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[TT2]⇒ Read Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books

Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books



Download As PDF : Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books

Download PDF Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books

Written by MATT FRACTION, STUART MOORE AND JASON AARONPencils by BRENDAN MCCARTHY, JOE QUINONES AND MIRCO PIERFEDERICICover by GERALD PARELSteve Rogers has returned! In fact he was in such a hurry that he actually came back before the story was done! But, whatever, I'm sure no one even noticed. Anyway, Bucky Barnes is the current Captain America, and has come into his own in the role in a story Captain America editor Tom Brevoort calls "the greatest single marriage of words and pictures in the history of the English language. Suck it, rest of literature!" But will Bucky go back to being the Winter Soldier? Are there others in line? Who cares?! All we're interested in is who WON'T be holding that Vibranium laced hunk of junk and what major new Marvel event comic it leads into. Who won't wield the shield? It could be not YOU!!! (Featuring a special appearance by everybody's favorite underused character, Deadpool! At last, Deadpool! In a comic!)32 PGS./One-Shot/Rated T+

Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books

I’m gonna say this right now:
This comic is stupid. The entire book, front to back, is stupid. And it knows it the entire time.
The book contains three stories in it, each involving an alternate version of a Marvel character. The first story involves a character named Forbush Man (a gag character from Marvel’s Brand Ech line of comics) as he confronts comic writers about all the extreme violence and gore in their comics. All while, unaware of the fact that he has become extremely violent and gory. As such, the writers, in an attempt to prove that they’re still good at their jobs, show him some of the comics they wrote, which are in fact the other stories in the book. The story itself isn’t that bad of a concept, and the hypocritical humor of seeing this goofy character become so blood hungry without even realizing it just adds to the amusement factor. What makes it even better is to see the exaggerated personalities of the writers as they try to defend their decisions and even how they think of each other. My favorite moment is when Forbush Man remembers who he is and what happens after. Overall, it’s a pretty amusing story with some nice humor and good artwork that can get a slight smile on your face.
The second story is about an alternate version of Captain America named Doctor America, a fusion between the good Captain and Doctor Strange. And... that’s pretty much all I can tell you. Not because I don’t want to spoil the story, but because I could barely understand what was going on. This story is honestly the low point of the comic, as it has no coherency, no flow, and just weird artwork. Now in its defense, this was probably the story's intent as the surreal nature seems to fit Doctor America, but unfortunately, it was too good at it, and the story suffered because of it. So... Yeah, not that good.
Finally, the third story focuses on the “Golden Age” Deadpool, a Deadpool that came about in the early days of WWII. The story focuses on his origin (he got lung cancer from smoking too many cigarettes in an attempt to fake mustard gas poisoning to get out of WWI, and a pair of Nazis recruited him for their Veapon X program), and his first mission as he’s sent to steal Captain America’s shield before it can be given to him. The story is pretty decent in its own way, and it is pretty cool to see Deadpool in a Golden Age setting, plus seeing the misfortune of the scientist creating the shield is funny, but honestly the story’s pretty formulaic. It’s easy to guess where the story will go and who Deadpool will side with in the end, but still, the premise is interesting, the jokes are still amusing, and overall, it is still a decent story, just don’t expect anything great.
So, overall, if you’re interested in this comic, then you probably know what you’re getting into. The stories may not all be great, but there’s enough charm, humor, and imagination to keep you interested, and admittedly, it is still cool to see these alternate iterations of these characters (at least for me). So, in the end, this comic is definitely stupid, but it’s enjoyably stupid and I think people will have a good time with it.

Product details

  • Comic
  • Publisher Marvel Comics (2010)
  • ASIN B003I2N8QK

Read Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books

Tags : Captain America: Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 [Jason Aaron, Matt Fraction, Stuart Moore, Mirco Pierfederici, Brenden McCarthy, Joe Quinones] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Written by MATT FRACTION, STUART MOORE AND JASON AARONPencils by BRENDAN MCCARTHY, JOE QUINONES AND MIRCO PIERFEDERICICover by GERALD PARELSteve Rogers has returned! In fact he was in such a hurry that he actually came back before the story was done! But,Jason Aaron, Matt Fraction, Stuart Moore, Mirco Pierfederici, Brenden McCarthy, Joe Quinones,Captain America: Who Won't Wield The Shield #1,Marvel Comics,B003I2N8QK
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Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books Reviews


I expected it to be a bit longer and more thorough. It was alright.
I’m gonna say this right now
This comic is stupid. The entire book, front to back, is stupid. And it knows it the entire time.
The book contains three stories in it, each involving an alternate version of a Marvel character. The first story involves a character named Forbush Man (a gag character from Marvel’s Brand Ech line of comics) as he confronts comic writers about all the extreme violence and gore in their comics. All while, unaware of the fact that he has become extremely violent and gory. As such, the writers, in an attempt to prove that they’re still good at their jobs, show him some of the comics they wrote, which are in fact the other stories in the book. The story itself isn’t that bad of a concept, and the hypocritical humor of seeing this goofy character become so blood hungry without even realizing it just adds to the amusement factor. What makes it even better is to see the exaggerated personalities of the writers as they try to defend their decisions and even how they think of each other. My favorite moment is when Forbush Man remembers who he is and what happens after. Overall, it’s a pretty amusing story with some nice humor and good artwork that can get a slight smile on your face.
The second story is about an alternate version of Captain America named Doctor America, a fusion between the good Captain and Doctor Strange. And... that’s pretty much all I can tell you. Not because I don’t want to spoil the story, but because I could barely understand what was going on. This story is honestly the low point of the comic, as it has no coherency, no flow, and just weird artwork. Now in its defense, this was probably the story's intent as the surreal nature seems to fit Doctor America, but unfortunately, it was too good at it, and the story suffered because of it. So... Yeah, not that good.
Finally, the third story focuses on the “Golden Age” Deadpool, a Deadpool that came about in the early days of WWII. The story focuses on his origin (he got lung cancer from smoking too many cigarettes in an attempt to fake mustard gas poisoning to get out of WWI, and a pair of Nazis recruited him for their Veapon X program), and his first mission as he’s sent to steal Captain America’s shield before it can be given to him. The story is pretty decent in its own way, and it is pretty cool to see Deadpool in a Golden Age setting, plus seeing the misfortune of the scientist creating the shield is funny, but honestly the story’s pretty formulaic. It’s easy to guess where the story will go and who Deadpool will side with in the end, but still, the premise is interesting, the jokes are still amusing, and overall, it is still a decent story, just don’t expect anything great.
So, overall, if you’re interested in this comic, then you probably know what you’re getting into. The stories may not all be great, but there’s enough charm, humor, and imagination to keep you interested, and admittedly, it is still cool to see these alternate iterations of these characters (at least for me). So, in the end, this comic is definitely stupid, but it’s enjoyably stupid and I think people will have a good time with it.
Ebook PDF Captain America Who Won't Wield The Shield #1 Jason Aaron Matt Fraction Stuart Moore Mirco Pierfederici Brenden McCarthy Joe Quinones Books

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