ComicBookNetworkEmag Archives Index
|
|
| << February04, 2006 - [ComicBookNetwork E-Mag] CBEM 561.6 |
February11, 2006 - [ComicBookNetwork E-Mag] CBEM 562.04 >> |
|
----------------------------------------------------------------- THE COMIC BOOK NETWORK ELECTRONIC MAGAZINE Issue Number 562 2/10/2006 Edited by: David LeBlanc - ComicBkNet@aol.com Winner of the 2001 EAGLE AWARD as FAVORITE COMICS E-ZINE! FREE VIA EMAIL SINCE FEBRUARY 1995 _________________________________________________________________ C O N T E N T S ----------------------------------------------------------------- COMICS OBSCURA - (Various Places) ....... Mike Curtis [A] Submissions, mailing address, web page [1] On the Net .............................. David LeBlanc [2] Letters to the Editor ................... Your Page! [3] TRIVIA CONTEST .......................... Win *real* prizes! [4] Network Buzz ............................ News/gossip/rumors [5] Interviews: Mark Poulton, Stephen Sistilli, Dexter, Tyler Mane, Debbie Bishop and Darren G. Davis ........................ Richard Vasseur [6] Interviews: Chris Marshall, Ian M. Feller Paul Dale Roberts [7] The Nitpicker's Column .................. Martin A. Perez [8] Suspended Animation ..................... Michael Vance & Mark Allen [9] ComiX-FAN Reviews........................ Eric J. Moreels [10] Rich's Reviews .......................... Richard Vasseur [11] M.O.E. Reviews .......................... Paul Dale Roberts [12] My View: PINE KISS ...................... David LeBlanc [13] New Comic Book Releases List ............ Charles LePage [14] HYPE! & LINKS Section ................... Various _________________________________________________________________ World Wide Web Home Page-->> http://members.aol.com/ComicBkNet Archived and mailed by Yahoo!: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ComicBookNetworkEmag ----------------------------------------------------------------- o \o/ _ o _| \ / |_ o_ \o/ o /|\ | /\ _\o \o | o/ O/_ /\ | /|\ / \ / \ |\ /) | ( \ /o\ / ) | (\ / | / \ / \ ----------------------------------------------------------------- The ComicBook Network started by Ed Dukeshire and Mike Imboden ----------------------------------------------------------------- If you wish to receive each issue automatically through your Email account, FREE, please send a message FROM that account TO: ComicBookNetworkEmag-subscribe@yahoogroups.com To UNSUBSCRIBE send a message FROM the account to be dropped TO: ComicBookNetworkEmag-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com See section [A] for the address to mail material to be reviewed. _________________________________________________________________ All text contained within is copyrighted to the originating author(s) and is used with permission. Except where elsewhere noted, The Comic Book Net Electronic Magazine is Copyright 2006 by David L. LeBlanc. You may freely distribute or retransmit this file intact without alteration for noncommercial purposes only. Except for personal archiving, permission must be obtained from the individual authors to reproduce, retransmit, or publish any part of this magazine. Opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors And do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of the Editor. _________________________________________________________________ ----------------------------------------------------------------- [A] E-Mag Info: Submissions, Back Issues, Web Page SUBMISSIONS ----------- To submit an article, review, column, etc. to our Emag, simply Email it to the editor at: ComicBkNet@aol.com You must include your REAL name and a valid Email address in order to be published in this Emag. Sorry, we do not accept anonymous columns. The weekly deadline is 7:00 PM Eastern Time on Thursday - NO EXCEPTIONS! Late submissions are held over for the following week. Final edit is reserved by the editor, not the submitter! Reviews of mainstream books are welcome and we encourage reviews of indies and self published material as we feel that material deserves more exposure to the general public. If you write intelligent, coherent, and timely reviews of any comic book it will almost always be printed, so give us a shot. Commentary on the state of the industry, and personal observations and reflections related to comics are *most* likely to be included in our publication. PLEASE, no material on gaming, non-comic derived media, role playing, collectible card games, Anime or other hobbies or collectibles other than comic books. That also includes plugs for web comics and web pages UNLESS they are concerned with print comic books. We do not promote web comics per se, only the printed media. SEND US YOUR WORK ----------------- We also accept product for review purposes. Advanced copies of comic books will not be returned but any comic books sent to us *will* be reviewed in the ComicBook Net Emag in the column MY VIEW. Send material to be reviewed to: David L. LeBlanc 84 Heather Circle Jefferson, MA 01522-1419 Material is generally reviewed in the order received and be advised that we work a few weeks in advance so your review may not be in the magazine immediately. Advanced copies are therefore encouraged so the review will occur prior to your product hitting the stores. THE Comic Book Net WEB PAGE http://members.aol.com/ComicBkNet ---------------- If you have access to the World Wide Web, please stop by and visit our web page! On our web page, you can find the latest issue of our E-Mag, in both a text and a zipped version for fast downloading as well as back issues and an annotated index. You'll also find important links to some of the comic companies and creators' web pages and many other Comic Book related links! _________________________________________________________________ ----------------------------------------------------------------- [1] On the Net David LeBlanc ComicBkNet@aol.com It seems like I have less and less time each week. Either I am slowing down or the world is speeding up. Now I am finishing up a week's worth of paperwork and jumping right into the Emag to get it out tonight. Meanwhile, on TV, is the classic movie, THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL. If you have never seen it I highly recommend you rent it or catch it on cable. It is intelligent science fiction. Here are some intelligent comics, some just plain fun, out this week. BOOM! STUDIOS Jeremiah Harm #1; $3.99 DC COMICS Fables #46; $2.75 JLA #125; $2.50 JSA #82; $2.50 Supergirl #4; $2.99 Teen Titans #32; $2.50 MARVEL COMICS Marvel Zombies #3; (Of 5) $2.99 Ultimate Extinction #2; (Of 5) $2.99 Ultimate X-Men #67; $2.50 TOP SHELF PRODUCTIONS Owly Vol 1 The Way Home TPB; $10.00<---------Pick of the Week! I was contacted today by a fellow at Warner Brothers Interactive Marketing to see if CBEM would like to help promote the movie " V FOR VENDETTA". I am not sure what that might entail but look for news and maybe some nifty trivia prizes very soon. David LeBlanc - ComicBkNet@aol.com Editor The Comic Book Net Electronic Magazine _________________________________________________________________ ----------------------------------------------------------------- [2] Letters to the Editor If you want to comment on this or any previous issue, want to offer something for us to publish, or just want to shamelessly suck up to the editor to try and get your name in print send Email to: ComicBkNet@aol.com Note: Letters of comment, including those sent to the columnists, may be used in future issues of CBEM unless you specifically request us NOT to use them. Your Email address and/or name will be withheld upon request. +++++ Subject: RE: REVIEWS Date: 2/7/2006 12:30:45 A.M. Eastern Standard Time From: sjung@netcomics.com To: ComicBknet@aol.com Dear Mr. LeBlanc: I was touched and impressed by your thorough and perceptive reviews. Thank you very much. I am planning on sending our new titles to you this week. I have also posted your review at our website. Thank you. Warm regards, Soyoung Jung _________________________________________________________________ ----------------------------------------------------------------- [3] [TRIVIA CONTEST] Due to costs, customs regulations, and logistical difficulties: THIS CONTEST IS OPEN TO RESIDENTS OF THE CONTIGUOUS 48 U.S.STATES! IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A U.S. ADDRESS DO NOT ATTEMPT TO WIN THE PRIZE. THE FIRST PLACE TO FIND THE EMAG EACH WEEK IS ON OUR HOME PAGE! IF YOU ARE DESPERATE TO WIN THE TRIVIA, GO THERE FIRST ON FRIDAY NIGHT! http://members.aol.com/ComicBkNet QUESTION OF THE WEEK Prizes donated by Discount Comic Book Service at www.dcbservice.com where you can order most DC, Marvel, Image, and Dark Horse comics, statues and retail products for 35% off. Submit your own trivia and win the CHEEZY PRIZE(tm) if you can stump the readers! You MUST submit the correct answer with your question. LAST ISSUE'S QUESTION OF THE WEEK: Some Amalgam Comics were published by DC and others by Marvel. In the first series of Amalgam Comics, other than by creator credits, how can you tell from the cover which publisher did which title? While there are a few minor ways I was looking for one of two that are easy to spot. One is the location of the price - Marvel put it in the bar code box, DC elsewhere. The other is the Amalgam logo which is gold on blue or blue on gold depending on the publisher (Not that way in the second series). Brad Christian was the first and wins STAR WARS: SHADOWS OF THE EMPIRE EVOLUTION TP from Discount Comic Book Service. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ THIS WEEK'S TRIVIA QUESTION: Who is Emperor Kurr? IMPORTANT RULES NOTICE Due to costs, customs regulations, and logistical difficulties: THIS CONTEST IS OPEN TO RESIDENTS OF THE CONTIGUOUS 48 U.S. STATES! IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A U.S. ADDRESS DO NOT ATTEMPT TO WIN THE PRIZE. Email your guess to ComicBkNet@aol.com or just REPLY to the message if you read the Emag in your mail. DO NOT quote the entire message! You MUST allow mail from ComicBkNet@aol.com to be notified if you win. The first correct answer to reach the editor wins the CHEEZY PRIZE(tm). The editor will be the sole judge as to which guess arrived first! Messages with more than one guess will be disqualified. Winners will forfeit their prize if the Email notification is not accepted from ComicBkNet@aol.com LIMIT: ONLY ONE PRIZE every 4 weeks PER PERSON! _________________________________________________________________ ----------------------------------------------------------------- COMICS OBSCURA Mike Curtis shandafa@cyberback.com [COMICS OBSCURA are facts Mike Curtis has dug out during his 30 years of collecting Superman and writing about comics. His website for his comic imprint is www.shandafantasyarts.net ] MIGHTY FAMILIAR COUNTRY AROUND HERE According to official DC history, the JUSTICE LEAGUE first met the JUSTICE SOCIETY in JLA 21, 1963, CRISIS ON EARTH ONE. Yet two years earlier, in JLA 4 "DOOM OF THE STAR DIAMOND" the League is gathered to rescue potential member GREEN ARROW from alien CARTHAN. J'ONN J'ONZZ and WONDER WOMAN team up to stop the menace in KEYSTONE CITY, but somehow avoided meeting the golden age FLASH while there. _________________________________________________________________ ----------------------------------------------------------------- [4] Network Buzz News, gossip and rumors from the industry Valkyries Ride into Battle for Alias February 4, 2006 (San Diego, CA)- Coming this March, Alias Comics and Astounding Studios bring you a new kind of warrior, with VALKYRIES #1, by writer Kevin Grevioux and artist Leonel Castellani. VALKYRIES is an all-new limited series about a young Valkyrie who doesn't exactly follow "Odinian protocol" when it comes to choosing warriors to enter Valhalla, the Viking heaven. Typically in Viking lore, only the strong and the brave are allowed into Valhalla's hallowed halls. However, a young Valkyrie named Keldegarde, has a compassion for the least likely individuals to enter the Norse afterlife. She chooses people who are sick and infirmed, and not necessarily the brave and the bold. This attitude and behavior doesn't sit too well with neither her fellow Valkyries, nor the absolute ruler of Asgard, King Odin himself. Odin knows that if Valhalla is filled with unworthy warriors the gods will be poorly prepared when Ragnarok comes and the forces of evil attack. This can't happen if Asgard is to survive. "Keldegarde is basically the "pariah" of the Valkyries. Here she is a member of a very war-like culture who judges people based on how well they fight and die, and she's advocating compassion and honor on a level they've never seen before." said Grevioux. "It makes for really good conflict. She's even been known to bring a few dying animals to Valhalla as well." Grevioux also comments that the story will have a lot of cool elements to it that really make for a fantastic Disney-like epic. It has love, war, death, triumph and disaster. That coupled with familiar Norse characters such as Thor, Loki, Hela and Baldur, Grevioux says, "It should be a fun ride!" Here's how the publisher describes the issue: VALKYRIES #1 Written by Kevin Grevioux, with art by Leonel Castellani, Eduardo Lemos, Mauro Vargas, and Javier Tartaglia From Actor/Screenwriter, and Creator/star of UNDERWORLD, Kevin Grevioux! Keldegarde, a young Valkyrie, finds the heroic in the most unusual places. When she returns to Valhalla with her latest warrior, she unwittingly starts a chain of events that will change the face of Norse mythology forever. The adventure of a lifetime begins here! -- 32-pages, full color limited quarterly series, $3.50 In addition to the usual pantheon of Norse characters - Odin, Baldur, Loki, Thor, etc. - Grevioux plans to introduce a few new characters to the mythos. VALKYRIES #1 (order code: JAN062808) is 32-pages of full color action for only $3.50 Even though it's available in March, you can still order your copy today at your local comic book shop! For more information on VALKYRIES visit Alias Comics on the web at http://www.aliascomics.net or Astounding Studios at http://www.astoundingstudios.com - or visit your local comic book shop! +++++ MoCCA's VAN LENTE INTRODUCES THE GOLEM @ RMA, 2/10 CURATOR/CREATOR PROVIDES COMIC BOOK MULTIMEDIA PRESENTATION TO RUBIN MUSEUM OF ART'S "MONSTROUS PROTECTORS" FILM SERIES NEW YORK - At 9:30pm, on February 10th, 2006, the Rubin Museum of Art, in conjunction with the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art, will present "Monstrous Protectors", a multimedia presentation by MoCCA curator and comic book writer Fred Van Lente before a screening Paul Wegener's 1920 silent monster movie classic The Golem. The multimedia introduction traces the history of Jewish folklore's premature "creature feature" in comics, from the Jewish folklore creature's brief stint as a lead feature in Marvel's Strange Tales, down through graphic novels by James Sturm and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Adventures of Kavalier & Klay. Van Lente also uses images from his own Xeric-winning, Ignatz-nominated non-fiction series Action Philosophers!, which features the story of the golem and the Jewish mystical tradition, the Kabbalah, in its fourth issue (on sale Feb. 8). The Golem is being presented in conjunction with RMA's "Demonic Divine" exhibition, tracing the horrific in Himalayan Art. The silent film classic will be screened with live musical accompaniment by acclaimed musician Gary Lucas. About Fred Van Lente Fred Van Lente is the co-creator and writer of the Xeric-winning, Ignatz-nominated non-fiction humor series ACTION PHILOSOPHERS! His graphic novels include SCORPION: POISON TOMORROW (Marvel) and THE SILENCERS (Image/Moonstone). Upcoming projects: NEW UNIVERSE: NIGHTMASK (March '06) and MARVEL WESTERN LEGENDS (June '06). He is the Secretary of the Board and the Chair of the Curatorial Committee of the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art (MoCCA). About MoCCA The Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art, located at 594 Broadway in SoHo, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit arts education organization dedicated to promoting greater understanding and appreciation of comic and cartoon art. The Museum celebrates the unique creative achievements of graphic storytelling through study, discussion, preservation and exhibition of comic and cartoon artworks. # # # WHAT: THE GOLEM Paul Wegener's silent 1920 monster movie classic, with live musical accompaniment by Gary Lucas and introduced by MoCCA curator and comic book creator Fred Van Lente WHEN: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2006 9:30pm WHERE: RUBIN MUSEUM OF ART 150 West 17th Street New York, NY 10011 212-620-5000 info@rmanyc.org COST: $15.00 +++++ eigoMANGA JOINS DEVIL'S DUE IN THE RELEASE OF SAKURA PAKK'S ON- GOING SERIES SAN FRANCISCO, CA - February 6, 2006: eigoMANGA LLC. and Devil's Due Publishing, Inc. have announced the release of the Sakura Pakk digest series starting with Sakura Pakk Volume 1 (ISBN#: 1- 932796-49-5). Sakura Pakk is an on-going, 160 pgs, B&W anthology comic book digest series beginning since January 2006. Sakura Pakk is considered a sh"jo (or shoujo) publication which is, a style of anime and manga intended for girls (that may have some crossover appeal to boys as well). Sh"jo anthologies and publications from other leading companies predominantly run on themes centered on romance and relationships. Sakura Pakk's stories portray women and female protagonists in roles far beyond the "teeny bopper" lifestyle. The creative team behind Sakura Pakk believes that female readers are into more than just romance, beauty, and style. We wanted to produce an original publication that depicts women in far more diverse roles and situations", states eigoMANGA's publisher, Austin Osueke. The stories in Sakura Pakk contain compelling Original English Language (OEL) manga stories that emphasize themes such as the spirit of modern femininity, wellness, friendship, self- confidence in addition to serious topics such as sexual harassment, and teenage depression. +++++ Small Press Idol 2006 news Hello World! For the third year straight, the Self Publisher Association is sponsoring the Small Press Idol Contest. Official guidelines and deadlines are now up on the Idol Homepage at: http://www.dimestoreproductions.com/SPA/Idol06/index.asp Past winners have included (in 2004) Metro Med (picked up by Shooting Star), Fly Guy (gained interest from Cartoon Network), (in 2005) Redchapel, The Squirrel, and Beyond Human...great new comics by real people just like you! Teams for this year's contest are forming now on many different forums, a true internet event! Spectators welcome, and this year, YOUR VOTE counts more than ever! What will be the next big thing in indy comics? It's all starting RIGHT NOW! Ian Shires Dimestore Productions P.O. Box 214 Madison, OH 44057 www.dimestoreproductions.com +++++ From: aharlib@earthlink.net Dear David, Here is an article of great interest to newsletter readers. Cheers! Amy February 7, 2006 DC Comics' Man Upstairs Readjusts His Writer's Cap By GEORGE GENE GUSTINES New York Times On Wednesday, comic book fans who buy the new issue of "JSA," a superhero book published by Time Warner's DC Comics division, will be in for a rare event. The book is written by Paul Levitz, the comics company's president and publisher. Mr. Levitz, 49, last wrote about the Justice Society of America regularly in 1979. He's committed to writing six issues of the comic, now titled simply "JSA," this year, returning to some of the characters who helped make his reputation as a gifted writer of superhero team books. The new stories tie into a series called "Infinite Crisis" that involves nearly every DC character, from Aquaman to Wonder Woman. The plot for the "JSA" issue released this week hinges on a notebook written in "secret code," which an older character soon realizes is actually shorthand. Handling the illustrations for the first issue and the covers for all six will be George P???rez, a celebrated industry artist. DC icons like Superman and Batman, despite their origins in 1938 and 1939, respectively, exist eternally in the present. The Justice Society, considered the comics' first superhero team, was founded in 1940, and its tales spin out closer to real time, with heroes who age, retire, even die. During his tenure writing the book in the 1970's, Mr. Levitz introduced the Huntress, the daughter of Batman and Catwoman. In another tale, he revealed that, in the 1950's, the Society chose to disband rather than reveal members' identities to the House Un-American Activities Committee in Washington. The new series picks up that storyline again. "Paul's a good guy and a clever writer," said Mark Evanier, a comics historian. Team books, in which a writer must juggle several characters, can be more challenging than solo titles, with one main hero. "He wrote a team book in a way that had characters relating to one another without phony sounding conflicts, without inventing one-syllable personalities." All told, it's been quite a journey for Mr. Levitz, who began reading comics in the 1960's and has worked for DC since 1973. "I started out reading comics - like most in my generation - out of a box of them that a kid on the block had," he said in an interview at his home in Chappaqua, N.Y., where his den houses more than 30,000 handsomely bound comics. Mr. Levitz grew up in Brooklyn and by the time he was 12 discovered fanzines - amateur newsletters about comics - and eventually founded his own, "Etcetera," with a high school friend, Paul Kupperberg (who also later became a comic book writer). After classes at Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan, Mr. Levitz would visit the offices of DC and its rival, Marvel, for newsworthy tidbits, and in 1973, he was offered a part-time assistant editor's job at DC. He took it, but juggled it with a full-time freshman course load at New York University. His goal back then, he said, was to "get a real job selling technology or something for I.B.M." At the time, the feeling in the industry was that comics were dying. " 'Please let it last until our retirement' was the attitude the guys in their 50's had," Mr. Levitz said. But the small size of the industry made it a thrilling, intimate world. (Mr. Levitz estimated there were about 200 people in the business when he started working at DC, compared with the 1,400 freelance writers and artists that the company used last year, in addition to 300 staff members.) "It seemed like every person who cared about comics knew every other person that cared about comics and probably was likely to show up for dinner in the evening," he said. In his early days at DC, Mr. Levitz worked for Joe Orlando, an editor who helped hone his writing and taught him the craft of editing. They handled almost 30 scripts a month, many of which involved rewriting. "It was a tonnage business," Mr. Levitz recalled. "It was all page rate. It was mostly uncredited. It was a tough way for guys to make a living." In 1976, Jenette Kahn arrived at DC and Mr. Levitz's career took off. Ms. Kahn, one of the few women in a business dominated by men, "believed in things like credits for creators, royalties, rights," Mr. Levitz said. "So for the young people, and certainly for me, it was a very exciting moment." Given the opportunity to edit his own titles, Mr. Levitz dropped out of N.Y.U. He also started to blossom as a writer. In 1976, Mr. Levitz landed "All-Star Comics," featuring the Justice Society, and he began his first run on the Legion of Super- Heroes, a team of 30th-century adventurers. In 1980, Ms. Kahn persuaded Mr. Levitz to become DC's manager of business affairs. Their goal was to make the company grow. They created a marketing department, improved DC's printing quality, embraced an older readership and started thinking about graphic novels. "We began the process of saying, 'The great comic book material should be published in book format and kept in print perpetually,' " Mr. Levitz said. Last year, the comic book industry generated about $250 million in sales from graphic novels or trade paperback collections of individual comics. In total, the industry surpassed $500 million in sales, said Milton Griepp, the publisher of ICv2, an online trade publication that covers pop culture for retailers. Like the industry, comics fandom has changed as well. Thanks to the Internet, fanzines have become news sites, rumor columns and blogs. This visceral connection with fans also points to the continuing appeal of the characters. "It's pretty hard to think about anything else from the culture of 1940 that we still care about today," Mr. Levitz said. "There's as many kids today who love our characters as there ever were." The story of "Infinite Crisis" has involved nearly everyone at DC, no one more so than Geoff Johns, who is writing the series, and who usually writes "JSA." At an editorial meeting to plan out the arcs and aftershocks of "Crisis," everyone realized that Mr. Johns would need a break from his usual duties. Mr. Levitz quickly found himself drafted to write "JSA." In addition to juggling deadlines, another challenge for Mr. Levitz has been the shift from boss to freelance writer for the "JSA" editor, Steve Wacker. "I'm sure it's weird," Mr. Levitz said. "Steve's done a good job of tossing out things he felt didn't work and asking me to rewrite them. Mostly, he's been right." When they have disagreed, Dan DiDio, DC's vice president and executive editor, has served as arbitrator. When the six months are over, will Mr. Levitz pick up the pen again? "I may have gotten the courage from this to do something else," he mused, then quickly added, "But I don't think I'm ready to sign up for a good second job at this point in my life." +++++ Thanks for subscribing to the Comic Book Network Electronic Magazine (CBEM) --------------------------->Disclaimer<--------------------------- This is an ANNOUNCE only mailing list, only the Editor can send messages to the list. No one else has access to the subscriber list. Replies to these messages will be received by the Editor ONLY, so you must CC: individual contributors if you want them to get your E-Mail. The E-mail to the E-mag MAY be used in future issues at the Editor's discretion UNLESS you specifically request that they not be. It is our policy to withhold names and/or Addresses, by request only, from letters of comment. All contributors are required to use their real name and have a valid Email address for their columns to be published. Send Email comments to: ComicBkNet@aol.com Material for inclusion in the Emag - press releases, solicitations, column submissions, Letters to the Editor, guesses for the trivia contest should be sent to ComicBkNet@aol.com The EDITOR, not the submitter, has final approval and edit rights on ALL material. Printed comic books and advanced copies for review in the Emag should be sent via US Mail or UPS to David L. LeBlanc 84 Heather Circle Jefferson, MA 01522-1419 TO Subscribe send a message FROM the intended address to: ComicBookNetworkEmag-subscribe@yahoogroups.com TO Unsubscribe send a message FROM the address to be dropped to: ComicBookNetworkEmag-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com You may also unsubscribe from the Egroups Web page at the short cut below. Shortcut URL to the Egroup page: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ComicBookNetworkEmag All contents COPYRIGHT 2006 The Comic Book Network. This messages may be reproduced only in its original form, and in its entirety for non-commercial purposes. Contact the original author(s) or the Editor for permission to use individual items. Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ComicBookNetworkEmag/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: ComicBookNetworkEmag-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ |
|
| << February04, 2006 - [ComicBookNetwork E-Mag] CBEM 561.6 |
February11, 2006 - [ComicBookNetwork E-Mag] CBEM 562.04 >> |
ComicBookNetworkEmag Archives Index
|
|
|
Archives powered by Zinester's Mailing List Service
Details on ComicBookNetworkEmag |
Browse for more newsletters at Zinester's Ezine Directory
Managed by Zinester's Mailing List Management |