by: Len Kaminski, Tom DeFalco, Mark Gruenwald, Roy Thomas, Dan Thomas, Gerard Jones, Bob Harras, Paul Ryan, Pat Olliffe, Rik Levins, Dave Ross, Rurik Tyler, Jeff Johnson, Stephen B. Jones, Steve Epting, Greg Capullo, Craig Brasfield, John Czop, Darren Auck, Dave Simons
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785120452
ISBN: 0785120459
Label: Marvel Comics
Manufacturer: Marvel Comics
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 288
Publication Date: December 27, 2006
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Reading Level: Young Adult
Sales Rank: 682436
Studio: Marvel Comics
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: One galaxy's heroes are another's villains, and two galaxies' worth of them are in head-on collision - with the Avengers in the middle of a war whose repercussions will haunt them for years! The events that split and shook the Earth's Mightiest Heroes to their foundations end here, and intergalactic boundaries aren't the only lines being drawn! Plus: The tri-galaxy war devastates the Earth far more literally when we see 'What If the Avengers Lost Operation: Galactic Storm?'! Collects Iron Man #279, Thor #446, Captain America #400-401, Avengers West Coast #82, Quasar #34-35, Wonder Man #9, Avengers #347, What If? #55-56.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
Having read some of the original issues when this series first came out in the early 90s, I decided to pick up the assembled stories in the 2 Galactic Storm volumes... and now I wish I hadn't. Frankly, they're exactly what you'd expect from a 90s Marvel crossover- there's a loud of loud noise, mindless action and disjointed plot threads. I'm as big a fan of action and loud noise as the next comic book fan, but this just didn't work for me. Thor's nagging self-doubts have been done better elsewhere ... Read More
Rating: -
This graphic novel contains the conclusion to the Galactic Storm series, which was originally published by Marvel in the Annual issues of their various on-going series (Capt America, Avengers, Thor, etc...). As a rule of thumb story lines that involve Annual issues from multiple comic series are wretched.
This one is no exception. The story telling is choppy, because each Annual covers one hero (or set of heroes). The art is middling to bad, again because its an Annual; Marvel and DC feel ... Read More
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