SPOTLIGHT ON NEW RELEASES :: MARCH 7
Fans of the popular Vertigo series Fables will want to remember this new series starting this week. The rotating arcs of Fairest feature some of the most popular female characters from Fables, as well as new creative teams for each story arc. The first six issues focus on the character Briar Rose, and are written by Fables scribe Bill Willingham, with art by Phil Jimenez and covers by the great Adam Hughes!
This new series spins out of the popular storyline in Uncanny X-force. David Lapham and Roberto de la Torre helm this new series that deals with a ragged group of human survivors called the X-terminated as they naviagate the violent world of Apocalypse. While the series has some of the mutants you know from the Age of Apocalypse story, it mainly focuses on characters like William Stryker, Bolivar Trask, and Donald Pierce. Some of you will recognize those names from previous X-men stories.
3) Hellboy TP vol. 12: The Storm and The Fury
This trade paperback makes the list this week because it exemplifies how creator Mike Mignola allows his characters to evolve and develop over time. The two stories in the volume change Hellboy in fundamental ways, and in the Mignola-verse, when characters undergo big changes they stay changed without going back to recycled stories or situations. This volume also features some beautiful art from Duncan Fegredo.
Jonathan Hickman has a knack for producing interesting ideas in both his mainstream and creator owned work. This new series (featuring art from Red Wing artist Nick Pitarra) considers the possibility that the researchers of the Manhattan Project may have been involved in creating things darker and stranger than even the atomic bomb.
If you only know of writer/artist Brandon Graham from his recent work on Prophet, you really owe it to yourself to check out his incredible work on King City. Part manga, part science fiction, and full of monsters, spies, and a cat that can turn into any tool or weapon, King City is a detailed and multifaceted look at the city itself and its inhabitants. It’s a unique book that stands out among other books with its intricate attention to detail and unique uses of visual storytelling.
> Bonus Picks of the Week: Animal Man #7, Winter Soldier #3, Swamp Thing #7, Avengers: Children’s Crusade #9, Fatale #3, Flashpoint TP, and Compleat Terminal City TP.









3) Athos in America HC
5) Glory #23




We’re hitting the road for appearances at two conventions this weekend! Heroes’ own Seth Peagler and Brent Bagwell will be setting up at the Columbia Comic and Toy Con on Saturday, and the Atlanta Comic Convention on Sunday. They’ll have a huge variety of comics for you to enjoy, including brand new discount books, hard to find recent and new comics, and selections from Shelton’s new Golden Age and Silver Age collections that debuted at the Charlotte MiniCon. They’ll even be selling advanced tickets to HeroesCon, and will have plenty of information to pass along to you about some of the exciting things we have planned for this year’s 30th Anniversary! Stop by and say hello to the guys and pick up some comics while you’re at it!


















If superhero books in 2011 largely focused on both sweeping company-wide changes and numerous relaunches, what can we say about indie and genre books of the recently past year? A few years ago the industry was rightly blown away by the genius work of David Mazzucchelli’s Asterios Polyp. 2011 didn’t necessarily have a single book that was hands down an instant classic, but if you had to choose one book that impacted the industry, it was Love and Rockets: New Stories volume 4. Jaime Hernandez has been telling the story of Maggie and her friends in real time for over 30 years, always

Unlike Thompson, Dan Clowes is an artist who has regularly released new comics every few years. 2011 was one of Clowes’ most prolific years to date. Following up 2010’s acclaimed Wilson, Clowes offered up Mister Wonderful, which can be seen as a bookend of sorts to Wilson, or perhaps the flip side of the Wilson coin. In addition to Mister Wonderful, Clowes released a deluxe, expanded version of his classic The Death-Ray, which contains one of the most interesting explorations of the superhero genre we’ve seen from a non-superhero artist.

One of 2011’s other significant genre happenings had to be Mike Mignola’s decision to kill off his ever popular character Hellboy. While Hellboy will continue in 2012 in the Mignola-penned and illustrated “Hellboy in Hell” storyline, the creator has spoken about how important it is to allow characters and stories to develop, change, and grow over time. He has always made a point of stating that when characters in his books die, they stay dead. It’s a testament to Mignola that he works hard to eschew creative stagnation by allowing ideas and themes to run their course. One need only look at Mignola’s numerous other properties like B.P.R.D., Lobster Johnson, and the Amazing Screw On Head to see that his work always operates within this dictum. Fans have been clamoring for more Amazing Screw On Head stories,but he won’t make them because he feels that he already achieved what he hoped to within the one book. These books are also exemplary of how Mignola surrounds himself with quality storytellers and lets the characters progress in their natural state. When a creator cares more about staying true to his characters and stories than he does about regurgitating material, the industry is all the better for it.
1) Fatale #1












