Titan Comics and Heroic Signatures' new Conan the Barbarian series launched last summer, with Robert E. Howard's legendary creation put front and centre in a new tale of bravery and heroism.
The Savage Sword of Conan has since joined it and, today, we can exclusively share a first look at new covers for both comics along with details on the creative teams and heaps of epic story details.
We'll start with Conan the Barbarian #14. Written by Jim Zub with art from Doug Braithwaite, the gorgeous cover art you see below comes our way from Jae Lee, Rebeca Puebla, Braithwaite, Stuart Sayger and James Harren.
If you're in the U.S., you can order yours from PreviewsWorld. In the UK, it's available at Forbidden Planet. You can also click on each of the covers below to order them directly.
After Leaving Cimmeria Filled With Wanderlust, A Young Conan Heads North In Search Of Glory.
The Savage Sword of Conan has since joined it and, today, we can exclusively share a first look at new covers for both comics along with details on the creative teams and heaps of epic story details.
We'll start with Conan the Barbarian #14. Written by Jim Zub with art from Doug Braithwaite, the gorgeous cover art you see below comes our way from Jae Lee, Rebeca Puebla, Braithwaite, Stuart Sayger and James Harren.
If you're in the U.S., you can order yours from PreviewsWorld. In the UK, it's available at Forbidden Planet. You can also click on each of the covers below to order them directly.
After Leaving Cimmeria Filled With Wanderlust, A Young Conan Heads North In Search Of Glory.
- 5/21/2024
- ComicBookMovie.com
My standard complaint about the Black Hammer comics is that they’re mostly static, locked into an initial premise that wasn’t all that exciting to begin with. I suppose that’s in distinction to “real” superhero comics, which rely on the façade of change – someone is always dying, someone’s costume is always changing, someone is always making a heel-face turn, and worlds are inevitably always living and dying so that nothing will ever be the same – but it’s not self-reflective enough to count as irony.
But some kinds of stories aren’t supposed to change anything – the whole point is that they don’t, and can’t, change the things we already know. Jam comics by entirely different creators tend to fall into that bucket: they’re sometimes “real” and sometimes not, but even if they’re canonical, they don’t push the canon in any direction.
But some kinds of stories aren’t supposed to change anything – the whole point is that they don’t, and can’t, change the things we already know. Jam comics by entirely different creators tend to fall into that bucket: they’re sometimes “real” and sometimes not, but even if they’re canonical, they don’t push the canon in any direction.
- 4/10/2024
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
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