>What is this thread? Every Wins'day at Win-O'-Clock we gather here and post links to the latest scans and rips of comic books. Most links we uploaded ourselves, others we are sharing from elsewhere. Some comics we've even purchased ourselves (but most we didn't). If you'd like to help out, just ask and we would be delighted to tell you how. Otherwise, be patient, be polite, and understand the simple concept behind these words: Not posted means not available yet.
>Where can I find downloads for other comics? Warez forums/blogs, DDL-indexing search engines (like FilesLoop), torrent trackers (like 1337x) and other P2P networks (like DC++). If a link has been posted on Yea Forums, you can search for it in the Desu archive (add "http*" to searches to return only posts with links). If all else fails, just >buy it.
>Where can I buy comics? amazon.com/ On the various publishers' webstores, and at your local comics shop.
>How do I download from websites that only give me .exe files? Untick the checkbox under the download button.
>How can I find this thread every week? If you are using the inline extension go to Yea Forums.org/co/official or use the option under "Filters & Post Hiding". If you have 4chanX go to Settings > Filter > Subject and add the following line: /Official Win-O'-Thread/;highlight
The hopeless romantic Joan Peterson travels through time and space have brought her not just to another position as a grown woman, but to a whole new childhood as well. This new romance begins all the way from birth, making it the biggest emotional commitment (and eventual heartbreak) that Joan has had to experience so far. Elsa Charretier's art and Matt Hollingsworth's colors create a dreamy, vintage atmosphere that contrasts with the looming dread of the underlying plot while Clayton Cowles' lettering emphasizes the melodramatic tone of Tom King's self-aware script (Everlasting Productions Substack: 25 pages).
Thank you to all the people who rip things and make them available for us all. Thank you
Adam Barnes
The Man Of Tomorrow and The World’s Mightiest Mortal have a great deal in common (especially if you ask Nation Periodical’s lawyers in the 1950s.) But there are a few things that make them very different. While he doesn’t like to think of himself as special, Superman is kind of the gold standard for the heroes of the DC Universe, but he has found himself surprisingly grateful at the appearance of Captain Marvel, who shares an understanding of what it’s like to live with great power. The Big Red Cheese and The Big Blue Boy Scout have struck up an unusual friendship, but they’ve also gotten a lot of unwanted attention … Dr. Sivana makes a deal with Lex Luthor, Superman & Captain Marvel battle a giant muck-creature, the villainous Sabbac is summoned, and only the combined efforts of these two powerful heroes will be enough to defend Fawcett City and Metropolis from the combined onslaught of their archenemies.
Reminder that today is april's fool day so be sure not to believe anything anybody says today faggots. although I doubt most of you are smarter enought to do this.
Matrix is an angel, one of the Amenlee, whose task is to help those who rebel against His Will and help them find their way. But her love for humankind starts to dwindle as her latest charge, Linda Danvers, resists her attempts to help her. This Elseworlds is a reimaging of the Earth-Angel storyline of the first half of Supergirl - Peter David's excellent Supergirl series that mixed traditional superheroics with spirituality, giving it an almost Vertigo-like (DC's imprint) feel., written by J. M. DeMatteis who used the basic premise of Matrix-Supergirl melding with Linda Danvers, stripping it of obvious superhero trappings. This one shot was illustrated by Jamie Tolagson, with Sherilyn Van Valkenburgh's colors (DC Comics: 51 pages).
Sorry for peculiar question, but I'm looking for a fomic book about crucified Conan the Barbarian. Any tips?
Carter Nelson
So we know CMX Unlimited books were almost guaranteed to get ripped.
What's the status for those on Kindle Unlimited? Has that been cracked as easily?
I ask because newer Justice League trades are on the latter service for free.
Nathaniel Flores
>but not Nice joke sirs!
Zachary Cook
>fomic 🤨
Brandon Lewis
Thanks for ripping the Spider-Man Epic Collection, much appreciated
Matthew Edwards
You can't crack kindle Unlimited, it's a paid for service. I have it on trial at the moment, which Justice League books do you need?
Nolan Cooper
If only the AZW files provided by Amazon weren't such low-quality garbage... I tried it again recently. Files are 4 times bigger than they used to be but still half the resolution you would expect from comicbooks.
Jaxon Nelson
Justice League: Galaxy of Terrors Justice League: Death Metal
Justice League - Endless Winter (2021) got ripped last week by another KU user like you, he probably wants a 'bloat' version, with one of those pretty hydra tag pages attached so he can feel like a cool kid.
Three of the Future State books were also ripped by another user, but I think those are Overdrive: SS, JL and Supes - so maybe if there are others of those on KU?
Is Justice League Incarnate (TPB) is probably not even out, I'm guessing?
Anything past vol. 6 or past Scott Snyder Deluxe 2, or any GA/SA not ripped, I guess, I have no idea what user wants other than 'proper' bloat.
Kayden Wilson
Yeah I ripped Endless Winter and those 3 Future State trades. They came from KU, not super quality but it’s as good as it gets unless the go on sale and Empire rips them.
Cameron Stewart
Reeee I keep getting ones I have already ;_; Bit lame you can roll the same one multiple times with the 10x roll.
>Kindle Unlimited? >Has that been cracked as easily?
>AZW files The same way that the rippers are screen shooting current releases can be applied to any Kindle book, so Kindle Unlimited can be screen shot.
Are you eyeballing your page joins or using some app? I have over 100 books, mostly floppies, I bought between 2017-2019 that are just sitting, cracked, on an external because trying to eyeball page joins was annoying as fuck.
What comics have you read or do you plan to read today user?
Ryan Bailey
When is the last time you paid money for a comic be honest
Luis Foster
As opposed to a HDrip under 200MB, user. There's a middleground between SD and BLOAT. I didn't take a look at what the user above called "SD", mind you.
Carter White
Yes, especially if it's a book I'm not interested in very much.
You can convert raws. I agree with , there's nothing wrong with some SD rips in many cases.
And yes, >1gb+ for a 5 issue trade is absurd and only stupid people not paying attention would call a 5 issue trade >under 200MB an example of a bad 'HDrip'
💢
Henry Parker
win-o died over night 🙄
Jaxon Cruz
I know I can convert raws but like I mentioned earlier, the raws being served by Amazon aren't HD so there's no point. At least on desktop. Also: >120pages under 200MB is an example of a bad 'HDrip' BLOAT FOR THE BLOAT GOD!
Ian Jenkins
I remember the days when all we had were scans which normally came in around 15-20mb and we were damn grateful to get them each week. People are far to fucking entitled these days
Ayden Miller
>win-o reached bump limit, son. rare but it happens.
Nolan Stewart
>BLOAT FOR THE BLOAT GOD! reply to I'm not a fan of bloat or bloatron just because he's the son of a Mexican Drug Cartel Lord who doesn't care he waste all the ill-gotten gains he provides bloatron on zit cream, orange pop, hot pockets, and funny books.
Luis Turner
am i confused or is Yea Forums broken? it says emotes i clicked will appear in the list, i spent the last 5 minutes on a thread and i got bugger all after i refreshed
Angel Brooks
Clicking/Witnessing them doesn't unlock them. It's just a way to see what an emote is instead of blindingly spending points on it. Either the coding is shittastic or there's a mod fucking me for reeeeing about only rolling ones I alreadu had because I just had a 9 hour rollback and it seemed like I got ~2.5k refunded but after rolling once it turned out the ~2.5k wasn't refunded after all.
Jaxon Scott
You darned kids with your e-moots and mumbo-jumbo. You disgust me.
i want to unlock the mayuri one but i can't see what number it is because the thread is archived
Aaron Roberts
HE CAN'T KEEP GETTING AWAY WITH THIS! • Kirk Baily (1963-2022), US voice actor in Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex (English dub, 2002-2004), Big Hero 6 (2014) and others, died on 27 February aged 59. • Johnny Brown (1937-2022), US actor in Plastic Man (1979-1980), died on 2 March aged 84. • Farrah Forke (1968-2022), US actress in Lois & Clark (1994-1995) and others, died on 25 February aged 54. • William Hurt (1950-2022), Oscar-winning US actor whose credits include Avengers: Endgame (2019), died on 13 March aged 71. • Alan Ladd Jr. (1937-2022), US film executive who was president of 20th Century Fox and produced The Phantom (1996) and others, died on 2 March aged 84. • Garry Leach (1954-2022), UK comics artist who worked for 2000 AD and was the first to draw Alan Moore’s 1982 Marvelman/Miracleman reboot, died on 26 March aged 67. • Pavlo ‘Pasha’ Li (1998-2022), Ukrainian actorwith voice roles in dubs of The Lion King and The Hobbit, was killed by Russian shelling on 6 March; he was 23. • Pepper Martin (1936-2022), Canadian-born actor in Superman II (2006) and others, died on 18 March aged 85. • Mitchell Ryan (1934-2022), US actor in Judge Dredd (1995), died on 4 March aged 88. • Kunt Tulgar (1948-2022), Turkish director of The Return of Superman (1979), died on 16 March aged 74.
Just find the thread and click on it. If you don't have it unlocked, it will show in the list but have a grey overlay that disappears while doing mouseover.
Thomas Nelson
Found one of the three Fantagraphics volumes in French, at least Indeed my friend, indeed
Yea Forums had dedicated threads to posting them. I don't even know what rolling does, because you just have to scroll and click those threads.
Carter Bennett
Rolling unlocks so you can actually use them. Clicking on them just reveals them on the list, you still have either buy the unlock with points or pray to rngsus and roll.
Bentley Smith
💤
Nathan Stewart
want old comic links? check the
Jaxson Wilson
>two Are you the hacker known as Yea Forums? Teach me your ways.
Andrew Edwards
>• Garry Leach (1954-2022), UK comics artist who worked for 2000 AD and was the first to draw Alan Moore’s 1982 Marvelman/Miracleman reboot, died on 26 March aged 67. OMG HE'S EATING HIS FRIENDS NOW
Sebastian Lewis
...
Carson Brown
Oi! Do ye have a loicense to fail that 'ard?
Sebastian Bailey
1r0n either posts a pending on the megalinks or if he includes a mega folder link it never includes the latest volume
Re 033: That was definitely to make sure. He was supposed to bring back photo evidence too.
I agree with the amount of smut being lackluster this time around, but I'm kind of looking forward to more if for no other reason than to see what kind of assholes neko-neko/the cia can be.
>Green Lantern by Geoff Johns Book 04 yoooo red lantern kino time
Oliver Adams
🥺
Benjamin Watson
In this Elseworld, there could never be two more different super-heroines. Barbara Gordon's parents rather than Bruce Wayne's are killed by Joe Cool while trying to save Wayne's parents. Barbara becomes Batgirl with the help of the Wayne millions and the assistance of her childhood friend and millionaire playboy Bruce Wayne. After becoming Batgirl, she is the supreme enforcer of all Gotham and due to her actions and that of the monitoring "Oracle Eye,” Gotham has been completely sealed off from normal society. An embargo is in place forbidding any metahumans from entering the city, unless Batgirl permits it. Supergirl in this tale is the last survivor of Krypton and has been adopted by Wonder Woman after crashing on Earth as a teenager. She's been helped out by Lex Luthor and is intensely loyal to him. When Lex Luthor gets kidnapped by a lovesick (for Batgirl) Joker, the champions of Gotham and Metropolis must form a reluctant partnership and forge an uneasy truce to save him. But everything may not be as straightforward as it seems (DC Comics: 66 pages).
more supergirl is always welcome unless it's that rebirth shit
Brandon Cooper
Andreyko's run was fun.
Robert Lee
Thank you so much, digital-Empire! You’re the best
Tyler Kelly
>Andreyko's run was fun. Andreyko's run quickly degenerated to "tie-in to whatever event is going on in DC".
Robert Sanchez
It was still fun though.
Jackson James
...
Nolan Fisher
>John Constantine, Hellblazer v26 - The Curse of the Constantines (2022) (Digital) (EJGriffin-Empire).cbz Thanks!
Noah Hughes
fiending for some mango
John Williams
What was so fun? Supergirl flying around the space with Rogol Zaar's axe? Supergirl being infected by The Kekman who Bats?
Adam Green
>Superman and the Authority (2022) (Digital) (EJGriffin-Empire).cbz 4 issues: 524.5 MB plus 5 variant pages (so less extra pages than house ads in the floppies), 2 pages of model art (again still less pages than the floppies.
Last Kryptonian floppies = more than 65 % less.
😣
Jaxon Wilson
Thanks (digital-Empire) for the Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen issues. Thanks user for the links.
Nathan Cox
>forgot to roll for a couple hours >have 665 points now >not 666
Austin Parker
The Drawn & Quarterly Nancy books are the John Stanley comics, Fantagraphics published three volumes of Bushmiller's Nancy a while ago before abruptly cancelling it. tfw you own two of the volumes but the last one is super expensive
Gabriel Collins
>Bushmiller's Nancy ah yeah, sorry thanks for clarifying that!
>spent the last 30 points it left me with 25 points
James Watson
>Nancy is Happy 89$ >Nancy Likes Christmas 75$ >Nancy Loves Sluggo 400$ Being a strip fan is suffering, either incomplete, not in print or impossible to find for a good price
Oliver Garcia
Funnily enough Nancy is Happy is the volume I'm missing. The problem is I'm in Australia and that's what makes finding it at a decent price harder. I'd pay $89 in a heartbeat for it.
Blake Murphy
You. I like you.
Joshua Miller
>Supergirl flying around the space with Rogol Zaar's axe? yes? Is that even a question?
Chase Myers
Thanks (EJGriffin-Empire), (Son of Ultron-Empire) and (Digital-Empire) for the DC and Independent Trades. Thanks user for the links.
Adrian Parker
💯
Connor Morgan
>page 9
Lincoln Nelson
>No digital Morrigan #1
Daniel Johnson
Supergirl sucks
Chase Cook
Getcomics has started uploading Tpb's tagged De-Bloated Lol At least someone has a bit of common sense
Liam Martinez
>page 8
Asher Clark
Keep rollan or gambling on this event lasting ~3 more hours so I can just buy the last 4?
>tfw i had the missing ones unlocked but event glitched and i was rolled back to the start
Clicking doesn't do anything, except tell you where on the list the various emojis are so you don't have to blindbuy. Turns out I can't even buy the ones I lack, because the system thinks I already own them due to the rollback glitch. Rollan it is.
Has anyone read The Evil of Oz? this is not for the faint of heart since it contains gore and bloodshed. My favourite part is when Dorothy kills Glinda with her ruby slippers I have never liked her since she was always a bitch. Anyone who has seen the Oz movie knows if Glinda had told Dorothy how to use the ruby slippers from the start then she would have been able to defeat the Wicked Witch of the West in a heartbeat, since she would have been no match for her powers. And she should have been able go home from the start but since Glinda didn't do this all she really did was endanger Dorothy and her friends which make her a bitch.
Landon Martinez
The Secret to Superhuman Strength (2021) (digital+) (fylgja).cbz (- Nem -)
Comics and cultural superstar Alison Bechdel delivers a deeply layered story of her fascination, from childhood to adulthood, with every fitness craze to come down the pike: from Jack LaLanne in the 60s ("Outlandish jumpsuit! Cantaloupe-sized guns!") to the existential oddness of present-day spin class. Readers will see their athletic or semi-active pasts flash before their eyes through an ever-evolving panoply of running shoes, bicycles, skis, and sundry other gear. But the more Bechdel tries to improve herself, the more her self appears to be the thing in her way. She turns for enlightenment to Eastern philosophers and literary figures, including Beat writer Jack Kerouac, whose search for self-transcendence in the great outdoors appears in moving conversation with the author’s own. This gifted artist and not-getting-any-younger exerciser comes to a soulful conclusion. The secret to superhuman strength lies not in six-pack abs, but in something much less clearly defined: facing her own non-transcendent but all-important interdependence with others.
Thank you so much, digital-Empire! You rule. And thanks user for the links
Adam Diaz
Many, many DC trades on GetComics (also, bump?
Luis Ortiz
>The Complete Darkness v02 (2021) (Digital) (DR & Quinch-Empire) Is there a v3 in the works? v2 sure as shit ends quite abruptly.
Grayson Robinson
New trades up on GetComics: Wonder Woman Vol. 5 – Lords And Liars (TPB) (2021) Wonder Woman Vol. 4 – The Four Horsewomen (TPB) (2021) The Flash Vol. 15 – Finish Line (TPB) (2021) Superman Vol. 4 – Mythological (TPB) (2021) )Superman – Action Comics Vol. 4 – Metropolis Burning (TPB) (2021) Justice League Vol. 8 – Death Metal (TPB) (2021) Justice League Vol. 7 – Galaxy Of Terrors (TPB) (2021) Justice League – Endless Winter (TPB) (2021) Harley Quinn Black + White + Red (TPB) (2021) Superman and the Authority (TPB) (2022)
Cameron Edwards
hope someone posts more up to date Superman and Batman trades also the last Nick Spencer spider-man trade
>Save Yourself! (2022) aw hell nah I remember this book
Ryder Baker
>2022 >still crying about the orange man
Hudson Rivera
I ron't give a shit about Drumpf. It is his followers who seem to live in some parallel reality
John Hughes
For twenty-five years Alison Bechdel’s path-breaking Dykes to Watch Out For strip has been collected in award-winning volumes (with a quarter of a million copies in print), syndicated in fifty alternative newspapers, and translated into many languages. Now, at last, The Essential Dykes to Watch Out For gathers a “rich, funny, deep and impossible to put down” (Publishers Weekly) selection from all eleven Dykes volumes. Here too are sixty of the newest strips, never before published in book form.
Settle in to this wittily illustrated soap opera (Bechdel calls it “half op-ed column and half endless serialized Victorian novel”) of the lives, loves, and politics of Mo, Lois, Sydney, Sparrow, Ginger, Stuart, Clarice, and the rest of the cast of cult-fav characters. Most of them are lesbians, living in a midsize American city that may or may not be Minneapolis. These brilliantly imagined countercultural band of friends—academics, social workers, bookstore clerks—fall in and out of love, negotiate friendships, raise children, switch careers, and cope with aging parents. Bechdel fuses high and low culture—from foreign policy to domestic routine, hot sex to postmodern theory—in a serial graphic narrative “suitable for humanists of all persuasions” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books: 416 pages).
Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home was a pop culture and literary phenomenon. Now, a second thrilling tale of filial sleuthery, this time about her mother: voracious reader, music lover, passionate amateur actor. Also a woman, unhappily married to a closeted gay man, whose artistic aspirations simmered under the surface of childhood . . . and who stopped touching or kissing her daughter good night, forever, when she was seven.
Poignantly, hilariously, Bechdel embarks on a quest for answers concerning the mother-daughter gulf. It's a richly layered search that leads readers from the fascinating life and work of the iconic twentieth-century psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, to one explosively illuminating Dr. Seuss illustration, to her own (serially monogamous) adult love life. And, finally, back to Mother — to a truce, fragile and real-time, that will move and astonish all adult children of gifted mothers (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books: 308 pages).
Yikes, is there a more accessible mirror for this one?
Nathaniel Gutierrez
i had to reboot and i lost my emotes, give them back to me moot
Mason Edwards
The Secret to Superhuman Strength is an account of Alison Bechdel’s lifelong pursuit of nondual bliss through vigorous-to-the-point-of-violent physical activity: the dharma of working out, you might call it. Bechdel sets out to discover why she has devoted so many hours of her life – “very possibly as many as are actually recommended” – to exercise.The author of Fun Home reflects in this astonishing new graphic memoir on her physical and mystical journey of the concept of otrada — a birthright condition of “enchanting well-being, and a political one too. Obliged to look past the “gender psychosis” of the various training programs she encounters in girlhood (TV’s Jack LaLanne talking about firming up the bustline and shedding those ugly pounds), she achieves an autonomous, nonconformist approach to fitness. Suffice to say that while the subjects – nature, love, work, sexuality – are huge, The Secret to Superhuman Strength never feels heavy. If it were a barbell, you’d be able to lift it with one hand (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books: 416 pages).
Finally got around to reading pic related and holy shit it was amazing. And I'm saying this as someone that's always hated Flintstones because of the shitty HB cartoons.
Originally published on image sharing site pixiv, My Lesbian Experience with Loneliness swiftly became an underground success. Now in English, you too can thrill to the adventures of its painfully shy, socially anxious heroine, Kabi, through her first sexual encounter, in which she hires a female sex worker to meet her in a Japanese love hotel. From this awkward encounter, our narrator then goes backwardin time to tell us how she got to this point in her life. This honest and heartfelt look at one young woman’s exploration of her sexuality, mental well-being, and growing up in our modern age. Told using expressive artwork that invokes both laughter and tears, this moving and highly entertaining single volume depicts not only the artist’s burgeoning sexuality, but many other personal aspects of her life that will resonate with readers (Seven Seas: 148 pages).
if you like it good on you, but its hipster shit imo
Xavier Kelly
Sometimes romance can be as easy as finding the boy next door. For flirty Dillon, that boy comes with a jealous ex. His best friend, roommate, and fellow actress Amber is an ex-porn star trying to go mainstream. And Ruby, Amber's sister, has just shown up to move in with them both-only until her BBA gets her a job, of course, so she'll probably be gone by Tuesday. But when prudish Ruby gets an eyeful of Dillon's freewheeling life, it'll lead the two of them into a bond that'll turn her life around... and maybe Dillon's, too (Pixie Trix Comix: 169 pages)!
Unlikely friends Dillon and Ruby challenge each other a lot, but that helps them face other challenges, like Ruby's disinterested-seeming boyfriend and some men who seem interested in Dillon for all the wrong reasons. Though Ruby's sometimes not so much "helping" there as she is "delightedly ogling." On his own, Dillon has to face his jealousy and career woes, while Ruby has to address her frosty family relations and whether her manga addiction can possibly be an asset in her business-minded life. Or they could just fail to face those problems forever, we suppose! Growth is optional (Pixie Trix Comix: 218 pages).
Famed photographer Domenico makes Sandra the new freckled face of his agency! But success brings more than worshipful fans... she lives at the mercy of a sadistic supervisor, an icy ex-model, and Domenico's whims. Can she take it all with a smile? Of course she can! After ten 12-hour days of constant smiling, she's forgotten how to frown (Pixie Trix Comix: 168 pages)!
Sandra's modeling career continues, but success has attracted all kinds of attention to her, not all of it good. Several people pine for her affections: the baker next door, her boss's uber-confident driver, the blogger now coaching her through her geek education, and a couple of bewitching barflies. On the downside, she has attracted the enmity of two rival models. And wherever she goes, her career and love life shakes up the lives of her friends, fans, and foes... they all collide like stirred ice cubes (Pixie Trix Comix: 169 pages)!
Sandra has been drifting a bit... even though she still can't pose "nakies," when she ends up on a tropical island with no memory of how she got there, she just goes with the flow. But sharks are circling: Eloise continues to play the long game in hopes of snatching away Sandra's boyfriend, while Eva manipulates the rest of Sandra's circle as revenge against her mentor. Before this is over, going with the flow will land Sandra on shores that seem inescapable (Pixie Trix Comix: 169 pages)?
Thanks (digital-Empire) for the Titan issues. Thanks user for the links.
Luke Lopez
One hundred thousand years ago, at least six different species of humans inhabited Earth. Yet today there is only one—homo sapiens. What happened to the others? And what may happen to us? In this first volume of the full-color illustrated adaptation of his groundbreaking book, renowned historian Yuval Harari tells the story of humankind’s creation and evolution, exploring the ways in which biology and history have defined us and enhanced our understanding of what it means to be “human.” From examining the role evolving humans have played in the global ecosystem to charting the rise of empires, Sapiens challenges us to reconsider accepted beliefs, connect past developments with contemporary concerns, and view specific events within the context of larger ideas (Jonathan Cape: 253 pages).
What if humanity’s major woes—war, plague, famine and inequality—originated 12,000 years ago, when Homo sapiens converted from nomads to settlers, in pursuit of the fantasy of productivity and efficiency? What if by seeking to control plants and animals, humans ended up being controlled by kings, priests, and Kafkaesque bureaucracy? Volume 2 of Sapiens: A Graphic History–The Pillars of Civilization explores a crucial chapter in human development: the Agricultural Revolution. This is the story of how wheat took over the world; how an unlikely marriage between a god and a bureaucrat created the first empires; and how war, plague, famine, and inequality became an intractable feature of the human condition.
But it’s not all doom and gloom with this book’s cast of entertaining characters and colorful humorous scenes. The origins of modern farming are introduced through Elizabethan tragedy; the changing fortunes of domesticated plants and animals are tracked in the columns of the Daily Business News; the story of urbanization is portrayed as a travel brochure, offering discount journeys to ancient Babylon and China; and the history of inequality unfolds in a superhero detective story; with guest appearances by historical and cultural personalities throughout. This book is a radical, witty and colorful retelling of the story of humankind for adults and young adults, and can be read on its own or in sequence with the first volume (Jonathan Cape: 253 pages).
This hardcover volume collects and thematically groups the very best of more than 30 years of visually stunning, blood-boiling graphic outrage and calls-to-arms. World War 3 has featured some of comix's greatest underground talents, from Peter Bagge and Art Spiegelman to Sue Coe and Sabrina Jones, not to mention Fly, Spain Rodriguez, and many more, and their work for WW3 was always their rawest, most unrestrained material; using confrontational comics to shine a little reality on the fantasy world of the American kleptocracy. This full-color retrospective exhibition is arranged thematically, and includes topic of housing rights, feminism, the environment, religion, police brutality, globalization, and depictions of conflicts from the Middle East to the Midwest. World War 3 Illustrated also illuminates the war we wage on each other — and sometimes the one taking place in our own minds. Contributors include Eric Drooker, Sandy Jimenez, Peter Kuper, Susan Willmarth, and dozens more (PM Press: 306 pages).
Paying for It was easily the most talked-about and controversial graphic novel of 2011, a critical success so innovative and complex that it sold out of its first print run in just six months; combining the personal and sexual aspects of Brown's autobiographical work (I Never Liked You, The Playboy) with the polemical drive of Louis Riel. He calmly lays out the facts of how he became not only a willing participant in but also a vocal proponent of one of the world's most hot-button topics—prostitution. While this may appear overly sensational and just plain implausible to some, Brown's story stands for itself. Paying for It offers an entirely contemporary exploration of sex work—from the timid john who rides his bike to his escorts, wonders how to tip so as not to offend, and reads Dan Savage for advice, to the modern-day transactions complete with online reviews, seemingly willing participants, and clean apartments devoid of clichéd street corners, drugs, or pimps. Complete with a surprise ending, Paying for It continues to provide endless debate and conversation about sex work (Drawn & Quarterly: 302 pages).
DISCLAIMER: graphic sexuality; this series is rated Adults Only
In the late 1980s, the idiosyncratic Chester Brown (author of the much lauded Paying for It and Louis Riel) began writing the cult classic comic book series Yummy Fur. Within its pages, he serialized the groundbreaking Ed the Happy Clown, revealing a macabre universe of parallel dimensions. Thanks to its wholly original yet disturbing story lines, Ed set the stage for Brown to become a world-renowned cartoonist. Ed the Happy Clown is a hallucinatory tale that functions simultaneously as a dark roller-coaster ride of criminal activity and a scathing condemnation of religious and political charlatanism. As the world around him devolves into madness, the eponymous Ed escapes variously from a jealous boyfriend, sewer monsters, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and a janitor with a Jesus complex. Brown leaves us wondering, with every twist of the plot, just how Ed will get out of this scrape. The intimate, tangled world of Ed the Happy Clown is definitively presented here, repackaged with a new foreword by the author and an extensive notes section, and is, like every Brown book, astonishingly perceptive about the zeitgeist of its time (Drawn and Quarterly: 256 pages).
The Little Man: Short Strips, 1980-1995 is a collection of short-story works by the celebrated and bestselling Louis Riel cartoonist Chester Brown. From his early experimental comedic surrealism to his later autobiographical and essay strips, we see not a major talent in development but a fully realized storytelling virtuoso. Included are his early autobiographical stories "Helder" (a story about a young man's tentativeness when pursuing a woman), "Showing Helder" (a blow-by-blow account of the construction of the previous story), and "Danny" (a strangely compelling moment-by-moment account of Brown waking up and trying to avoid contact with a fellow rooming-house tenant). Other standouts are Brown's controversial essay on schizophrenia (specifically his own mother's) and various medical views on this baffling disease, and the title story, "The Little Man," a Freudian classroom romp fantasy by a adolescent Brown that ties into the schizophrenia essay in a surprising way. The acclaimed compendium, culled mostly from his groundbreaking comic book series Yummy Fur, provides a fascinating insight into Brown's psyche; he rounds out the collection with exacting notes on each story (Drawn and Quarterly: 189 pages).
A memoir of shocking honesty by the graphic novelist behind 2011's acclaimed comic Paying for It As with every Chester Brown book, The Playboy—originally published in 1992—was ahead of its time, illustrating the fearlessness and prescience of the iconoclastic cartoonist. A memoir about Brown's adolescent sexuality and shame, The Playboy chronicles his teenage obsession with the magazine of the same name, but it's also a work that explores the physical form of comics to their fullest storytelling capacity. In it, a fifteen-year-old Chester is visited by a time-traveling adult Chester, and the latter narrates the former's compulsion to purchase each issue of Playboy as it appears on newsstands. Even more fascinating than his obsession with the magazine is his need to keep his habit secret and the resulting lengths to which he goes to avoid detection by his family and, later, his girlfriends. The comics that became The Playboy first appeared in issues of Brown's controversial, groundbreaking comic Yummy Fur more than twenty years ago, and yet the frankness of the work makes it seem avant-garde even now. As in every work by this master cartoonist, The Playboy uses no extra words, no extra panels, no extra lines, conveying environment and emotion through perfectly chosen moments. Fans of his acclaimed and controversial memoir Paying for It are sure to be drawn in by this early autobiographical portrait of blazing honesty. The expanded reissue includes all-new appendixes and notes from the author (Drawn and Quarterly: 227 pages).
This series is rated Adults Only - DISCLAIMER: violent content
The iconoclastic master Chester Brown continues his idiosyncratic thoughts on sex work, returning with a polemical interpretation of the Bible that will be one of the most controversial and talked-about graphic novels. Mary Wept over the Feet of Jesus is the retelling in comics form of nine biblical stories that present Brown’s fascinating and startling thesis about biblical representations of prostitution. Brown weaves a connecting line between Bathsheba, Ruth, Rahab, Tamar, Mary of Bethany, and the Virgin Mother and reassesses the Christian moral code by examining the cultural implications of the Bible’s representations of sex work.
This fitting follow-up to Brown’s sui generis graphic memoir, Paying for It, which was reviewed twice in the New York Times and hailed by sex workers for Brown’s advocacy for the decriminalization and normalization of prostitution. Brown approaches the Bible as he did the life of Louis Riel, making these stories compellingly readable and utterly pertinent to a modern audience, proving extensive handwritten endnotes that delve into the biblical lore that informs this graphic novel (Drawn and Quarterly: 287 pages).
In one of the best graphic novels published in recent years, Chester Brown tells the story of his alienated youth in an almost detached, understated manner, giving I Never Liked You an eerie, dream-like quality. Pathetic and genuine, this devastating story of young love and rejection takes a minimalist approach to style equates to the equally understated emotions of the protagonist. For the new 2002 definitive softcover edition Brown has designed new layouts for the entire book, using "white" panel backgrounds instead of the black pages of the 1994 collected edition (Drawn & Quarterly: 199 pages).
Depends on your tolerance for awkward voodoo zombie storylines that are pointless and stupid
Written by Kevin VanHook, Batman vs. The Undead TPB (2011) collecting Batman Confidential (2006-2011) #44-48: Batman fights alongside the vampire Dimeter to stop a horde of reanimated corpses in a dark adventure. Doctor Herbert Combs has escaped from Arkham Asylum - and now he's heading to New Orleans to raise the dead. The only ones who can stop him are Dimeter - and The Dark Knight.
Cool, I have a high threshold for that kind of thing! Thanks for the synopsis. I have a copy on my phone that I got from libgen (screens hot) it's a compilation of the series apparently that I got before libgen did the flipshit.
Nathan Hill
Herbert Combs I see what they did there
Nolan Brown
>what they did there When DC wasn't all multiple Eisner Award winners only or woke wannabes (pandering Eisner Award wannabes), eh?
Lincoln Martinez
I don't What's the joke
Lincoln Collins
>emojis when were these added and how do I used them
John Wright
oh nvm
Carter Rodriguez
god bless
Isaac Thomas
April fools. They're gone now.
Josiah Gonzalez
Marble Season is the all-new semiautobiographical novel by the contemporary master cartoonist Gilbert Hernandez, the co-creator of the groundbreaking Love and Rockets comic book series. His first book with Drawn & Quarterly, and one of the most highly anticipated books of 2013, Marble Season features Huey, his family, and their neighbors, who tell the untold stories from the youth of the American comics legend and his cartooning brothers and fellow icons Jaime and Mario, and their large family that grew up in 60s suburban California. Marble Season subtly and deftly details how the innocent, joyfully creative play children engage in such as shooting marbles, backyard plays, and treasure hunts change as the children encounter name-calling naysayers, abusive bullies, and the value judgments of other kids. An all-ages story, Marble Season explores the redemptive and timeless power of reading and role play in childhood (Drawn & Quarterly: 134 pages).
A pansexual horror love story! In a post-apocalyptic future, three demons live and love as one among the ruined wastes. But eating rats and making love only goes so far when jealousy comes into play. What will happen when their polyamory falls apart? Find out in the pages of Death's Door!
Pansexual author Sam Saturday just has this way of drawing these weird creepy little demony things where you don’t want to stare but you can’t look away. No, seriously. They are just so darn creepy but they suck you in. Maybe that is one of their evil demon powers (Saturday Buffet: 20 pages)
Supposedly ripped, there's a 106MB (which feels SD) no-name version called just "Isla to Island.cbr"
But it's only on a certain site with the world's most shittiest, premium required, filehost - YES, even worse than BookGN and AvaxHome, because this site will also download viruses on your phone if you let them.
Since the site steals from elsewhere (including here) for books but apparently they are not the hubs, give it a few week or pray to the goddess of your choice.
Landon Ross
>YES, even worse than BookGN And here I thought you were talking about BookGN.
Michael Flores
Sex life? In this board? Who you trying to fool user?
Noah Butler
bookGN lets you download some shit without registering, more shit with registering, the throttle is a VERY healthy 3 GB in 3 days, without ridiculous 1-2 hour wait times like slowgator or filefaggotry.
No trust, me, this is the world's shittiest, spamiest, virus filed file host on one of the crappiest comic sites on the planet.
Only that special needs child running his comic club at All Comics Book can even compare.
Asher Myers
I couldn’t care less how they call them, as long as it’s a decent space saver.
Hunter Cooper
I'd love to get this, thanks! I'll search it on libgen.
Alison Bechdel’s groundbreaking, bestselling graphic memoir that charts her fraught relationship with her late father.Distant and exacting, Bruce Bechdel was an English teacher and director of the town funeral home, which Alison and her family referred to as the "Fun Home." It was not until college that Alison, who had recently come out as a lesbian, discovered that her father was also gay. A few weeks after this revelation, he was dead, leaving a legacy of mystery for his daughter to resolve. In her hands, personal history becomes a work of amazing subtlety and power, written with controlled force and enlivened with humor, rich literary allusion, and heartbreaking detail (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books: 242 pages).
Thanks (Shadowcat-Empire) for the classic DC issues. Thanks (Digital-Empire) for the Morbius - Preludes and Nightmares trade. Thanks user for the links
Gavin Torres
>defending bloatron
the absolute state of /co
Gavin Kelly
Captain Atom - Armageddon 07 (of 09) (2006) (digital-Empire) Anyone got a fix for this yet, it's got the wrong contents
>The Magicians - Alice's Story (2019) (Digital-Empire) >The Magicians - New Class (2020) (digital) (Son of Ultron-Empire) What the actual fuck happened between these two books, did the writer go full woketranny out of fucking nowhere or what?
The first one is fairly decent for a Harry Potter x Narnia mashup. The second one goes pedal to the metal woke pandering right off the bat with a token tranny, mary sue dangerhair and a Draco Malfoy clone that just so happens to be white, from the very first chapter.
Noah Young
Once again NO not ripped yet.
Joshua Sanders
I’m sure the rippers will be lining up to get this, after all it’s only $130.
Jeremiah Sanders
To the rippers who have been so generous lately with that truckload of TPBs you have released recently, would it be possible to get "Avengers: Live Kree Or Die" please?
FYI, regarding the two volumes of "My Father's Husband": Both the listed volumes arecollected in "My Brother's Husband Omnibus v01 (2017) (F) (Digital) (danke-Empire).cbz" and continued in "My Brother's Husband Omnibus v02 (2018) (Digital) (danke-Empire).cbz". (Both can be found on libgen.)
Lincoln Barnes
Might be a long shot, does anyone have Uncanny X-Force #2 from the 2010 run?
Kayden Johnson
Why are they running? Are they corrupt?
Elijah Ortiz
Yep, I'm aware. Even juvecube, when he did his pride torrent, used those danke Omni's instead of his versions. But then those torrents also missed a shitload of things.
Evan Lewis
Hey, digital-Empire! Thank you so much for everything you share with us! It’s greatly appreciated. I have a new request. You’ve been filling a lot of gaps and you’ve ripped almost every Lobo comic out there, but the Infanticide mini series is still incomplete. Could you please rip issues 2 to 4? Thanks in advance!
Pyramid is a very talented scanner, and their c2c scans of Image's 1963 1 & 4-6 are the gold standard. Hoping that they'll do 2 & 3 one day to complete the set.
Daniel Ramirez
These faggots still haven't shipped my physical copy that I ordered Wednesday and I'm still seething.
At least limit your begging to once per thread, you entitled sack of shit. You do realize the rippers actually have to buy the stuff they want to rip, before they can get to ripping it? Go buy it yourself if you can't wait.
inb4 >b-but then it couldn't be shared Apply brain. >load up vpn/find public wifi >make throwaway account >buy shit you want ripped but can't wait for, use giftcard bought with cash >post username/password here >??? >potentially profit!
Is there a reason to why the rippers are not ripping X-Men Unlimited anymore? Like it seems like they are ripping the other Infinity Comics but not X-Men Unlimited even though it's the most popular one which is weird
Jordan Watson
Devil's Reign ends this week. Are you guys excited ?
Benjamin Morales
I've enjoyed it Also we still got the Omega one-shot next month
Tyler Perry
Oh shit you're right I forgot about that
William Russell
The only thing about that, that's vaguely exciting is that it's one less capeshit item I'll delete on sight next time I sift through my unsorted folder. Fuck, I wish it was customary for rippers to add publisher in the filename too. It would save me so much hassle.
Jace Morris
Thanks (Digital-Empire) for The Amazing Spiderman Epic Collection. Thanks for all the comics you share with us. Thanks user for the links.
And I for one am grateful for that, even if I don't show it nearly as often as I ought to.
Dylan Torres
What are you gonna pick up this Wednesday, user?
Levi Jackson
Epic trollz would just delete the book from the library. Thanks for adding the option to permanently delete books from one's account so we have to buy them again, Amazon. Really cool.
Liam Robinson
They are like waiting for a bus, nothing at all then 3 turn up at once.
Jacob Walker
Batman Beyond: Neo-Year #1 Moon Knight #10 Spider-Punk #1 Strange #2 The Thing #6 Monkey Meat #4 And if the rippers rip it (I don't know if they rip Behemoth comics at all), STRGRL #1
Benjamin Jenkins
Why would anyone be daft enough to delete something without backing up first anyway? Don’t matter I’d the option is there no ones forcing you to delete anything.
Caleb Flores
It’s a good week for me Moon Knight Strange The Thing and She-Hulk Plus the final of Devil’s Reign
Easton Ortiz
But user what about Batman: killing time #2 and devil's reign #6
Carter Lee
yeah, but it seems that mango rippers drop at a higher rate. well, off to see this new veiny, throbbing ripper!
Landon Sanchez
You can't backup new purchases on Amazon anymore. And the point was that using a public account would lead to people deleting books for shit and giggles.
Joshua Perry
>linking pol shitpost thats how i know youre a fucking retard
Christian Gutierrez
zelensky is a faggot and a jew.
Camden Lee
Anybody please know where to rips find for these Sherlock Holmes books none of these are on archive orl libgen
he Untold Adventures of Sherlock Holmes bt Luke Benjamen Kuhns A Case of Witchcraft: A Novel of Sherlock Holmes by Joe Revill Sherlock Holmes and the Tangled Skein by David Stuart Davies Sherlock Holmes and the Lyme Regis Horror by David Ruffle Sherlock Holmes and the Lyme Regis Legacy by David Ruffle Sherlock Holmes and the Lyme Regis Trials by David Ruffle Sherlock Holmes: A Scandalous Affair by Christopher D. Abbott Watson's Afghan Adventure by Kieran McMullen Shadowfall: A Novel of Sherlock Holmes by Tracy Revels Sherlock Holmes and the Hentzau Affair by David Stuart Davies Sherlock Holmes: The Game's Afoot by David Stuart Davies The Lost Stories of Sherlock Holmes by Tony Reynolds The Outstanding Mysteries of Sherlock Holmes by Gerard Kelly Sherlock Holmes and the Affair in Transylvania by Gerry O'Hara Sherlock Holmes and the Murder at Lodore Falls by Charlotte Smith A Biased Judgement: The Sherlock Holmes Diaries 1897 by Geri Schear Sherlock Holmes and Count Dracula: The Adventure of the Solitary Grave by Christian Klaver The Adventure of the Innsmouth Whaler by Christian Klaver The Adventure of the Lustrous Pearl by Christian Klaver Holmes and Watson End Peace by David Ruffle Murder in the Vatican: The Church Mysteries of Sherlock Holmesby by Ann Margaret Lewis The Secret Journal of Dr Watson by Phil Growick The Sign Of Fear by Molly Carr A Study in Crimson by Molly Carr The Deadwood Stage by Mike Hogan The Empty Birdcage by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar The Adventure of the Peerless Peer by Philip José Farmer Sherlock Holmes: The Sign of Seven by Martin Rosenstock Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Jacobite Rose by Fiona-Jane Brown Sherlock Holmes in the Adventure of the Ancient Gods by Ralph E. Vaughan
Josiah Thomas
Also trying to find rips for these books A Study in Treason (The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes Mysteries, #2) by Leonard Goldberg The Disappearance of Alistair Ainsworth (The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes Mysteries #3)by Leonard Goldberg The Art of Deception (The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes Mysteries, #4) by Leonard Goldberg The Abduction of Pretty Penny(The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes Mysteries #5) by Leonard Goldberg The Blue Diamond (The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes Mysteries #6)by Leonard Goldberg The Daughter of Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson by S.K. Lloyds Sherlock Holmes and the Mystery of Einstein's Daughter by Tim Symonds A Taste for Honey (Mycroft #1) by H.F. Heard The Empty Birdcage (Mycroft Holmes and Sherlock, #3) by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Mycroft Holmes and the Adventure of the Desert Wind (Mycroft Holmes #1)by Janina Woods Mycroft Holmes and The Edinburgh Affair by (Mycroft Holmes #2) by Janina Woods Mycroft Holmes and The Adventure of the Silver Birches by David Dickinson Mycroft Holmes and the Adventure of the Naval Engineer by David Dickinson Mycroft Holmes and the Case of the Missing Popes by David Dickinson Mycroft Holmes And The Banker's Conclave by David Dickinson Mycroft Holmes and Murder at the Diogenes Club by David Dickinson Mycroft Holmes and the Case of the Romanov Pearls by David Dickinson Sherlock Holmes: The Golden Years by Kim H. Krisco Sherlock Holmes And The Case of the Crystal Blue by Luke Benjamen Kuhns You Buy Bones: Sherlock Holmes and his London Through the Eyes of Scotland Yard by Marcia Wilson The Adventures of the Second Mrs. Watson by Michael Mallory The Chronicles of Sherlock Holmes: Volume Three by Denis O. Smith Requiem For Sherlock Holmes by Paul Stuart Hayes Two Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by by Thomas G. Dixon The Irregular Casebook of Sherlock Holmes by Ron Weighell The Curious Case of the Hounds of Hell by Peter Cawdron Sherlock Holmes and the Two Treasures by Diana Wolff