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Swords Of Sorrow: The Complete Saga Kindle & comiXology
Leah Moore (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
Mairghread Scott (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
Mirka Andolfo (Artist) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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$0.00 Kindle & ComixologyBuy now and you can also read this title for free on the Comixology app, Amazon's premier digital comic reading experience. Learn More$20.99 to buy - Paperback
$44.03
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherDynamite Entertainment
- Publication dateJanuary 20, 2016
- File size1532104 KB
- Due to its large file size, this book may take longer to download
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Product details
- ASIN : B01BU0PB0W
- Publisher : Dynamite Entertainment (January 20, 2016)
- Publication date : January 20, 2016
- Language : English
- File size : 1532104 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Not enabled
- Enhanced typesetting : Not Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Print length : 503 pages
- Lending : Not Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #118,921 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #220 in Fantasy Graphic Novels (Kindle Store)
- #539 in Fantasy Graphic Novels (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Nancy A. Collins (1959-) is the award-winning author of numerous urban fantasy, multi-genre, and Southern Gothic tales, as well as several graphic novels. Her works include Sunglasses After Dark, Knuckles and Tales, and a two-year stint writing Swamp Thing for DC Comics/Vertigo. A native of Arkansas, she currently resides in the Atlanta Metro Area.
LEAH MOORE is an author, columnist, and digital comics evangelist, born in Northampton, England in 1978.
Leah's comic writing career began in 2002 with stories for America's Best Comics. Most recently her solo comics scripting has appeared as part of Dynamite Entertainment's Gail Simone masterminded crossover series Swords of Sorrow (2015, with Francesco Manna).
In 2006 Leah wrote the story and copy to accompany The Royal Mail's 40th anniversary Christmas Stamps. She has written columns and articles for The Big Issue, Lifetime TV online, and Comic Heroes Magazine.
Since 2013 Leah has been the Project Manager of the innovative, free to use, digital comics publishing and reading platform Electricomics. She was also the contributing editor of Electricomics flagship release, co-writing the sci-fi story Sway, with art by Nicola Scott.
Leah and her husband, John Reppion, have been scripting comics together since 2003, writing for the likes of 2000 AD, Channel 4 Education, Dark Horse, DC Comics, Dynamite Entertainment, Electricomics, IDW, and Self Made Hero.
They have written established characters such as Doctor Who (The Whispering Gallery, 2008 with Ben Templesmith) and Sherlock Holmes (The Trial of Sherlock Holmes, 2009 with Aaron Campbell, and The Liverpool Demon, 2012 with Matt Triano), as well as creating their own including Brit-Cit Psi Division, Judge Lillian Storm (Storm Warning, 2015 with Tom Foster).
Together they have faithfully adapted notable works by Lewis Carroll (The Complete Alice, 2010), H. P. Lovecraft (The Shadow Over Innsmouth, 2012), Bram Stoker (The Complete Dracula, 2009), and M. R. James (Ghost Stories of an Antiquary Vol 1, 2016) into comics and graphic novels.
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Well, I was very excited for this book. Seeing Gail Simone's name on a book of female warrior heroes, I was pretty sure that this would be another great story with strong women in strong roles. Sadly, I was wrong.
The story: A whole bunch of strong female characters, some I am familiar with (Vampirella, Dejah Thoris, Red Sonja) and many that I am not so familiar with (Purgatori, Lady Demon, Chastity, Jennifer Blood, and many others), are being paired up in teams by someone called The Traveller to save the world from The Prince (of Darkness), who is getting his own team of monsters together to fight the female champions. But pairing up these strong, independent women is not going to be easy. First, they need to find a way to <em>not</em> kill each other before they can fight together.
And...that's pretty much it. Each woman is plucked from her home world and plopped down with another woman warrior. They see each other as opponents for a bit but come to respect each others' abilities and fight off some real enemies.
Okay...so the plot is pretty weak, but the working of the story could still be done well. Unfortunately, it isn't. This is a 500+ page graphic novel, which might be one of the longest I've ever read (though I must admit here that I haven't read the entire thing ... the Advance Reading Copy that I was given stops at page 413), and it is so incredibly repetitive that I could practically write the dialog myself based on the first segment. Woman meets woman. Comments on strange attire. Sees other woman as a threat. Fight. Common enemy arrives. Fight side by side. Admit respect for other woman despite strange attire. Repeat.
If the repetitive nature of the stories isn't enough to scare off the reader, a complete lack of understanding of the characters by the writers might do the trick. I nearly put the book down when Red Sonja (a warrior from the 'Hyborian' age [which takes place before the beginning of recorded history according to creator Robert E. Howard]) goes back further in time to team up with Jungle Girl and Red Sonja has to explain quips and puns to Jungle Girl. Where do I begin with what's wrong with this?!
There is a moment, around page 300 when a number of the women come together and it feels as though we might actually be working toward a climax that could be exciting, but it is only a temporary build in the story. I will hope that there is another crescendo to the story in the last 100 pages that I didn't read, but it hardly matters...there isn't enough build in this story as it is to make it interesting enough to read.
The art is extremely hit-or-miss. There is some really beautiful art:
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And there is some art that is rather terrible:
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(Yes...that's our Red Sonja above - she kind of looks like Red Sonja as imagined by a Disney version for elementary students.)
And there's pretty much everything in between these two styles. While the story is predictable and repetitive, the art is wildly un-predictable. I most definitely would not buy this book just for the art. In fact, I just plain wouldn't buy this book. It is a huge disappointment. Such a great opportunity to really have these great female characters shine, but instead they all seem pretty much alike, doing pretty much nothing. Such a waste.
Looking for a good book? <em>Swords of Sorrow Complete Collection Volume 1</em> is a massive graphic novel, at over 500 pages, and had great potential but falls flat with the story and the art.
I received a digital copy of this book from the publisher, through Netgalley, in exchange for an honest review.
This book covers a vast range of female heroines and villains from the Dynamite catalogue. The premise is simple enough. Bad guy gathers a crew of female villains from all worlds, times and dimensions. Good guy gathers a crew of female heroines from all worlds, times and dimensions. Then they go at it. To make it more interesting and less frantic, the book consists of a number of set pieces in which two heroines from different eras and styles get thrown together. They fight; they smartmouth; they bond. Two by two the crew is assembled. So, we get Vampirella and Jennifer Blood. We get Masquerade and Kato. Red Sonja matches up with Jungle Girl. Maybe weirdest of all we partner Dejah Thoris and Irene Adler, and Black Sparrow and Lady Zorro. And so on. For villains we have, amongst others, Purgatori, Lady Demon, Bad Kitty and Chastity. And, through a series of portals all of these characters and then teams travel back and forth to, through and among each other's worlds, realms, times and dimensions. So you get Dejah in Victorian London and Irene Adler on Mars and Vampirella in modern L.A., and so on.
The book is organized to follow the order of all of the original series issues and one-shots, so that the story develops along a single time line. So, you get Team A issue 1, then Team B issue 1, then Team A issue 2, then Team C issue 1, then team B issue 2, and so on. This might seem confusing, but it works a lot better than following all of the Team A arc and then going back to do the Team B arc, before going back again to start the Team C arc.
All of this, as I say, is the prelude to the final confrontation. Some of the heroine pairs work - in terms of teamwork, or snappy banter, or complimentary skills. Some, maybe not so much. But it's like watching a flip book, and every few pages a new chapter appears on screen, so you'll never get bored. And in addition to flipping among characters we're also flipping among writers so you get to sample a lot of different styles in terms of wordplay, dialogue and the like. The same is true for the drawing, which is of pretty high quality except for one or two bits that were a bit cartoony for me.
So, bottom line, this is the biggest and most crammed full cross-over to come along in quite a while, if ever. If you want to visit a lot of old friends and maybe find a few new characters, this is a fine choice.
(Please note that I received a free advance will-self-destruct-in-x-days Adobe Digital copy of this book in exchange for a candid review. Apart from that I have no connection at all to either the author or the publisher of this book.)
A mysterious stranger delivers various weapons to a bunhc of heroines for an upcoming war. Meanwhile, the bad guys are recruiting a lot less heroes. On the side of good are a ton of lady heroes, including some from fiction and some I've not actually heard of. There is Red Sonja of course, but I'd not heard of Lady Kato.
Through a series of portals, everyone meets in smaller groups of two or three. There are the usual hostilities and fights, but those quickly move aside for the bigger issue. Why do they have these cool weapons and what are they supposed to do with them?
At 504 pages, this is only volume 1, so I never got to a big face off. Unfortunately, too much of a good thing is just too much. There are simply too many characters, and way too much time is spent on characters introducing each other. The plot seems a bit on the endless side, and with so many different titles, authors and artists, it all comes across as a bit inconsistent and mediocre.
I received a review copy of this graphic novel from Dynamite Entertainment, Diamond Book Distributors, and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you for allowing me to review this graphic novel.
Top reviews from other countries


THE STORY. A mysterious woman known only as The Traveller journeys across time, space and dimensions, bestowing magical ebony blades (the eponymous Swords of Sorrow) to a trio of female adventurers - Dejah Thoris, Red Sonja and Vampirella. Her mission is to prepare a last line of defence against the Prince of All Universes, a lovelorn despot with the power to shatter realities. To further aid the heroic trio, the Traveller also enlists the aid of other mighty women such as Athena, Black Sparrow, Eva (Daughter of Dracula), Irene Adler, Jane Porter (aka Lady Greystoke), Jennifer Blood, Jana the Jungle Girl, Kato, Lady Rawhide, Lady Zorro, Masquerade, Miss Fury, Pantha, Red and Voodoo Childe. These women were also given magical blades. United by the Swords of Sorrow, these spirited women must face not only the Prince's powerful Shard Men, but such agents of Chaos as Bad Kitty, Chastity, Mistress Hel and Purgatori.
The heroines are recruited in diverse pairs, which we as readers get to know more about through the one-shot issues and mini-series. These teams-ups feature in alphabetical order, Black Sparrow and Lady Zorro (one-shot), the Chaos Quartet prequel (one shot), Dejah Thoris and Irene Adler (3 part mini-series), Masquerade and Kato (one-shot), Miss Fury and Lady Rawhide (one-shot), Pantha and Jane Porter (one-shot), Red Sonja and Jungle Girl (3 part mini-series) and Vampirella and Jennifer Blood (4 part mini-series).
From the introduction to the book, Gail Simone writes, "You will notice these stories run concurrently and some issues take place in small moments during others. So you may ask: How do I go about reading this? We have presented the saga in the order that the issues were published to preserve continuity. This way, you will read the story as it originally unfolded, and won't come to the end of one series and have to backtrack by starting another. This is how we recommend reading this story... at least the first time." This works perfectly fine for me although I have read some folk criticising the book for being too confusing. Nah! It isn't!
THE VERDICT. I bloody well loved it! Yes, every single page! Obviously, my main focus was upon Vampirella (my favourite comics character) and she was well served in terms of screen time, scripting and artwork. The team up between Vampi and Jennifer Blood worked extremely well. Some of the team-ups seemed a little odd, like Dejah Thoris and Irene Adler, but worked surprisingly well. What made this series work so brilliantly was the quality of the writing. Gail collected the best female writers in the business and got them to pull out all the stops, making full use of their talent and energy. Obviously with so many artists working on the series the artwork varies but thankfully, none of it is sub-standard. Overall, the quality is good to very good. Going back to Gail's introduction, she wrote, "for THIS crossover, I didn't want the usual boring stuff. I wanted a rough and tumble, fun and sexy, scary and action-packed classic epic. Subtlety be damned. I wanted something that felt like the creators of all these characters got together in a room after a three-day bender and just JAMMED. So that's what we did. We assembled a team of the best writers and artists we could find and just threw every firecracker we could right into the gunpowder factory. I hope you like it." Oh, I did! I liked it very much! In fact I like it enough to award it a 5 star rating. I have no hesitation in recommending this TPB to any one with even a passing interest in comics. Ultimately though, how much you will want to buy this will depend very much on how you feel about the characters portrayed within its pages and also your feelings on "girl power." This book is ALL about girl power and I certainly don't have a problem with that!


However, Dynamite could of chosen a better site to give praise for the book on the back. The Mary Sue is not what I would call a credible source and the fact they chose that name for their site is ironic... anyways, doesn't detract from the book it just I am sure they were more credible sites out their praising their work.
If you are interested in any of these Dynamite characters this may be a good comic for you to nab.
