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Kurt Busiek's ASTRO CITY
Life in the Big City
Written by Kurt Busiek
Art by Brent Anderson
   & Will Blyberg
Cover by Alex Ross
Paperback: 192 pages
DC Comics
ISBN: 156389551X
$19.95
Kurt Busiek's ASTRO CITY
Confession
Written by Kurt Busiek
Art by Brent Anderson and Will Blyberg
Cover by Alex Ross
Introduction by Neil Gaiman
Paperback: 192 pages
DC Comics
ISBN: 1563895501
$19.95
In the follow up to "Life in the Big City", Kurt Busiek hits the mark once again in the fictional world of Astro City, where he brings the "costumes" to a place every bit the equal to Metropolis or Gotham City.
The story revolves around a Batman and Robin-type team of the Confessor and his new side-kick, Altar Boy. The same sense of wonder that permeated "Marvels" is in full effect here. There are bible-thumping heroes, an X-men-like supergroup, a superhero-phobic Mayor hell bent on registering all costumed crusaders and Alien Invaders (summoned in the previous graphic novel). There's a nice balance between continuity (the unsolved Hill murders, Altar Boy's revealing apprenticeship with the Confessor, the Aliens) and the randomness of the stand-alone stories.
Kurt Busiek's ASTRO CITY
Family Album
Written by Kurt Busiek
Art by Brent Anderson and Will Blyberg
Cover by Alex Ross
Introduction by Harlan Ellison
Paperback: 224 pages
DC Comics
ISBN: 1563895528
$19.95
Astro City is a city filled with superpowered beings. You can't walk from street to street without noticing at least one meta-human, if you're an inhabitant of the city. But not so like most 'superhero-titles' the focus here isn't only on the heroes and their deeds, but on the regular people who live (and try to cope with all the supernatural activities around them) there as well. It tells about their personal lives as well as about the events they all witness.
This Trade-Paperback is the first Astro City collection that collects issues from the ongoing series (#1-3 & #10-13, no loose ends there though).
The great thing about Astro City TPB's is that they both work for longtime readers as for people who are new to the title. For 'experienced' readers there are many recognizable (background-) characters, surroundings and situations that it feels familiair (without being repetitive), yet never the same. At the same time all those recognizable parts aren't vital points to the story-arcs so that new-comers will never feel like their missing out on something (and once they're through reading their first TPB and move on to another Astro City book THEIR party of recognition begins, without anything being spoiled in a previous book. No matter what order you read them in because they work as self-contained books as well). The issues in this book I'd like to advise to especially take a good look at are #10-12. Issue #10 is about a man called "The Junkman" who once managed to pull off the greatest bank-robbery in the history of Astro City. Only the one thing he wants most, recognition for it, he doesn't have. He decides to go back and do it again. Issues #11/12 are about one of the most famous characters of Astro City namely 'Jack-in-the-Box'. One evening he leaves home and he gets confronted with some persons from his 'possible futures'. An event which makes him rethink his activities, both private as professional.

Finally, the volume is concluded with some pages filled with sketches of how the characters came to be what they are now AND the Alex Ross covers to the original issues which are collected in here. Like I said in my review-title, I consider this one of the best titles in the genre where superheroes are involved. It's about superheroes AND about regular folks among them AND about the the lives these metahumans have apart from being heroes. Especially people who liked "Marvels" and Alan Moore's "Top Ten" will have a good time with this book, but it really should appeal to most other comicbook-readers as well, both superhero-fans as fans whose interest lies in the more 'serious' sub-genres. Really well-executed.

Kurt Busiek's ASTRO CITY
The Tarnished Angel
Written by Kurt Busiek
Art by Brent Anderson & Will Blyberg
Painted cover by Alex Ross
Introduction by Frank Miller
Paperback: 224 pages
DC Comics
ISBN: 156389663X
$19.95
Reprinting the "Steeljack Saga" from issues #14-20 of the popular series.
Kurt Busiek's ASTRO CITY
The Tarnished Angel
Written by Kurt Busiek
Art by Brent Anderson & Will Blyberg
Painted cover by Alex Ross
Introduction by Frank Miller
Hardcover: 256 pages
DC Comics
ISBN: 1563896532
$29.95
The longest ASTRO CITY storyline ever is collected in a handsome hardcover volume featuring sketchbook pages and a new cover by Alex Ross. Reprinting the "Steeljack Saga" from issues #14-20 of the popular series.
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