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And in the “NO FUCKING CONTEST” section of Cover of the Week, we have Jock’s unbelievable offering for Detective Comics #880.

Also, I’ll say it right now, a likely contender for the top 10 of next year’s 52 Favorite Covers since SDCC 2011.

Also, if you are for any reason not reading this ‘Tec run by Scott Snyder, Francesco Francovilla, and Jock…you are fucking up.  Get on it.  Here are some CBR Reviews to help convince you (this link is to the issue below, but if you scroll down you can get all the reviews that have come before).

And when I say “the year” I mean since last year’s comic-con in San Diego.  That’s right, in honor of SDCC 2011, which I am, again, not able to attend I thought I’d do a list of my 52 favorite covers* since last year’s comic-con, so essentially July 2010 – July 2011.**

I’m not going bore you with lengthy descriptions about what I respond to in each image, but if you frequent this blog with any regularity, the choices will not surprise you.  My tastes skew to specific things like anyone, and I reward covers that cater to those personal tastes.  For example, as a woman, I tend to be interested in covers with female characters and at the same time you’re unlikely to see many covers with a lot of objectification and hyper sexualization.  As an artist (but only sorta, and a crappy one at that) I tend to be a bit of a snob about what I think is a good or bad cover – good often involves highly graphic images, lots of great negative space, interesting/solid composition, single figures, white space, and good integration of text into the image.

Whenever possible I’ve included the full cover, with text etc., as I feel that’s part of the whole.  I made a few exceptions if the covers were saddled with particularly horrible “event banners” or some such, or if I didn’t have access to a high enough resolution image including the text.

I’m sure I missed a bunch of great covers anyway and, as always, I never feel great about the order, but I tried my best! I hope you’ll enjoy, even if they’re not the covers you would pick, it’s a beautiful line up of cover gorgeousness.

If you’re new to the blog and haven’t seen my “100 Best Comic Covers” list, you can check it out: here, here, here, and here.  As well as my “already second guessing myself” modified list here.

Next year SDCC, next year!***

* This includes only monthly saddle stapled North American comics since that is what I have access to and did not include graphic novels, trades, etc. 

**Because comics are generally dated a month or two after they are actually released, there’s a bit of a fudging of the numbers/eligibility. It makes for a bit of grey area around the eligibility dates, but I did the best I could.

***Be advised, I say this every year. 

052.  BIRDS OF PREY #12.  Jesus Saiz

50.  ZATANNA #14.  Adam Hughes

50.  STREETS OF GOTHAM #15. Dustin Nguyen

49.  SUPERBOY #2.  Phil Noto

48. DEADPOOL PULP 4.  Jae Lee

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Sometimes superhero comics are just FUN.  Take a look at this page from Kieron Gillen and Jamie McKelvie’s Generation Hope #9.

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I don’t love the face on this Adam Hughes Zatanna #15 cover (it’s very pretty but doesn’t actually look very much like Zatanna to me), but it’s otherwise a really beautiful.  The way she emerges out of the black is just wonderful and the integration of her title block into the image is fantastic, making it all look very clean and simplified.

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My good friend Tim Cummings has a book now available – Orphan Stories.

“Set in 1940s Florida, Middle America, Hollywood in the 70s, curious netherspheres between life and death, and deep inside the imaginations of characters whose greatest abundances are their emotions, the ten stories (and smattering of poems) in Cummings’s eclectic collection ‘Orphans’ evoke familiar and strange scenarios of love, loss, heartbreak, humor, spirituality, sexuality, and the quelling of violence. An unhappy housewife mired by the ravages of war fantasizes about killing her own daughter. An unlikely couple in the heart of Americana is brought together by strange sparks of magic trapped in a horoscopes column. The dark but achingly honest confessions of a Hollywood icon’s emotionally deranged son cause him to band together with like-minded misfits. A play about a sweet, sickly little boy illuminates a weird world of living, corporeal dolls that gently dance him to his imminent death. And there is more. In this refreshingly unpredictable assortment of short stories, poems, plays, and screenplays, a strong and imaginative new voice in American literature spins a majestic web of people, places, relationships, and situations.”

You can buy it in either print or digital editions, now.

If you like creative short fiction and want to support artists that are paving their own way, rather than wading through the (I can assure you exhausting) traditional publishing machine, I urge you to get your copy now.  Mine’s in the mail.  Congratulations Tim!  :)

Easy win for this week from Stephanie Hans.  Stephanie Hans has been doing awesome things with the Journey Into Mystery covers, but one for issue #625 is my favorite one yet.  Her use of color here is just inspired.  Though I usually prefer to put up the final cover, complete with titles etc., as I generally consider that “part of the cover” for good or ill, I’m putting up the “preview cover” as I can’t bear to show it with that hideous (and massive) “Fear Itself” banner.

Look at the gorgeousness!!!

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So the illustrious Greg Burgas of CSBG asked me to do a joint review with him of Dave McKean’s Celluloid.

Check it out!  Beware, definitely NSFW.

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Also from Green Wake #4 and the sublimely talented Riley Rossmo, is this week’s panel of the week.  I adore this panel.  In fact, I call it the perfect comic panel in my review of Green Wake #4 on CBR this week thanks to its exceptional merging of image and words toward a stronger more powerful whole.

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Easy win this week for this sublime cover for Green Wake #4 by Riley Rossmo.

Read this book folks, it’s awesome, and looks at least as good inside as out.

 

 

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Really simple, beautiful, powerful stuff from Charlie Adlard and Cliff Rathburn in this week’s The Walking Dead #86.  This was my favorite, but there were many good moments.

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