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Tarfumes.com - The Death of Captain America, Vol. 2

The Death of Captain America, Vol. 2
List Price: $19.99
Our Price: $14.39
Your Save: $ 5.60 ( 28% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Marvel Comics
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785128502
ISBN: 0785128506
Label: Marvel Comics
Manufacturer: Marvel Comics
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 160
Publication Date: 2008-06-04
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Studio: Marvel Comics

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Editorial Reviews:

The Winter Soldier held prisoner by the Red Skull! While Sharon and the Falcon race to his rescue, they're about to cross paths with the Mighty Avenger that Tony Stark has sent hunting our rogue hero - The Black Widow! Will the Red Skull kill both Cap and Bucky? It's anyone's guess, as the second arc of the epic "Death of Captain America" storyline opens with a bang! Collects Captain America #31-36


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Another assumes the mantle
Comment: Ed Brubaker continues to impress me with his direction in the saga of Captain America. I love the espionage, and the flashbacks to WWII. The war is such the root of the character, that to ignore it in favor of colorful modern enemies, is to diminish the essence of who Captain America is. I applaud the daring of the editorial staff of Marvel to allow Ed and his team to explore this direction of the mythos of the Captain, and I for one, can't wait to see where they take the characters next.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: The best creative team in comics today
Comment: Plenty has been said about the initial story, (after all, it was national news) and the fact that the book is still selling over a year later, after the death of the titular character, should make clear the craftsmanship going on here. The creative team won the Eisner for their efforts and it was well-deserved.
It is usually my habit to at least give a synopsis but I just can't seem to see the point. I have been reading comics for 40+ years and Cap has never been this good. If you like superhero comics, read this book. Nuff said.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Pleasant Surprise
Comment: Not much to say. I read volume 1 and had to keep going. I never thought I'd approve of a new Cap but the way it's done is great. I really enjoyed this book. I'd definately recommend this series to anyone who enjoyed "Civil War"

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: A Memorable Step Forward
Comment: The Death of Captain America was really the beginning of a new chapter, and a rebirth of the symbol for a new age. Brubaker and team have wisely throttled the team into thriller mode. The Death of CA in the wake of the Civil War epic is really about the ongoing SHIELD-Avengers-Stark-Winter Soldier-Falcon-Black Widow-Sharon Carter-etc intrique that make this a nice comic meets film noir tale. What will happen next? Let's hope the series can keep up the momentum.

Brilliant cover by Alex Ross.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Ed Brubaker's Captain America run continues to fire on all cylinders.
Comment: This book collects issues 31 to 36 of "Captain America volume 5", written by Ed Brubaker, with art by Steve Epting, Mike Perkins, and Butch Guice. These issues make up the story arc "The Burden of the Dream", the second act of a new epic storyline "The Death of Captain America" (the next act being "The Man Who Bought America"), an epic which opened with, obviously, the death of Captain America. Bucky, aka the Winter Soldier, sought to avenge his mentor's death by seeking out both the Red Skull, the villain who orchestrated his death, and Iron Man, Director of SHIELD, the hero Bucky blames for betraying Cap. Sharon Carter and the Falcon, Cap's two other allies (the former his girlfriend and unwilling executioner, thanks to Doctor Faustus, the Skull's brainwashing henchman), pursued Bucky in the hopes of dissuading him from going after Fury, while Bucky stole Cap's shield from SHIELD agent Black Widow (his former girlfriend back in the USSR), who then was assigned to track him down. The first volume ended with Bucky and Sharon in the clutches of the Red Skull.

In this volume, Brubaker, in the space of six issues, pays off a few running plot threads from the previous volume and initiates a major change in the series' status quo by introducing a replacement Captain America (it's Bucky, not that that would be a surprise to anyone reading the series, though Marvel initiated a feeble effort to drum up some suspense over who it was going to be). Sharon and the Falcon largely fade into the background in these six stories; the former struggles against her mental programming, largely unsuccessfully at first, while the reader waits for more information concerning her apparent pregancy with Cap's child, while Falcon, after a teamup with Black Widow to rescue Bucky from the Skull, also recedes temporarily into the background. The major characters are Bucky, the new Captain America, Black Widow, and Iron Man; in effect, with these three, Brubaker momentarily replicates the series dynamic from the initial Winter Soldier arc, with Bucky, Natasha, and Tony in lieu of Steve, Sharon, and Nick Fury. At the midway point, Bucky finally faces off with Iron Man, the hero he sees as the Judas to Steve's Jesus; the confrontation is handled in a way that is quite satisfactory, and respectful of both characters, not at all like J. Michael Strackzynski handled the meeting of Thor and Iron Man in his "Thor" series. Bucky taking up the mantle is also handled with remarkable subtlety, and just feels perfect; if only all legacy heroes could be handled in this manner. When the heroes are done fighting each other, the focus shifts to the Skull, whose master plan begins to really unspool in this volume, and it's a brilliantly realistic one that plays on contemporary economic and political insecurities in the United States (and there's a time machine involved somehow too). The volume ends on a major jolt that will have you ready to pick up the next one and see what Brubaker has in store (or, if the wait is too long, buy the monthly issues).

Brubaker's writing is expertly-paced, both in monthly serial and trade format, and demonstrates in-depth knowledge of all the characters; he's a master both at using a formula and doing it will (thus showing why it became a formula in the first place) and innovatively pioneering his own variations on how things usually go (watch what happens, for example, when Bucky tries to use the old EMP trick to disable Iron Man's powered armour). On art, Steve Epting, Mike Perkins, and Butch Guice all make contributions (in Perkins' case, this is apparently his last scheduled work on the series before leaving for other jobs, and he, fittingly, gets the last pages; I'll miss him, but Guice is a great replacement). The series has always benefited from seamless transitions between its major artists, and that continues to be the case here; the three are all brilliant at rendering fantastical objects like a flying aircraft carrier and making them seem as real and believable as an ordinary car; characters have rich, varied facial expressions, and realistic proportions and body types. And one cannot forget to mention colourist Frank D'Armata, whose wonderful work blends the different artists' work together even more expertly.

If you are looking for a great story, look no further than this book.


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