real history with sharp characterization to make a very memorable book. Highly recommended.
Skull ThroneReview Date: 2007-09-11
One of the best novels in the history of the series!Review Date: 2007-06-11
I love the "Cerberus crew" of Kane, Brigid and Grant and the entire supporting cast of Domi, Lakesh, Philboyd and now the Cerberus Away Teams. Being able to visit with old friends and be introduced to new ones makes Skull Throne an exceptionally enjoyable book.
The humor between the lead characters, the camaradrie and the fact that they get on each other's nerves lifts them from being one dimensional cut-outs to fully realized portraits---larger than life of course, because they're so heroic but they still have ordinary concerns.
The explanation put forth by Mark Ellis about the true nature of the mysterious crystal skulls as well as the fate of Colonel Fawcett all those years ago in the Amazonian jungle is both original and amusing.
I also was gratified by the return of Sindri, who we haven't seen in several years...and he's just as cunning and entertaining as ever.
The trek through the jungles was vividly described and I particulary liked the scene at the waterfall with Kane and the high priestess, Ixchel.
The only criticism I have with Skull Throne is that it wasn't twice as long!
Related Subjects: Superhero Comedy
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