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What are the top 5 comic book arcs/trades?
Well, I asked about the top 5 monthly comics, and the top 5 writers, now I want to know what you think are the top 5 comic book arcs or tradepaperbacks. I know these were probably at least hinted out in other threads, but I want more concrete answers.
I'm slowly getting back into comics, and I'm making sure I only buy those issues with good stories and art. But now I need comparison material. So, what's the best? |
For me:
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This could be the hardest question yet to get a top 5 out of.
Any of the TPB arcs of Sandman, Transmetropolitan, and Preacher "Death in the Family" from Batman the original Dark Knight Returns The two Rising Stars story arcs. Wish Top Cow would stop screwing with JMS so we could get the last two issues. Watchmen And for a lengthy run on issues that sadly isn't available in TPB form, Peter David's run on Incredible Hulk was great. |
I thought the original Books of Magic mini was incredible.
The Dark Phoenix saga, with the Hellfire Club, was pretty awesome. A Game of You, and The Wake, were my favorite story arcs from the Sandman comic, but they were all great. Batman Year One. Though I didn't get to finish it, what I did read of Kingdom Come was just plain awesome. |
If you're interested, here's the list of the Top 100 Graphic Novels that Wizard Magazine did a while back:
1. Maus 2. Watchmen 3. Dark Knight Returns 10th anniv. ed. 4. Sandman vol. 4: Season of Mists 5. Ultimate Spider Man vol. 1: HC 6. Batman: Year One 7. Daredevil: Born Again 8. Marvels 9. Superman: Whatever Happened To the Man of Tomorrow? 10. X-Men: Dark Phoenix Saga 11. The Golden Age 12. X-Men: Days of Future Past 13. Swamp Thing vol. 1: Saga of the Swamp Thing 14. Miracleman vol. 3: Olympus 15. New Teen Titans: The Judas Contract 16. Top 10 Book 1 17. Magnus, Robot Fighter: Steel Nation 18. Daredevil Visionaries: Frank Miller vol. 2 19. Hawkworld 20. Preacher vol. 3: Proud Americans 21. The Books of Magic 22. Squadron Supreme 23. Superman: For All Seasons 24. Death: The High Cost of Living 25. Fantastic Four: The Trial of Galactus 26. Solar, Man of the Atom: Alpha and Omega 27. Sin City: That Yellow Bastard 28. Spider Man: Nothing Can Stop the Juggernaut 29. Daredevil: Yellow 30. Astro City vol. 3: Confessions 31. Torso 32. Bone vol 2: The Great Cow Race 33. League of Extraordinary Gentlemen 34. 300 35. Pedro and Me 36. Sin City: A Dame To Kill For 37. Planetary vol. 2: The Fourth Man 38. Neil Gaiman's Midnight Days 39. Banner 40. Kingdom Come 41. Akira vol. 1 42. 100 Bullets vol. 3: Hang Up On the Down Low 43. Fantastic Four Visionaries: John Byrne 44. Usagi Yojimbo Book 6 45. X-Men: E Is For Extinction 46. Hellblazer: Hard Time 47. Thor Visionaries: Walt Simonson 48. Hellboy: The Chained Coffin and Others 49. Stormwatch vol. 4: A Finer World 50. The Power of Iron Man 51. The Authority vol. 2: Under New Management 52. Box Office Poison 53. Hellblazer: Dangerous Habits 54. Animal Man 55. Strangers In Paradise col. 2: I Dream Of You 56. Legion of Super Heroes: The Great Darkness Saga 57. Dr. Strange/Dr. Doom: Triumph and Torment 58. JLA: New World Order 59. Earth X 60. Infinity Gauntlet 61. Justice League: A New Beginning 62. X-Force: A New Beginning 63. Jinx: The Definitive Collection 64. X-Men: God Loves, Man Kills 65. Silver Surfer: The Rebirth of Thanos 66. Avengers: Under Siege 67. Daredevil: The Man Without Fear 68. Captain America: War and Remembrance 69. Wolverine 70. Fortune and Glory 71. Goldfish 72. Powers vol. 1: who Killed Retro Girl? 73. Punisher: Circle of Blood 74. Whiteout 75. Doom Patrol: Crawling From the Wreckage 76. Batman: The Long Halloween 77. TMNT: The Collected Book vol. 1 78. JLA: Earth 2 79. Avengers: Ultron Unlimited 80. Crisis On Infinite Earths 81. Obergeist: Director's Cut 82. Green Lantern: Emerald Dawn 83. Batman/Huntress: Cry For Blood 84. The Coffin 85. Nightwing vol. 4 86. Batman: Dark Victory 87. Ultimate X-Men vol. 1: The Tomorrow People 88. Incredible Hulk: Ground Zero 89. Batman: Arkham Asylum 90. American Flagg! vol. 1: Hard Times 91. Wolverine: Blood Debt 92. Cerebus vol. 2: High Society 93. The Adventures of Tony Millionaire's Sock Monkey 94. Batman: Haunted Knight 95. X-Men: From the Ashes 96. The Complete Concrete 97. Spider Man vs. Venom 98. Batman: Red Rain 99. The Red Star 100. Batman: Faces |
Strangers in Paradise - I Dream of You. I love that book.
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B2K I cannot stress enough to stay away from all things Wizard related as that list above is that somebody posted (although that is probably one of their better lists). Everything they write, review, & rank has hidden agendas behind it. For proof of that just look at there #5 choice.
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Sure, Wizard isn't the most objective place for information, but are you really saying to stay away from Maus, Watchmen, Dark Knight Returns, Sandman, Batman Year One, Dark Phoenix Saga, and Judas Contract?
It's just a guideline, for pity's sake. |
Originally posted by Danger1313 Sure, Wizard isn't the most objective place for information, but are you really saying to stay away from Maus, Watchmen, Dark Knight Returns, Sandman, Batman Year One, Dark Phoenix Saga, and Judas Contract? It's just a guideline, for pity's sake. |
That Wizard list is actually not too shabby. There's some questionable stuff on there (Batman/Huntress: Cry For Blood? Spider Man vs. Venom? Give me a break!), but all in all, a decent list. I agree with Sessa, though, that the magazine in general is 98% junk. Here are some tips from me:
* Alan Moore. Anything the man touches is pure gold. Watchmen gets a lot of press, but V for Vendetta absolutely floors me every time I read it, Top 10 is a visual treat, Promethea is a head trip, and From Hell will leave you passed out on the floor. * Marvel's Essential series. These are monstrously thick books full of the good stuff. Primarily early stuff, from back when Stan Lee was writing everything and Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko were drawing most of it, but they've also put out 4 volumes of Claremont's X-Men, Gerber's Howard the Duck (totally different and much better than the movie), Wolfman & Colan's Tomb of Dracula (great stuff!). Oh yeah -- and Wolverine. * Bone. There's 8 or 9 volumes of this. Part Disney movie, part Lord of the Rings. It's really entertaining stuff, and my description doesn't do it justice. Pick up the first volume. Trust me. * Preacher. Indiana Jones with a Quentin Tarantino sensibility. And it's got a real story, with a begining, a middle, and an end. The series starts off specatcular, drops down to very good by the middle, and ends up excellent. * Kurt Busiek's Astro City. Superheroes viewed through a real-world sensibility, but in a totally different way from the manner in which Moore did it in Watchmen. Another one that's indescribable, but if you like superheroes, you'll like this. |
Originally posted by Sessa17 That above list is probably the best list they ever did, but my warning was for the magazine in general. And I agree with the recommendation for Preacher and Astro City. |
I agree with a lot of the sentiments above.
Stay away from Wizard. Almost anything by Alan Moore or Frank Miller is great. My personal top 10 as memory serves at the moment: Watchmen Dark Knight (original) Sandman (all of it) Bone (all of it) Daredevil Born Again Crisis on Infinite Earths (as Chew said, a bit of a guilty pleasure, as I'm a huge 70s DC fan) V for Vendetta Miracleman Concrete Flaming Carrot (total guilty pleasure) |
Re: What are the top 5 comic book arcs/trades?
Originally posted by bishop2knight Well, I asked about the top 5 monthly comics, and the top 5 writers, now I want to know what you think are the top 5 comic book arcs or tradepaperbacks. I know these were probably at least hinted out in other threads, but I want more concrete answers. http://bookshelf.diamondcomics.com/p.../STAR01622.JPG Joking aside, I would actually recommend this book for 1) Excellent storytelling 2) Offbeat type of stories. It's not your typical superhero book. 3) It's out of print, but should be fairly easy to find. Get it while you can. However, the title of this book is a misnomer; there are several other collections of Concrete single stories and mini-series, but I'd recommend this one to start. And more books for the same reasons above: Dave Steven's Rocketeer books (not the movie adaption, the original series) Mark Schultz's Xenozoic Tales (Cadillacs & Dinosaurs) I'm slowly getting back into comics... |
The entire Bone series (one could argue that it's all one story arc)
Death: The Time of Your Life X-Men: Xtinction Agenda Generation X (the first 20 issues with Chris Bachalo, awesome stuff) Daredevil: Man Without Fear |
Wow, the drooling elitist fanboys come out to bash Wizard again.
Bishop, ignore the raving. The kids think they're cool because they read the "underground" stuff think it's cool to bash Wizard and anyone else that dares to like stuff from the big 2. |
Originally posted by JestersTear Wow, the drooling elitist fanboys come out to bash Wizard again. Bishop, ignore the raving. The kids think they're cool because they read the "underground" stuff think it's cool to bash Wizard and anyone else that dares to like stuff from the big 2. Couldn't be farther from the truth. I read very little underground stuff & almost every single one of my favorite comics is published by "the big 2" & the X-men is my all-time favorite comic which is as Wizard-friendly as you can get. I can provide (& have provided) numerous reasons why Wizard is absolutely garbage & the worste thing for someone getting back into comics after a long absence. I know B2K's taste & he has enjoyed pretty much all of my recommendations (which are all books that Wizard does not promote or write about yet they are NOT indy books & are pusblished by the "big 2). I'm a retailer, know people that have worked for Wizard & that still work for Wizard. Wizard often makes up rumors & news to fill-in pages & columns. They promote the same books & the same creators every single month, NEVER criticizing their works because these same creators give Wizard exclusives & interviews. They rank Top Ten artists & writers that haven't put out work in months or put out 1 or 2 comics a year, & their price guide is determined but what creators & comics they are doing stories on over the next 2 months & they give you release dates for books that are constantly wrong & not even verified. And there are PLENTY of more reaons why Wizard is complete crap. But if you enjoy it more power to you, I bashed Wizard not the people that read it. |
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Originally posted by JestersTear Wow, the drooling elitist fanboys come out to bash Wizard again. Bishop, ignore the raving. The kids think they're [....] Benedict Moderator, Book Talk |
I just wanted to add support for my two favorite Batman arcs:
- Year One - The Dark Knight Returns Frank Miller! |
Originally posted by Ralph Wiggum I just wanted to add support for my two favorite Batman arcs: - Year One - The Dark Knight Returns Frank Miller! I'm not a big fan of Frank Miller's stuff for the past decade or stuff, but his work on Batman and Daredevil in the 1980s -- wow! |
Originally posted by Sessa17 B2K I cannot stress enough to stay away from all things Wizard related as that list above is that somebody posted (although that is probably one of their better lists). Everything they write, review, & rank has hidden agendas behind it. For proof of that just look at there #5 choice. What's the hidden agenda behind their ranking of USM? I don't really want to continue arguments about Wizard, but I consider USM to be the best traditional superhero comic I've ever read. By traditional I mean not deconstructionist like Watchmen or DKR. I don't know enough about Wizard to defend it, but there does seem to be an unreasonable amount of criticism focused on Wizard. I think that top 100 list is a nice reference although there will always be crazy entries on any top 100 list. As for the topic, I don't have a top 5 arc/trades list, but I think I'll go do the other top 5 threads. |
Originally posted by nny What's the hidden agenda behind their ranking of USM? I don't really want to continue arguments about Wizard, but I consider USM to be the best traditional superhero comic I've ever read. By traditional I mean not deconstructionist like Watchmen or DKR. I'm not saying Bendis and Bagley haven't turned out a great comic. They have. They've taken very familiar material and put a great fresh spin on it. But is it the 5th best comic of all time? Not hardly. |
Wow, I can only name 5? There are so many. I'll give it a shot:
1. Batman Year One 2. Watchmen 3. Batman: The Dark Knight Returns 4. Sandman--pick one 5. Kingdom Come |
For that matter, is it really better than Lee & Ditko's version -- so much better that neither the Masterworks nor the Essentials reprinting of the Lee/Ditko version makes the list while Ultimate Spidey is #5? As for some good collected storylines, I really like the Milligan/Allred X-Force and X-Statix stuff, which is available in hardback and TPB. And for Spider-Man fans, Loeb and Sale's Spider-Man: Blue is simply excellent. Same goes for their Batman work, Long Halloween and the other whose name I forget. Powers is well-worth reading also, and has the first three or four arcs available in TPB. For a realllllly long arc, Lone Wolf and Cub is awesome, but 28 books may be more than most folks want to get into. As for the Wizard list, Maus and Watchmen, enough said there. Great books. |
Originally posted by Shiv Shankly For my money, and this is coming from a longtime Spidey fan, yes. I was re-reading the old Lee-Ditko stuff recently, and while some of it still has its charms, I find most of it corny and hard to sit through, at least in terms of story. Ditko's art I can take or leave. I had to laugh at the moment in Amazing 500 recently, when Spidey goes back to his first battle with the Sandman and the whole "vacuum him up" bit. Even as a kid, I thought that was the dumbest thing I had ever seen. Anyway, I think USM is simply better written, but the art is so-so. As for some good collected storylines, I really like the Milligan/Allred X-Force and X-Statix stuff, which is available in hardback and TPB. And for Spider-Man fans, Loeb and Sale's Spider-Man: Blue is simply excellent. Same goes for their Batman work, Long Halloween and the other whose name I forget. Powers is well-worth reading also, and has the first three or four arcs available in TPB. But for my money, there is no better run of superhero comics than that first year-to-year-and-a-half of John Romita Sr.'s run on Spidey. Starting with the Green Goblin unmasking Spidey, you get the intro of Mary Jane, Peter starting to feel a little more comfortable in his own skin, battles with John Jameson, the Rhino, Kraven, the Lizard, and the Vulture, the introduction of the Shocker, that great battle between the original Vulture and his would-be replacement, all culminating in that incredible "Spider-Man No More" shot of Peter walking away from the Spider-Man costume, which he has discarded in a trash can. Maybe it's because those were some of the first stories I read (no, I'm not that old; I read them when they were reprionted in Marvel Tales in the early-to-mid-80s), but I love those stories. Where was I going with this? Oh yeah -- Spider-Man: Blue. I've thought Loeb & Sale were a great team since I read their Challengers of the Unknown 15-or-so years ago. I love Long Halloween, and their Marvel stuff is awesome, too. Spider-Man: Blue was a lot of fun, and since it's an examination of the stories I love most, I think it resonates with me more than anything else they've done. And I absolutely love the fact that they didn't return to the Ditko stories that so many other writers and artists are drawn to. I mean, those are great, but given the fact that they are drawn upon so much, I think there's more richness to be drawn from the Romita stories at this point. By the way, the other Loeb & Sale work you referenced is either Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight (a collection of 3 or 4 Halloween themed one-shots they did prior to Long Halloween); Batman: Dark Victory (a sequel to Long Halloween); Daredevil: Yellow (a re-examination of Daredevil's earliest adventures); or Hulk: Grey (which I haven't read yet, but I assume to be a re-examination of the Hulk's earliest adventures. |
In no particular order:
1. The Invisibles (W: Grant Morrison, 7 volumes) 2. Preacher (W: Garth Ennis, A:Steve Dillon, 9 volumes) 3. Sandman (W:Neil Gaiman, 10 volumes) 4. From Hell (W: Alan Moore, A:Eddie Campbell, 1 volume) 5. Love and Rockets (Gilbert & Jaime Hernandez, 15 volumes) |
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