Thursday, October 31, 2013

NaNoWriMo 2013

It's just about that time again. If you aren't aware November is National Novel Writer's Month aka NaNoWriMo. The idea is to write 50,000 words in 30 days with no expectation of quality. This is my third official year signing up. The first year I signed up, I think that was the extent of my involvement.  I managed to win, as they call it, last year... but only kinda. I got quite a ways into my novel and then the plot got all twisted up and refused to cooperate. I got more than a little lost as to where the whole thing was going. I started churing out less and less words per day until I realized I just couldn't go on with that story without stepping back and reconstructing the basic plotline and fixing what I had already writen. This is an absolute no no for how NaNoWriMo works especially because I just didn't have time for that if I was to reach the goal of 50000 words. So I stopped that story and just continued on with a short story that I had in my head. Technically I did write 50,000 words, it just wasn't one complete story.

This year I am going to write a story called Time of the Tower. It is actually based on a fantasy plot line I came up with for a game I was building with the Aurora toolset that came with the Neverwinter Nights video game back in 2002. I has spent a whole lot of time learning the toolset and building the game, except that doing something of that scale by myself, outside of a professional environment, was a big pain in the ass. I remember I had this NPC the player could talk to and I didn't want the player to be able to ask him about the gate blocking the way out of the forest area if the player hadn't actually seen the gate yet. There was a flag that you could be set if somebody tried to open the gate, only it wasn't getting set. I scoured the documentation and ranted on the official message boards. Finally somebody posted that that flag was only set if an NPC clicked on the gate, not the player. Thank you a week of my life wasted.  Anyway, the importance of all this is that I have the basic plot framework already laid out and I also know how it ends.

The basic story involves a young man on the run who finds himself trapped in a small village in the mountains that is used as a trading stop for caravans coming down off the glacier. A early and quite massive storm chokes the passes with snow and blocks off the town.  It also turns out that various powerful entities are converging on the town and the mysterious tower it was built around. The tower, more of a tall, solid and twisted stone obelisk, has been there since before recorded history and it holds a powerful secret. It has a lot of high fantasy elements coming together such as an ancient dragon, a power sorceress and a devious litch. The litch was supposed to be a vampire, but that was way back before vampires became so passe so I changed him to a litch just now. It also has ghosts, time travel and a cool marionette guy. Actually, I also added the marionette guy just now too, though he may replace the ghost.

I've had this idea for a marionette character and have wanted to stick him in a story since I read Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz Go to War Again by Garth Nix. I was on the 2007 Aurealis Awards panel where it was up for best Fantasy Short Story. I loved it and successfully lobbied for it to win. He wrote two more short stories about the two characters and they were recently collected as Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz: Three Adventures.  I also encountered a cool marionette character in the graphic novels series The Stuff of Legends about a group of toys who venture into the dark to save their owner, a young boy who has been taken by the Bogeyman.  I chatted very briefly with Mike Raicht, the writer, on Twitter awhile ago and assured him that I had an idea for a marionette character, but that I had stolen the idea from Garth Nix
not him. Hmm, apparently I do not have the third volume, A Jester's Tale, that came out last year.

That whole last bit was unnecessary, I know. I really only wrote that paragraph to extend the blog post and allow myself to do some more writing. Call it a warming up exercise.

Before I go I just want to encourage others to sign up at http://nanowrimo.org. Each region has it's own section where you can see events and such that are planned by municipal liaisons. The Las Vegas area one can be found HERE and you'll note that our Kick-off Party is Thursday October 31st 2013, 10 PM at Buffalo Wild Wings at 7430 Las Vegas Blvd South. Our first Write-In is on Friday from 6 - 9 PM at the Buffalo Wild Wings at 190 West Craig Road in North Las Vegas.  There are other write-ins planned for various areas of town to give you a chance to meet other writers. Not much writing gets done at these, but the camaraderie is good motivation.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Café of Broken Dreams

I wrote this short story many years ago. At one point I took a creative writing class at College of Southern Nevada, though I think it was still calling it Clark County Community College even though it had already changed names. I turned this story in for one of the assignments and was told by the professor that it was the best student written short story he had ever read. He was one of the editors of the Red Rock Review at the time and even suggested that I submit it pending some changes he thought I should make. He thought there should be more dialog between the four characters in the middle. I've tried several times to add that in, but I never get anything I am happy with. I do love writing dialog, it just doesn't seem to fit without turning it into yet another version of the Canterbury Tales which isn't what I was going for. I never made the changes nor did I submit it for publication anywhere. 
I'm gearing up for National Novel Writer's Month, NaNoWriMo to the cool kids, and decided to dig it out and and throw it up here on the blog. If anybody is still reading the blog, feel free to tell me what you think. 
I looked up my professors name from a few old copies of Red Rock Review and found that he has gotten a few books published. Congrats! Here is his webpage: H. Lee Barns

The rain had lasted only a few moments, but it had been enough to wet the black pavement down like they do when filming movies.  The reflection of a red neon bowling pin danced on the street in front of the all-night diner.  It was sometime after midnight, but it was hot.  The day had been completely unbearable and the intermittent rain only added to the misery instead of cooling it off.
The diner was one of those converted railcars that always looked misplaced among the large skyscrapers of the city.  I had never really noticed it before, but there were a lot of things I hadn’t noticed before.  In the last couple of hours I had lost more than I ever thought possible, and now I was noticing a lot of thing too late.  My very reality had died and the world was decaying away.  Everything was gone and I could see the infinity of darkness and death that was entropy.    The sounds of my footsteps were hollow and muted as if there was nothing for them to echo off. There was more garbage in the street. The lone streetlight wasn’t lit. The cracks in the sidewalks were slithering up the buildings and starting to tear them down.  The very air itself was gray, dark, and final.
I realized I had stopped in the middle of the street and was staring at the diner.  There were lights on inside the car, but it was raised up so the windows were above eye level.  There was something about it that looked too alive, too real on a night like this. 
I had a bouquet of calla lilies under my arm. They were her favorite.  I don’t remember what I had done with the ring.
I held the flowers up in front of me and stared at them.   Their bright color, which had shone with such strength earlier in the evening, was now faded and dull. I opened my hand and let them drop.  I didn’t watch the black street swallow them up, but instead walked on towards the diner.
The blue letters on the lit up sign simply read “All Night Café.”  The shiny aluminum sides looked new in the wet moonlight.  Mist crawled out from the sewer grates and obscured the concrete base it sat on.  I could just imagine that it was still on its rails just waiting for that one last passenger before pulling out of the station. 
A man standing perfectly still just outside the front door heightened the illusion.  I hadn’t even noticed him till I was right on top of him.  He had a dead look in his eyes and was obviously homeless. His red polyester jacket was worn through in spots and his beard was gray and tangled.  His hand came up to ask, without words or eye-contact, for spare change and I pictured him as a porter waiting to take my luggage.  
I realized my other hand still held my black leather Gucci briefcase.  She had given it to me when her father had agreed to hire me into his firm.  I simply handed it to him.
“What ever is in there is yours”, I said over my shoulder as I climbed the steep metal steps into the diner.
I looked back as I opened the door, but he was gone.
The inside of the diner was darker than it appeared from the outside.  The lights were subdued but somehow more colorful.  The plants were so green I first thought they were fake. The soft blue walls were cool and relaxing.
Marilyn Monroe was played by a girl who couldn’t have been older than 13.  She sat at the far end of the counter clutching a small, overstuffed, suitcase to her chest.  Her hair was matted and slept on.  Tear tracks streaked her dirty face and her eyes were darting and afraid.  After living in the city for a number of years it was easy to spot a run-away, but she look like she was straight from a made for TV movie.
James Dean was a young black man.  His stained T-shirt was complete with pack of cigarettes rolled up in one of the sleeves. His hand beat on the counter in time to some song playing in his head.  He had a big expectant smile that lit up his face and pointed me to the stool next to him.
Elvis wore a black concert shirt so old and faded you could no longer tell which band it was for.  His dark hair was pulled back into a long, dirty, ponytail that dangled down his back.  He was behind the counter flipping burgers on the grill with the skill of a professional pyromaniac. 
This left me to be Bogart.  I sat down and picked up the surprisingly clean menu even though I wasn’t in the least bit hungry.  I tried to imagine what Bogart would order, but I never understood what he was doing in the ‘Boulevard of Broken Dreams’ version of the “Nighthawks” diner picture anyway.  Had he died early and tragically?  I never really thought about it before.

I looked up to see Elvis waiting on me while cleaning out a glass with a bright white cloth.
“Catch of the day is Salmon, though I would recommend the filet mignon,” he said with a smile.
“Filet sounds good to me, but I would still like the white wine instead of the red. 1998 Cheval Blanc I think would hit the spot,” I answered mirroring his smile.
“Ah monsieur, I was saving a bottle just for you. He put down the glass in front of me, filled it with ice water from a pitcher, and threw another cheeseburger on the grill.
“Buy her one too,” James said nodding over his shoulder.  “She won’t take anything from me; I think she is a bit scared.”
I could see the dark red stain of dried blood on his left side that had been hidden from me earlier.
“What?” exclaimed Elvis.  “You mean one of you actually has money!”
He laughed with genuine good humor.  Something you don’t hear coming from adults anymore.  Something I hadn’t heard in a long time.  It lifted the heavy mood that I had brought in with me and even Marilyn smiled.
“Burgers and milk shakes all round my good man,” I said tossing my money-clipped wad of bills onto the counter.
The conversation started with small talk. Little jokes and humorous observations that eventually lead to introductions and then finally to the tales we all had to tell.
Their stories were the ones you’d expect to hear and told more by their appearance than their words.  There were regrets and bad decisions, but they were honest and without blame.
I told mine in turn and without hesitation.  I told the truth and revealed even the lies I had told myself, even the lies that I had believed.
Sharing freed us of them.  The pain, guilt and sorry faded away.  We left those worlds behind over the best hamburgers I had ever tasted.  We were moving toward something brighter, something new.  An excitement came over us and we began to share our dreams of this new world.
“I never wanted a pony,” Marilyn said.  “All the other girls I knew in school always said they wanted a pony.  A pony can’t curl up at the foot of your bed at night.  A dog would be better.  I am going to have a Cocker Spaniel.  His name is gonna be diamond.”
“A diamond ring,” Elvis said.  His voice was airy and his eyes wandered away.  Nothing too big or gaudy, but something that would look good on either formal or causal occasions.  Something that she would be proud to wear when I had my arm around her.  She will sneak glances it at it all the time when I’m not around, because it will make her think of me.  I will have bought it a month before I actually get up the courage to propose to her.”
“What’s her name?” I asked.
Elvis thought about it for a second.  “Missy,” he said.
We all thought about it for a second.
“No,” I said slowly.  “That isn’t quite right.”
“Melissa!” James said.
“Yeah!” Marilyn said.   “That’s much better.”
“Melissa,” Elvis said and repeated it a couple of times silently.  He smiled finally in agreement.
“What about you?” James asked me.
“I am a writer,” I said and then quickly added, “a song writer.”
“Are you going to write a song about us?” Marilyn asked.
I knew I wouldn’t, but thought about saying I would.  I realized that telling the truth was more important.
“I don’t think I should,” I said.
“Yeah,” she agreed.  “That way it will stay special.”
“I am going to be one of those people who doesn’t have a job, but still wears a suit everyday,” James said suddenly.
“An out of work politician?” Elvis asked.
“You mean some of them work?” I countered.
Marilyn laughed much easier this time.
James had helped with the dishes after apple pie, and Marilyn showed me how to make a cat’s cradle with a piece of yarn.  None of us noticed the time slipping by.  The sun was straight up and bright light shone through the spotless windows behind us.  Nobody else had come in during the night, but we never expected that anybody would.
We gathered up our things and were all smiles, handshakes and hugs.  Elvis took off his apron and left it on the counter.  He was now wearing a button down white polo shirt.  Marilyn no longer had her suitcase and her golden hair shone in the morning light.  James fixed his tie and handed me my guitar case. 

When the door opened, the warm friendly sounds of the world greeted us with open arms.  We each stepped out in turn and went our separate ways.  I stopped half a block away and started to turn to look back at the dinner.  I thought better of it and went back to humming a little ditty that I was composing.

Saturday, October 05, 2013

Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency and Other Things Douglas Adams

I had heard about the BBC’s “Dirk Gently” TV series a while ago. They aired a pilot which went over pretty good and so BBC Four ordered 3 more 1-hour episodes. A friend of a friend got a hold of an imported DVDs and I've had them lurking in a corner of my office for about a month. I’d like to say I hadn't watched it because I was in the middle of a complete run of Scrubs and had just gotten to the last few seasons that I hadn't ever seen, but the truth is I was worried. “Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency” by Douglas Adams is my all-time favorite book. Douglas Adams is more famous for writing “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy,” which started as a BBC radio show and converted into just about every other form of media culminating with the less than stellar received movie that was finished after his unfortunate passing.

I was worried about what the conversion to a TV show would mean for the Dirk Gently story and humor. The book is hilariously inspired lunacy. It is billed as a "thumping good detective-ghost-horror-who dunnit-time travel-romantic-musical-comedy-epic." Well, that is what the Wikipedia page says which I believe is based on the UK hardback edition. The first copy I got was the 2-cassette, abridged audiobook version published by Simon & Schuster Audioworks and read by Douglas, which describes it as, “The first ever fully realized -ghost-horror-detective whodunnit-time travel-romantic-musical-comedy-epic.” I always liked the “fully realized” bit. I liked to imagine that there had been many ghost-horror-detective whodunnit-time travel-romantic-musical-comedy-epics before, some of which that were partly realized, but this one was the first ever fully realized one. The later 4-cassette, unabridged version published by Dove Audio and also read by Douglas cuts it down to, "So this is it: a ghost/horror/detective/time-travel/ romantic comedy epic."  That final audio version is available digitally at Audio.com. I point that out because the digital audio versions of the five-book, inaccurately named Hitch-hiker's trilogy on Audio.com are new versions read by Stephen Fry and have been Americanized so English words like Torch have been rewritten as Flashlight. I was so mad I stopped listening to them at that point. Seriously, there exists wonderful recordings of Douglas reading the Hitch-hiker's books, why re-record them?!  Though I'll give a shout out to Stephen Moore, who was the voice of Marvin in the original BBC Hitch-hiker's radio show and BBC TV series, who did a wonderful job of reading the abridged cassette version that came out first and introduced me to the series. 

Dirk Gently is somewhat based on a storyline call “Shada” that Douglas had written as the final 6 episodes of the 1979-80, season 17 of the popular British TV series, "Doctor Who." About half of it was filmed but it was never completed due to a technicians’ strike at the BBC. A re-constructed version was released in 1992 with Tom Baker, the Doctor at that time, recording linking material to cover the gaps. Supposedly Douglas wasn't too impressed with his story and was content to have let it die. He claimed that the contract to allow the 1992 release to go forward was part of a pile of papers he was signing for his agent and that he wasn't fully aware of what he was agreeing to. In 2003 Shada was redone as a six-episode audio play / webcast with a little Flash animation with another Doctor. Gareth Roberts also novelized the Shada storyline. I haven’t seen, heard, or read any of those versions; just the Dirk Gently book which recycled some characters and concepts with all the Doctor Who stuff taken out.

One of my fears is justified in having listened to a dramatized audio version of the book that I got on Audible.com that is horrible and may lead some people to believe that the word dramatized means to have taken all the humor out of something. The rest of my fears of a television version of the book steams from the fact that most of Douglas’ humor in all this books are in the third person description. For example, in describing the giant, alien, Vogon Constructor Fleet spaceships that arrive to blow up the Earth in the beginning of "The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy" (to make room for a hyperspace bypass) Douglas says, “They hung in the air the same way bricks don’t.” Not only is that pretty funny, but it does a really good job of describing the feeling you would get looking up and seeing a gigantic alien spaceship just floating in the sky.

Another example from “Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency” is where Susan is getting mad because Richard forgot to pick her up… again.
    Time passed.
    Susan waited.
    The more Susan waited, the more the doorbell didn't ring. Or the phone. She looked at her watch. She felt that now was about the time that she could legitimately begin to feel cross. She was cross already, of course, but that had been in her own time, so to speak. They were well and truly into his time now, and even allowing for traffic, mishaps, and general vagueness and diIatoriness, it was now well over half an hour past the time that he had insisted was the latest time they could possibly afford to leave, so she'd better be ready.
    She tried to worry that something terrible had happened to him, but didn't believe it for a moment. Nothing terrible ever happened to him, though she was beginning to think that it was time it damn well did. If nothing terrible happened to him soon maybe she'd do it herself. Now there was an idea.
    She threw herself crossly into the armchair and watched the news on television. The news made her cross. She flipped the remote control and watched something on another channel for a bit. She didn't know what it was, but it also made her cross. Perhaps she should phone. She was damned if she was going to phone. Perhaps if she phoned he would phone her at the same moment and not be able to get through.
    She refused to admit that she had even thought that.
    Damn him, where was he? Who cared where he was anyway? She didn't, that was for sure.
    Three times in a row he'd done this. Three times in a row was enough. She angrily flipped channels one more time. There was a programme about computers and some interesting new developments in the field of things you could do with computers and music.
    That was it. That was really it. She knew that she had told herself that that was it only seconds earlier, but this was now the final real ultimate it.
    She jumped to her feet and went to the phone, gripping an angry Filofax. She flipped briskly through it and dialled a number.
    "Hello, Michael? Yes, it's Susan. Susan Way. You said I should call you if I was free this evening and I said I'd rather be dead in a ditch, remember? Well, I suddenly discover that I am free, absolutely, completely and utterly free, and there isn't a decent ditch for miles around. Make your move while you've got your chance is my advice to you. I'll be at the Tangiers Club in half an hour."
    She pulled on her shoes and coat, paused when she remembered that it was Thursday and that she should put a fresh, extra-long tape on the answering machine, and two minutes later was out of the front door. When at last the phone did ring the answering machine said sweetly that Susan Way could not come to the phone just at the moment, but that if the caller would like to leave a message, she would get back to them as soon as possible. Maybe.
All of the humor would be lost just filming that scene.  How exactly do you portray a Filofax (Rolodex type address book) as being angry?  I always thought that the only way to pull it all off would be for a narrator to read the book out loud while the actors acted and spoke their actual spoken parts. I think somebody tried this with a book and it was a complete failure. Wish I could remember if that actually happened and if so what was the book/show so I could judge for myself and make a much better point here. Maybe if it was done as an animated show?  Oh well, moving on.

At this point I should state my goals in writing this, there are two. One being to get you to read the book because it is that good and two to state if the TV show version is any good. So if you haven’t already decided to go out and buy the book or unabridged audio-version read by Douglas, then I have already failed that part.

Now more specifically the TV show. It isn't the book. It is a re-imagining of Dirk Gently as a TV show again recycling some of the elements and characters of the books to create a new story. I know you are probably wondering if the show is labeled as being 'green' because of all the recycling, but Douglas himself liked to point out that all the different versions of "The Hitch-hiker's Guide to the Galaxy" were different things and they all worked in their particular medium. The TV show works, it isn't the book, but Stephen Mangan is Dirk Gently. There are some nit-picky bits that I have with tiny details nobody but somebody who has read (listened) to the books many times would pick up on. One not tiny, only small, bit that jumped out at me was that in the book Dirk is very much obsessed with the fact that he has no psychic powers and gets quite angry when anybody suggests otherwise. In the TV series he hints that he is or may be psychic. Part of the comedy is the constant and argent denial of these powers when things happen that might suggest that he has them. The bit in the book that tells how he was arrested and thrown out of University for cheating being a really good, and funny, example. He was just trying to scam people into buying him dinner. Overall, I very much liked the TV for what it was, another version of Dirk Gently and was instantly sad to have learned that the show was not given a second series. Douglas would have approved. I've added the DVDs to my Amazon wishlist and will be proud to display him in my DVD case.

There is a second Dirk Gently novel  called, “The Long, Dark, Tea-Time of the Soul”  (Amazon and Audible links) and parts of a third that Douglas was writing when he passed. The incomplete version was released along with some of his other writings in a book called, “The Salmon of Doubt.” (Amazon and Audible links) Though Douglas had said that a lot of the stuff he was writing in that unfinished Dirk Gently book wasn't working. He said he thought he might salvage some of it to use for another Hitch-hiker's book. If you read the unfinished bit you'll instantly recognize the parts he was probably talking about. I also know of two series of BBC radio dramas that were made based on the Dirk Gently books, but I have not heard them  unless they are the dramatized versions I mentioned above in which case I'll pretend that I have not heard them.

And just to be Douglas complete in case anybody was about to ask, I have not read (or listened to) the sixth Hitch-hiker's book, "And Another Thing..." that was written by Eoin Colfer with permission from Douglas' widow, Jane. I will someday though.

And speaking of 'and another thing' I do own the rare and hard to find "Last Chance to See" on cassette. The link will take you to the book on Amazon, but it was something Douglas recorded, not written originally, for the BBC where Douglas and zoologist Mark Carwardine, went to see a variety of animals on the brink of extinction, such as the Komodo Dragon, the White Rhinos of Zaire, New Zealand kakapos, and Yangtze river dolphins.

"Hey, you sass that hoopy Douglas Adams? There's a frood who really knows where his towel is." (Sass: know, be aware of, meet, have sex with; hoopy: really together guy; frood: really amazingly together guy.)

Thursday, October 03, 2013

Yay Amazon!

A few years ago I was doing a pub quiz with friends at a local Irish pub. One of the questions was related to the song “On the Dark Side” from Eddie and the Cruisers soundtrack. I remember having that soundtrack on cassette back in high school. I didn’t get my first CD player till my birthday during my senior year of high school. None of that is any admission of my age, for all you know I was just really late in getting a CD player. 

I went looking for the soundtrack on iTunes and remembered the Streets of Fire soundtrack that I had gotten at the same time and loved to death. Let’s face it “On the Dark Side” is the only really good song on that album while Streets of Fire is chock full of rocking tunes.  Unfortunately, neither album was digitally available for purchase, so I found and bought physical copies of them on Amazon.  At some other time before or after that I also bought Jonathan Coulton’s “Best. Concert. Ever” album and the album of Neil Gaiman inspired songs, “Where’s Neil When You Need Him” off Amazon, because I’m a big fat geek.  I kept saying that I was going to rip them into iTunes, but I never got around to it. I kept the CDs in the car’s CD changer and listened to them while driving. Well, while driving when  I didn’t feel like listening to an Audiobooks, because as I’ve already established, I’m a big fat geek. Oh, and you know what else? Something happened with the Jonathan Coulton CD recently and it won’t play anymore.

A few days ago I got an email from Amazon.com saying the 4 Albums I purchased from them were added to my Cloud Player library and that those songs were available to play or download from their Cloud Player for FREE. It did note that some of songs from my albums were not eligible for this feature. Those songs were all off “Where’s Neil When You Need Him,” but I already have a full digital copy of that album. 

Last night I download the other three albums from Amazon, it auto imported them into iTunes for me, I copied them to my iPhone and I’m good to go.

Edit: Fixed a typo

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Warning! My email was compromised!

Looks like this old Yahoo email address is spamming an email with what I am sure is a bad link. I cleared this email a long time ago and it looks like it is mailing a lot of non-valid email address which are bouncing back. I can't do anything about it ATM because my PC is in the middle of getting its hard drive replaced.

Very sorry about this. No idea how this can happen as I don't even log into this account except via my iPhone.  If you got the email and clicked the link, fire up those virus checkers. 

-Joseph-
www.working-as-designed.blogspot.com

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Hello Reddit

Every once in awhile I've made a comment on a Westwood related post on Reddit. I usually get a few comments or private messages asking me to do an AMA (Ask Me Anything). I kept saying that I would and kept putting it off. Recently a friend started berating me about it and if nothing more than to get them to shut up, I'm doing it.

Now, as you will remember, I've done a lot of work with time travel in the (relative) past. Here is the LINK to the Reddit AMA though as if this writing it isn't there yet. Once I finish this here post on the blog, I'll post the AMA on Reddit, then travel back in time to tell myself what the URL of the Reddit post will be and... hang on, somebody is at the door... Okay, that was me at the door with the URL.

Now that is all taken care of I have to go and remind myself to bring myself something to eat when I come back in time, because the future me forgot this time. Or will that cause all sort of continuity problems?

Another future self just arrived with lunch and told me to move my post to IAMA (I Am A) and I did so. Link was updated.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Shredded Apple Pie

NaNoWriMo LogoI've had a few things to say recently, but couldn't get away from what I was doing to write a post. I've been participating in National Novel Writer's Month or NaNoWriMo as it is called. Basically, a novel of 50 thousand words in 30 days, no expectation of quality. It is a writing exercise to get you to write. Every time I feel like writing, I write my novel.

I'm doing okay. You have to write about 1,600 words a day on average to make 50,000 in 30 days. I was ahead for a long time, but I missed a few days about a week ago and haven't quite caught up. I should be at 41,666 and am only at 39,170 (as of this writing.)

This post isn't about that though. My friend Kristina got me thinking about apple pie today and I told her about the time we were driving back to Vegas from a skiing trip to Brian Head. My friend Louis, who was driving, had us stop for dinner in Saint George. All I really remember about the place was that it was near an airport on a cliff that overlooked the city. This would have been between 1992 and '94.


I like apple pie, but as a child I had always had a problem with the chunks of apple. I was a weird picky eater as a kid. The chunks grossed me out. Granted, I had gotten mostly over it as a (somewhat) grown-up but I was still very excited when I saw 'shredded' apple pie on the menu. I knew it was the pie for me.

I spent some time scrolling around the satellite view Saint George on Google Maps. I found the airport with the cliff nearby, but no restaurant. This also wasn't the first time I had tried finding the place, but the maps have gotten much better over the years.

Finally, on a whim, I Googled, "Saint George Utah 'Shredded Apple Pie'" and this blog post on Life as a Lofthouse. I was sad to learn Sullivan's Rococo Steakhouse has closed, but at least the recipe survives.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Walking Dead on eBay



When I sold my comic collection (documented a couple of posts ago) I said I was keeping my Walking Dead issues so that I could sell them on eBay.

Season 3 of the AMC Walking Dead TV show starts tomorrow. Season three has them arriving at the prison and introduces fan favorite characters Michonne and the Governor. This is the point in the story where the comic series really took off and it is expected that the TV series' popularity will increase even more. I figured now was the time to sell them.

I've very little experience on eBay  I've bought a few things, and by that I mean three. I've never sold anything on the site.  I did some research and watched a similar eBay auction that ended a few days ago. He had 1-70, started the auction at $1000, and sold it for about $2500.

My run is 1-2, 4-5, and 7-58 and I started the bidding at $800. Not as many issues, but most of the later, more recent ones, aren't the ones that are worth lots of money. Here is the link to my auction on eBay.

Pricing out my issues on Comic's Price Guide Online at a 8.0 condition they come out to $2,006.20 and at a 9.4 condition they add up to $2,864.00. I listed the notable issues on my eBay auction, but be warned it contains major spoilers such as the deaths of some major characters.





I didn't realize what a pain the butt it would be to take these pictures. The iPhone camera warped them way too much and lucky I was able to borrow a real camera from Lauren, my friend Eric#1's daughter. Even then I still spent most of the day trying to get the pictures to come out decent. It didn't help that it was overcast and I couldn't get that nice ambient light from the window. I also had a problem with my reflection on the bag which you can see on issue #48 above. It makes it look like the comic is warped or something.





By the way, the walking dead are the main characters in the story, not the zombies. Think about it.

Monday, September 24, 2012

Refreshing and Streak-Free

I putting this picture together the other day, but without the funnel and poor choice of liquid levels it could have be viewed that I was putting Windex in the Powerade bottle. But that was because it was actually still Windex in the Windex bottle. But this time I emptied and cleaned the Windex out and actually filled the bottle with Powerade.


Anyway, I re-shot it with the funnel. Though, if I do it again, I'll clean the sprayer out a little more.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Aftermath - The comics are gone :-(

Here they are stacking my comic boxes up in the Maximum Van and empty dining room where they had been. There were a total of 17 long boxes and 13 short. All the Neil Gaimen titles (keeping) and The Walking Dead (which I'll be selling separably on Ebay) left me with 1 long box worth of comics.

I also kept the issues whose art work you can see left in the living room. Spash page from the Grendel / Batman crossover, Books of Magic showing the 3 page sequence where Tim sets free the thing to take away the wrecked car that his mother died in, and a page from The Children's Crusade where the two dead boy detectives take on the case.




Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Oh, I still have my Comic Trade collection

I've had it mentioned to me that I wasn't being completely honest about not collecting comics anymore. I actually stopped collecting single-issues, or "floppies" as they are sometimes called when I got back from Australia in 2009. I already had a large collection of trades editions, but that is when I officially became one of those 'wait for the trade' guys.



I mostly collect trade paperbacks as opposed to hard covers. My thoughts on the matter are that I like having the trades on the shelves. They look nice. They are easy to re-read - pick the whole story-line as one trade off the shelf as opposed to have to dig through a comic box for each issue, carefully take them out of their bag, gingerly read them and then put 'em back in the bag while trying not to have the tape touch the comic. I also don't mentally think of them as collectibles. I am not afraid to let other people read them or lend them out.  I do have a number of hard covers and the thing I have against them is that I do kind of think of them as collectables and they cost more.

P.S.
The statue collection is already boxed up.

P.S.S.
Anybody want a copy of Fury? Bwahaha! Seriously though, I have one copy with the other games I worked on, but I just can't get myself to throw those extra copies away. Four years! I worked on that damn game for four years and those idiots ruined it. All it needed was a few more months and some intelligence at running the beta.

Comic Book Collecting Post Mortem

Well, it looks like the time has finally come. I am selling my comic collection. It isn't a good time financially to be doing so, but being out of work and selling my house means I could use the money and the extra space they would take up in storage. I am also completely sick and tired of lugging these boxes around the world Please note, as someone who has move to Australia and back, that "around the world" bit isn't an exaggeration.




As I said in the title, this post is my comic book collecting post-mortem. What follows is my general history of my collecting of comics and then an inventory dump. Jay from Maximum Comics is supposed to come pick them up tomorrow. I should note that I am keeping everything Neil Gaimen wrote, the rest of the "Miracle Man" series, "Alan Moore's Neonomicon", "Alan Moore's Writing for Comics", and the "Walking Dead" series.

I kind of started collecting way back in the 70's. I say, "kind of" because I was just a young kid and collecting meant buying them in the book store and stacking them up in my room. I would occasionally sell them in front of the BX (Base Exchange, the Air Force Base store in San Vito, Italy where my father was stationed) for 10 to 25 cents each. They only cost 25 to 35 cents at the time. The money I earned would go to buy new comics. I kept none of those comics unfortunately and shudder to think of the condition they would have been in.

Even before that, I somewhat remember my very first comic book. I remember being at the air port in Panama City, Florida when I was about 4. This was probably a year before we moved to Italy. My mother bought me a comic book to keep my occupied while we waited for what ever it was we were waiting for. I am pretty sure it was "The Defenders" #31. I just checked and I have a number of issues around #31 but not #31 itself. I distinctly remember Nighthawk landing in a park holding a brain in a bowl. In #32-34 there is something about a brain in a bowl, but not that scene exactly. As a four-year old, I loved Nighthawk's costume. It was dark blue, trimmed with yellow and a red cape. He also had this cool bird symbol on his chest. I begged my mother to make me a Nighthawk costume for Halloween. Unfortunately for me she managed to distract and avoid the issue long enough that my young mind forgot about it by the time Halloween rolled around..

My actual "serious collecting" began in the early 80's while I was in Jr. High School. "Herb's Play World" was near my house and "Page After Page" comics was on the 4 mile bike ride home if we went the long way. "Friendly Neighborhood Comics" (the sign just read "Comics") was actually the first comic shop in Vegas, but it was a bit further away and not a very friendly store (at least not to nerdy Jr. High kids).

When doing the inventory below, I used Comics Price Guide to look up the approximate values of the issues. I noted all the comics that I found whose condition range of 8 to 9.4 was listed at $10 or more. So the range of dollars you see in the notes for some comics is the 8 to 9.4 values. Granted this is just a guide estimate and I was using it to get a general idea of what might be worth something. A lot of the comics were worth their cover price and some even less than that. There were a lot of disheartening moments when I noted that comics that used to be worth a good chuck of change were hardly worth anything anymore. For example look at Alan Moore's "Saga of the Swamp Thing" issues and Frank Miller's "Daredevil" issues. Hey, remember when Lobo used to be the hottest character around in the 90's? Yeah, DC sure did milk him to death. But I remember when his first appearance in "Omega Men" #3 was a hot comic because of that popularity.  There were also cases where I thought I had a comic that is worth something only to find that my collection skips that very issue. Note my "New Mutants" issues: 1-68, 94-97, 99-100. #87 is the first appearance of Cable ($60ish) and #98 is the first appearance of Deadpool ($180ish).

Anyway, what follows is a quickly done inventory of the collection pictures in the boxes above. I will note that there are two collection's here as I didn't bring everything with me Australia. I didn't merge them the two collections when I got back, so there were two separate inventories. The list below was merged in Excel. If you see a title listed twice that is why. Also Excel tried to convert some of my issue ranges into dates, "1-3" becoming "Jan 3," but I think I manged to fix that.

Title
Issues
Notes


100 Bullets (1999)
30, 81

1st Issue Special (1975)
8
8 is $13.00-$26.00 first DC Warlord

30 Days of Night (2002)
3, Annual 2004

30 Days of Night: Bloodsucker Tales (2004)
1, 4-5, 7-8

30 Days of Night: Dead Space (2006)
1-3

30 Days of Night: Return to the Barrow (2004)
1-6. Double 2, 4-6

Absolute Sandman (2006)
Special Edition
Reprints issue 1 as a promo

Absolute Vertigo (1995)
1

Action Comics
596, 598, 601-607, 610-612, 687, Annual 1

Adventures of Super-man
436-437, 501

After the Cape (2007)
1-2

After the Cape II (2007)
1-3

Akira
1,35-38

Alan Moore’s Neonomicon
1D
Jacen Burrows Auxiliary Edition. Limited 2000

Alan Moore’s Writing for Comics (2003)
1

Albion (2005)
1-3, 6

Alf
1

Alice Cooper: The Last Temptation
1-3

Alien Legion (1887)
1-5, Double 3

Alien Legion (1984)
1-14, 18-20

Alien Worlds (1982)
6

Aliens vs. Predator (1990)
1

Alpha Flight (1983)
1-14, 16-17, 51-56, Giant Sized Annual 2, Double 17

Amazing Spider-man (1963)
293-295, 334-341, 345, 519-524, 526, 528, 530, 532, 535-538, 540-587, Annual 21-22, 24, 35, Variant 545, Annual 21, Double 536, 538

Amazing Spider-man: Swing Shift (2007)
1A
“Director’s Cut”

American Century
2-12, Double 12

American Virgin (2006)
1-22, Double 9, 20

Angela (1994)
1-3

Anima (1994)
9-10

Animal Man (1988)
Annual 1

Anne Rice’s The Vampire Lestat
1, 6, 8-9

Annie (1982)
1

Aquaman: Sword of Atlantis (2006)
40-56, Variant 40

Arak (1981)
1-7, 11-23, 25, 30

Arcana the Books of Magic
1
Annual for the series? Can’t find.

Arion (1982)
1

Army @ Love (2007)
1-6, 8-11

Astonishing X-Men (2004)
17, 20-24 Variant 20

Avengers (1963)
116-118, 223, 240, 263, 291-296, Annual 10-11
116-118 is $25.00-$50.00 (condition?),  Annual 10 is $20.00-$40.00 first appearance of Rogue and in-joke Maddy Pryor little girl.

Avengers: Earth’s Mightiest Heroes II (2007)
1-8

Avengers: The Initiative (2007)
1-21, Annual 1, Special 1

Azrael: Agent of the Bat (1997)
91

Batgirl (2000)
24, 27, 29 Double 24

Batman (1940)
404-407, 415, 417-424, 599-603, 605, 608, Annual 12
404 is $20.80-$26.00, 405 is $16.00-$20.00, 406 is $14.40-$18.00, 407 is $12.80-$16.00 (Year One), 417-419 (Ten Nights of the Beast)

Batman and the Outsiders (1983)
5

Batman Puniser: Lake of Fire (1994)
1

Batman vs. Predator (1991)
1-2, Variant 1A, 1B, Double 1, 1A, 1B, 2

Batman/Grendel: Devils Bones (1996)
1-2

Batman: Gotham Knights (2000)
25-28, 30-31, Double 25

Batman: Grendel (1993)
1-2, Double 2

Batman: Houdini (1993)
1

Batman: In Darkest Knight (1994)
1

Batman: Judgment on Gotham (1991)
1, Double 1

Batman: Legends Of The Dark Knight (1989)
Halloween Special 2
Cover autographed by Jeff Loeb

Batman: Master of the Future
1

Batman: The 10 Cent Adventure
1

Batman: The Cult (1988)
1-2, Triple 3

Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (1986)
1-4
1 is $64.00-$80.00, 2 is $24.00-$30.00

Batman: The Killing Joke (1988)
1, Double 1
1 is $38.40-$48.00

Beauty and the Beast (1985)
1-4

Beowulf  (Movie Adaption) (2007)
1-2

Birds of Prey (1999)
39-41, 43, Double 39

Black Coat, The (2007)
1

Black Diamond Effect, The
1, Variant 1

Black Orchid (1988)
3, Double 3

Black Orchid (1993)
1-19, 21-22, Annual 1

Black Panther (1988)
1-4

Black Panther (2005)
7

Black Widow: Pale Little Spider (2002)
2-3

Blackhawk (1988)
1-3

Blade Runner (1982)
1-2

Blood and Shadows (1996)
2

Blood and Water (2003)
1-5

Blood of the Demon (2005)
1-4

Blood: A Tale (1996)
1-4, Double 1-3

Blue Beetle (1986)
20-21

Book of Ballads and Sagas (1995)
1-2

Books of Faerie (1997)
1-3

Books of Faerie: Molly’s Story (1999)
1-4

Books of Magic (1990)
1-4 double 1-4
1 First appearance of Tim Hunter

Books of Magic (1994)
1-41, 43, 46-48, 50-54, 56, 60, 70-75, Annual 1, Double 4, 14, 21-24,33, 41

Books of Magick: Life During Wartime (2004)
1-15

Booster Gold (1986)
24-25

Boris the Bear (1987)
9-10

Boris the Bear (1989)
13

Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Season 8 (2007)
1-22
Probably some variant covers in there

Cable & Deadpool (2004)
17

Cable: Blood & Metal (1992)
1

Camelot 3000 (1982)
1-7, 9-12

Captain America (1968)
268, 241, 336-346, Double 337, 339-340, Annual 8

Captain America (2004)
1, 3-4, 6, 9-16, 20, 23-46, Alex Ross Variant 34, 65th Anniversary Special, Director’s Cut 25

Captain Atom (1987)
11, 16-17

Captain Carrot and his Amazing Zoo Crew (1982)
1-15, 17

Captain Marvel (2008)
1-5

Captain Victory and the Galactic Rangers (1981)
3

Cerebus (1977)
0, 139-140, 142-146, 148-156, 158-161, 166-169, 171, 173-221, Companion 2, World Tour 1995

Checkmate (1988)
1-6

Chiaroscuro (1995)
1-4

Children’s Crusade (1993)
1-2

Cinder and Ashe (1988)
1-4

City of Heroes (2005)
1-2, 1B

Civil War (2006)
1-7  Double 1

Civil War: Battle Damage Report (2007)
1

Civil War: Choosing Sides (2006)
1

Civil War: Files (2006)
1

Civil War: Front Line (2006)
1-11,  Double 1

Civil War: Opening Shot Sketchbook (2006)
1

Civil War: The Confession (2007)
1

Civil War: The Initiative (2007)
1

Civil War: The Return (2007)
1

Civil War: War Crimes (2007)
1

Classic X-men (1986)
1-26

Cloak & Dagger (1983)
1-4

Code of Honor (1996)
1-4

Conan the Barbarian Movie Special (1982)
1-2

Concrete Celebrates Earth Day (1990)
1

Conqueror of the Barren Earth (1985)
1

Constantine: Movie Adaption (2005)
1

Cool World (1992)
1, Double 1

Coyote (1983)
1-4

Criminal (2006)
1-10

Criminal (2008)
1-7

Cross Roads (1988)
1

Crossing Midnight (2007)
1-19,  Double 6, 12

D.P.7 (1986)
1-8, 18-24

Daily Bugle: Civil War (2006)
1

Daredevil (1964)
181-184, 187, 189-200, 204-205, 208, 210, 212-213, 215, 218, 220, 223, 226-233, 235-240, 245-246, 248-259, 284-343, 345-361, 363-364, 367-368, Annual 9, Double 183-184, 196, 228-229, 231-231, 233, 245, 255-256, 302
181 is $15.00-$30.00 Death of Elektra, 227-233 is Born Again

Daredevil (1999)
2-24, 30, 34-35, 38-42, 45-47, 49-115, Annual 1, Double 22, 35,96
2 is $11.20-$14.00 42, 46, 49, 57, 61-64, 66, 69, 76-81 Cover autographed by Alex Maleev

Daredevil: Blood of the Tarantula (2008)
1

Daredevil: The Man without Fear (1993)
1-5

Daredevil: The Target (2003)
1, Double 1

Dark Days (2003)
1-6

Dark Horse Insider (1995)
1

Dark Horse Presents: Aliens (1992)
1

Dark Knight Strikes Again (2001)
1-3, Double 1-2, Triple 3

Dark Sector (2007)
0

Dark Tower: The Gunslinger Born (2007)
1-7

Dark Tower: The Long Road Home (2008)
1-5

Dark Tower: Treachery (2008)
1-5

Darkhold (1992)
1
Sealed in Poly bag

Darkness (2002)
1, Variant 1

Dazzler (1981)
1-21, 23-42, Double 1

DC Sampler (1983)
1-2

DC versus Marvel (1996)
1

DC/Marvel All Access (1996)
1-2

Deadly Foes of Spider-man (1991)
1

Deadman (2002)
1-3

Deadman (2006)
1-10

Deadman: Dead Again (2001)
1-5

Death Gallery (1994)
1

Death Jr. (2005)
1-3

Death Jr. (2006)
1-2

Death Talks About Life (1994)
1

Death: The High Cost of Living (193)
1-3, Double 1-3, Platinum Edition 1
Platinum Edition is $32.00-$40.00 1-3 x2 all autographed on cover by Chris Bachalo. NOT Platinum Edition, I accidently left it at home that day.

Death: The Time of Your Life (1996)
1-3

Deathblow (1993)
Variant 1A

Deathlok (1991)
1-7

Decade of Dark Horse (1996)
1

Decimation: House of M The Day After (2005)
1

Defenders (1972)
1-17, 32-81, 86-135, 137-140, 146, 150, 152, Annual 1, Giant Sized 1-5, Double 120, 137
1 is $80.00-$160.00, 2 is $30.00-$60.00, 3-5 are $20.00-$40.00, 6-7 are $13.00-$26.00, 8-9 are $16.00-$32.00, 10 is $40.00-$80.00, 11 is $17.00-$34.00, 15 is $11.00-$22.00, 16 is $10.00-$20.00, Giant Sized 1 is $21.00-$42.00, GS2-5 are around $11.00ish-$28.00ish. GS3 is first appearance of Korvak

Demon (1986)
1-2

Destiny: A Chronicle of Deaths Foretold (1997)
1-3, one-sheet, Double 1-3

Destroyer Duck (1982)
1
First appearance of Groo. This is the comic by Steve Gerber and Jack Kerby to raise money for the Howard the Duck lawsuit against Marvel in the 1980’s.

Detective Comics (1937)
582, 585-590, 766-773, Annual 1, Double 582, 766-769

Dhampire: Stillborn (1996)
1

Disney’s Aladdin (1994)
4

DMZ (2006)
1-22, 30-39

Doctor Zero (1988)
1-2, Double 1

Doom Patrol (1987)
67, Annual 2

Down (2005)
1

Dr. Strange (1974)
1-5
1 is $40.00-$80.00, 2 is $13.00-$26.00

Draft, The (1988)
1

Dragonslayer (1981)
1-2

Dreaming, The (1996)
1-19, 23-25, 29, 33, 35-60, Double 1-2, 6-8, 10-11, 17, 58

Dynamo 5 (2007)
1-10, Double 3

Echo (2008)
1-5

Electra: Root of Evil (1995)
1-4

Elektra Assassin (1986)
1

Elfquest: New Blood (1992)
1

Elric of Melnibone (1983)
1-2, 4-6, Double 5

Endless Gallery (1995)
1

Enigma (1993)
1-4, Double 1

Essential Vertigo: Swamp Thing (1996)
1-7, 11

Eternal Warrior (1992)
1-4

Eternals (2006)
1-7, Sketchbook, Variant 3-4
Variant 3 is $14.40-$18.00

Eternals Sketchbook (2006)
1

Everquest Online Adventures: The Quest for Darkpaw (2002)
1, Double 1

Everquest: Ruins of Kunark (2001)
1, Double 1

Everquest: Transformation (2002)
1, Double 1

Ex Machina (2004)
1-33, 35-40, Double 12, 26

Ex Machina Special (2006)
1

Ex Machina: Inside The Machine (2007)
1

Ex Machina: Masquerade Special (2007)
1

Excalibur (1988)
1-24, 26-32, 36, 38-42, 44-46, Double 6, 36, Octette 1

Excalibur (2004)
14

Excalibur Special: The Sword is Drawn (1987)
1, Double 1

Excalibur: Air Apparent (1991)
1

Excalibur: Mojo Mayhem (1989)
1

Excalibur: The Possession (1991)
1

Exiles (2001)
69-71, 76, Double 71

Exterminators (2006)
1-30

Extremist, The (1993)
1

Fables (2002)
1-81, #1 Special Edition, Double 5
1 is $19.20-$24, 2 is $9.60-$12.00

Fables: The Last Castle (2003)
1

Faker (2007)
1-6

Fall of the Hulks: Red Hulk (2010)
1
1 Autographed on cover by Jeff Parker

Fallen Angel (2006)
1-2, 5-7

Fallen Angels (1987)
1-8
2 per bag

Fallen Son: The Death of Captain America (2007)
1-5

Family Guy (2006)
2-3
No numbers on cover

Fantastic Four (1961)
243-245, 250, 286, 300, 312, 314, 348-349, 489, 554-559, Annual 21, 23, Double 489, 557, Annual 21

Fantastic Four Roast (1982)
1

Fantastic Four versus The X-men (1987)
1, 3

Fantastic Four: House of M (2005)
1-3

Fell (2005)
1-9

Fight for Tomorrow (2002)
1-3

Filth (2002)
1-12

Firestar (1986)
1-4

Firestorm: The Nuclear Man
67-68

Flash (1987)
1-17, 48-52, 54-56, 58-60, Annual 1, 4, Retail 1, Double 1-9, 14

Flash Gordon (1988)
1-4, Double 3

Flash TV Special (1991)
1

Forgotten Realms: Homeland (2005)
1-2

Fray (2001)
1-8, Double 2

Freaks of the Heartland (2004)
1, 3-5

Freshmen (2005)
1-6, Yearbook, Double 2

Freshmen (2006)
2, 4-6

Friendly Neighborhood Spider-man (2005)
1-24, Annual 1, Variant 24, Double 14

Further Adventures of Indiana Jones (1983)
1-5

Fury of Firestorm (1982)
1-5, Double 1-5

G.I. Joe (1982)
1-25, 38, 64
Some are 2 per bag

Geek, The (1993)
1

Gen 13 (2002)
0

Generation M (2005)
1-5, Double 1

Ghost Rider (1973)
8-9, 21-22, 35, 68-74, 78-80

Ghost Rider (1990)
15, 28, Annual 1
Annual 1 Poly bagged sealed and autographed Chris Bachalo & Howard Mackie and marked as being 29 of 250

Ghost Rider (2006)
12-13

Ghost Rider/Blaze: Spirits of vengeance (1992)
1

Ghostdancing (1995)
1-5

Giant-sized Avengers Special (2008)
1

Girls (2005)
1-2, 4, 6-9, 11-24

Give Me Liberty (1990)
1-4

Glamourpuss (2008)
1-2

Goddess (1995)
1-2

Green Arrow (1988)
1-8, Annual 1, Double 1-5

Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters (1987)
1-3

Green Lantern Corps (1986)
220-221

Gremlins (2006)
1

Grendel (1986)
3, 6, 11-12, 15-20, 24-33
24-33 Autographed by Matt Wagner, 24-31, 33 Autographed by John K. Snyder III

Grendel Cycle (1995)
1

Grendel Tales: Devil’s Choices (1995)
1-4

Grendel Tales: Devil’s Hammer (1994)
1-3

Grendel Tales: Devils and Deaths (1994)
1-2

Grendel Tales: Four Devils, One Hell (1993)
1-6

Grendel Tales: Homecoming (1994)
1-3

Grendel Tales: The Devil in Our Midst (1994)
1-5

Grendel Tales: The Devil May Care (1995)
1-4, 6

Grendel: Devil by the Deed (1993)
1

Grendel: God and the Devil (2003)
0-10

Grendel: War Child (1992)
1-10

Griffin, The (1991)
1-3

Grips (1986)
3-4

Groo (1994)
1-5, 7-8, 10-12

Groo Special (1984)
1

Groo the Wanderer (1982)
1-8
2 per bag

Groo the Wanderer (1985)
1-44, 70-73, 79-87, 92, 104-105, 107-119
Some 2 per bag

Groo: 25th Anniversary Special (2007)
1

Groo: Hell on Earth (2007)
2-4

Grounded (2005)
1-2

Hard Time (2004)
1-6

Hard Time: Season 2 (2006)
1-3

Hawkeye (1983)
1-4
2 per bag

Heartland (1997)
1, Double 1

Hedge Knight (2003)
1, 3, Variant 3

Hedge Knight II (2007)
1-6, Double 4

Hellblazer (1988)
1-254, 256, 270-291, Millennium Edition 1, Annual 1, Special 1, Double 33, 97-103, 106-117, 164, 173, 194, 196-197, 203, 252
1 is $14.40-$18.00, 27 is $9.60-12.00 (Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean low distribution)

HellBlazer: Bad Blood (2000)
1-4

HellBlazer: Books of Magic (1997)
1-2

HellBlazer: Chas the Knowledge (2008)
2-3, 5, Double 2

HellBlazer: Lady Constantine (2003)
1-4

HellBlazer: Papa Midnight (2005)
2, 4

Hercules (1982)
1-4, Double 1-2
Some 2 per bag

Heroes For Hire (2006)
1-5, 7-15

Heroes for Hope Starring the X-men
1

Highlander (2006)
0-1

Horrorist, The (1995)
1-2, Double 1

House of M (2005)
1-8, Double 3

House of M: Avengers (2008)
1-5

House of M: Checklist (2008)
1

House of Mystery (2008)
4

House of Secrets  (1996)
1-10

Hulk (2008)
1-4, 5

Hulk vs Hercules (2008)
1

Hunter: The Age of Magic (2001)
1-23, Double 6, 23

Immortal Iron Fist (2007)
1-22, Annual 1

Immortal Iron Fist: Orson Randall and the Green Mist of Death (2008)
1

Incognito (2009)
1, 3, 5, 6

Incredible Hercules (2008)
113-114, 117-119, Double 119

Incredible Hulk (1968)
336-337, 340

Incredible Hulk (1999)
83-86, 106-112

Industrial Gothic (1995)
1-5

Infinity Gauntlet, The (1991)
1-3

Infinity Inc. (1984)
45-47

Inside Image (1993)
20

Invincible (2003)
0, 8-10, 12-59, Larry’s #1, Double 47
8-10 are $$8.00-$10.00, Larry’s #1 $16.00-$20.00 Limited to 1000. 0, 8-10, 12-14 Cover Autographed by Ryan Ottley

Invincible: Atom Eve (2007)
1-2

Iron Fist: The Origin of Danny Rand (2008)
1

Iron Man (1968)
228, 231-232, 234

Iron Man (2005)
1, 4-13, 15-20, 24-35

Iron Man Captain America (2007)
1, Variant 1

Iron Man: House of M (2005)
1-3

Irredeemable Ant-man (2006)
1-12

Jack Cross (2005)
1-4

Jack Hunter (1987)
1

Jack of Fables (2006)
1-30, Double 7, 12, 16

John Byrne’s Next Men (1992)
1

John Romita Jr, 30th Anniversary Special (2007)
1

Johnny Hiro (2007)
3

Jon Sable, Freelance (1983)
1

Jonah Hex (2006)
1-19, Double 10

Jonah Hex: Two Gun Mojo (1995)
1-2

Just a Pilgrim (2002)
1-4

Justice (1986)
18-24

Justice League (1987)
1-6, Annual 1, Double 5-6, Triple 1

Justice League International (1987)
7-18, Annual 2, Double 7, 9, 11-17, Triple 15

Kid Eternity (1991)
1-3, Double 1-3

Kid Eternity (1993)
1-13

Killer, The (2006)
1-10

Kingdom Come (1996)
1-4, Double 2

Kitty Pryde and Wolverine (1984)
1-5, Double 1-5
2 per bag

Knights of Pendragon (1990)
1-2, 8-12

Kree-Skull War Staring the Avengers (1983)
1-2, Double 1
2 per bag

Krypton Chronicles (1981)
1-3

Lady Justice (1995)
1-4

Last Days of American Crime, The (2009)
1

Last One, The (1993)
1-6

Last Train to Deadsville (2004)
1-4

League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2002)
1-6

Legends (1986)
1-6

Legion of Monsters: Man-thing (2007)
1

Legion of Monsters: Morbius (2007)
1

Legion of Monsters: Satana (2007)
1

Legion of Monsters: Werewolf (2007)
1

Legion of Super-Heroes (1984)
42

Loaded (1995)
1

Lobo Paramilitary Christmas Special (1991)
1

Logan (2008)
1, 3

Lone Ranger, The (2006)
1

Lone Wolf and Cub (1987)
1-15, Double 1-10, 12-14

Longshot (1985)
1-6

Looking for Group (2007)
4

Losers, The (2003)
1-6, 26-29, 31-32

Loveless (2005)
1-24, Double 4

Lucifer (2000)
1-7,9-30, 32-75, Double 22, 38, 40, 45-46

Lucifer / Swamp Thing Preview (2000)
1

Lucifer Nirvana (2002)
1

Madame Xanadu (1981)
1

Madman (1992)
1-3

Magician Apprentice (2006)
1-12, Variant 1-2, Double 6
1-2 Dabel Brothers, rest Marvel

Magik (1983)
1-4

Man of Rust (1986)
1A

Man of Steel (1986)
1-6, 1A, Double 2-6, 1A, Triple 1

Marshal (2006)
1
1 is $14.40-$18.00 1st preview of Anita Blake

Marshal Law (1987)
1-4, Double 1-3

Marvel 1602 (2003)
1-8

Marvel 1602: Fantastick Four (2006)
1-2, 5

Marvel 1602: New World (2005)
1-5

Marvel Age (1983)
67

Marvel and DC Present The Uncanny X-Men and The New Teen Titans
1, Double 1

Marvel Comics Presents (1988)
1-4, 72-76, 78-84, 97, Double 79, Quadruple 1-2

Marvel Dabel Brothers Sampler (2006)
1

Marvel Fanfare (1982)
1-12, 14-18, 33, 38

Marvel Feature (1971)
1-4, 10
1 is $125.00-$250.00, 2 is $50.00-$100.00, 3 is $40.00-$80.00 (condition?) 2 per bag

Marvel Guide to Collecting Comics
1
“Page after Page Comics” sticker

Marvel Illustrated: Last of the Mohicans (2007)
1

Marvel Point One (2001)
1
1 is $20.00-$25.00 comicspriceguide may have this confused, no cover scan. Does come up on comicbookdb, but no price data on that site. 1st Scarlett Spider

Marvel Saga (1985)
4-6, 8-9

Marvel Spotlight (1971)
6
6 is $26.00-$52.00 (condition?)

Marvel Spotlight: Captain America Remembered (2007)
1
Can’t find in comicspriceguide database, but does come up on comicbookdb

Marvel Spotlight: Neil Gaiman & Salvador Larroca (2006)
1
Can’t find in comicspriceguide database, but does come up on comicbookdb

Marvel Spotlight: The Dark Tower (2007)
1
Can’t find in comicspriceguide database, but does come up on comicbookdb

Marvel Super Hero Contest of Champions
1-3
2 per bag

Marvel Super Heroes Secret War
1-12
8 is $14.00-$28.00 (first black Spider-man costume) 2 per bag

Marvel Super-Heroes (1990)
6-7

Marvel Team-Up (1972)
16-18, 21, 25, 33-35, 42, 44, 47-49, 61-66, 74-77, 80-81, 83-87, 89-92, 94-96, 98, 100-103, 108-134, 136-145, 147, 150, Annual 5, 7, Double 75
Some early issues in $10.00+ range. Very early issues, and others, stolen by kid next door! Still upset about that.

Marvel Team-up (2004)
14

Marvel Universe: The End
3

Marvels (1994)
1-4

Masters of the Universe (1982)
1-3
2 per bag

Max Sampler (2006)
1

Medieval Spawn Witchblade (1996)
1

Meltdown (2007)
1

Mephisto Vs… (1987)
1-4
2 per bag

Merv Pumpinhead: Agent of Dream (2000)
1

Micronauts (1979)
2-42, 44-59, Annual 1-2, Special 1
2 per bag

Micronauts (1984)
2-3, 6-16, 18-20, Double 2

Midnight Mass (2004)
1-6

Mighty Avengers (2007)
1-21

Millennium (1988)
1-8, Double 1-2, 5, 7, 8, Triple 6

Miracleman (1985)
1-24
11-13 are $20.80-$26.00, 14 is $16.00-$20.00, 15 is $80.00-$100.00, 16-17 are $24.00-$30.00, 18-23 are $16.00-$25.00ish, 24 is $32.00-$40.00

Miracleman 3D (1985)
1, Double 1
One with red/blue 3D glasses

Miracleman Apocrypha (1991)
1-3, Double 1

Mister E (1991)
1-3

Mnemovore (2005)
1-6 , Double 4

Mobfire (1994)
5

Moon Knight (2006)
1, 4-5, 7-14, Annual 1, Double 7

Moonshadow (1994)
7-9, 11-12

Morbius: The Living Vampire (1992)
1-2

Mouse Guard (2006)
3B, 4-6

Mouse Guard Winter 1152 (2007)
1-4, Double 2

Mr. Hero (1995)
1,3-5,8-11, Double 5

Ms. Marvel (1977)
1-5
First appearance of Ms. Marvel

Ms. Marvel (2006)
12-14, 23-35, Annual 1

Muties (2002)
1-3

Mutopia X (2005)
1-5

Nam, The (1986)
1-22, Double 3-4, 7-10, 15-18, 20-22 Triple 5, 11-14
Some 2 per bag

Names of Magic (2001)
1-5

Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere (2005)
1-9

New Adventures of Superboy, The (1980)
1-46
2 per bag

New Avengers (2004)
1-49, Annual 1-2

New Avengers: Illuminati (2007)
2-5

New Avengers: Most Wanted Files (2006)
1

New Excalibur (2005)
3

New Mutants (1983)
1-68, 94-97, 99-100, Annual 1-7, Special 1, Double 60
FUCK! Neither valuable issue!!!

New Teen Titans (1980)
1-3, 5, 7, 9-20, 23-40, Annual 1-2, Drug Awareness 1A
1 is $12.00-$24.00, 2 is $24.00-$48.00 first Deathstroke 2 per bag

New Teen Titans (1984)
1-5,36-38, Annual 3
2 per bag

New Thunderbolts (2004)
11

New Universal (2007)
1-3, 5-6

New Universal: Shock Front (2008)
1-2

New Warriors (1990)
Annual 1

New Warriors (2007)
1-3, 5-6, 9-20

New X-men (2005)
21-24, 30-46, Double 43

New X-men: Academy X (2004)
4-6, 8-11, 16-19

Nick Fury vs. S.H.I.E.L.D. (1988)
1-3

Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD (1983)
1-2
2 per bag

Night Force (1982)
1-5

Nightcrawler (1985)
1-4, Double 1, 3

Nightly News, The (2006)
1-2, 6

Nightwing (1995)
65-66, 68-69, Double 65-66

Official Handbook of the Invincible Universe (2007)
1-2

Official Handbook to the Marvel Universe (1983)
1-15

Official Handbook to the Marvel Universe (1985)
1-15, 18, 20

Official Marvel Index to the X-men (1987)
1-6

Omega Flight (2007)
1-2

Omega Men (1982)
1-16, 22, 25-35, 37-38
3 - First Lobo which used to be worth something. They sure milked him to death. 2 per bag

Order, The (2007)
1-10

Other Side (2006)
1-5, Double 1

Other World (2005)
1-7

Outsiders, The (1985)
27-28

Pax Romana (2007)
1-2, 4

Penny Arcade (2005)
1

Phantom Zone (1982)
1-4

Phoenix: The Untold Story (1984)
1

Phonogram (2006)
1-2, 4-6

Pitt, The (1988)
1

Power of the Atom (1988)
1

Power Pack (1984)
19, 27, 33, 35, 40

Powerline (1988)
1-2, Double 1

Powers (2004)
29-30, Annual 1

Powers Encyclopedia (2009)
1

Preacher (1995)
1-30, Double 1
1 is $24.00-$30.00

Preacher Special: Saint of Killers (1996)
1-4

Preacher: Good Old Boys (1997)
1

Preacher: The Story of You-Know-Who (1996)
1

Predator: Big Game (1994)
1-4

Predator: Cold War (1991)
4

Predator: The Bloody Sands of Time (1992)
1

Pride & Joy (1997)
1-3

Pro, The (2002)
1

Proof (2007)
1-3

PSI-Force (1986)
18, 21-24

Pulse (2004)
10, Special ‘Newsprint’ Edition

Punisher War Journal (2007)
1-2, 4-26, Annual 1

Punisher, The (1987)
1-12, Annual 1, 4, Double 1-7, 10-11

PvP (2003)
0-1, 4-5, 9, 13, 15-37

R.H. Stavis’ Demons of Mercy (2007)
1

Racer X (1988)
0

Ragman (1991)
1

Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
1-3
2 per bag

RASL (2008)
1-2

Ray (1992)
1

Red Menace (2007)
1-3

Red Prophet (2006)
1-11, Triple 2
1-2 Dabel Brothers, rest Marvel

Red Sonja (1983)
1-4, Double 1-2
2 per bag

Reloaded (1996)
1

Robin (1993)
98-99, Double 98

Robin II (1991)
1B, 2C,3A, 4A, 1-4 Poly sealed collector’s sets, Double Poly sealed collector’s set 1

Rogue (2001)
1-4

Ronin (1983)
1-6

Ruins (1995)
1-2

S.H.I.E.L.D (2010)
Variant 1

Sable (1988)
1-7,Double 1

Saga of Ras Al Ghul (1988)
2-4

Saga of the Swamp Thing (1982)
1-23, 25-45
20 is $12.50-$25.00, 21 is $10.00-$20.00, 37 is $15.00-$30.00 first appearance of John Constantine

Samurai: Heaven and Earth (2006)
1

Sandman (1989)
1-75, Special 1, Double 8, 37, 50, Special 1
1 is $19.20-$24.00, 2 is $11.20-$14.00, 8 is $16.00-$20.00 1-2 Autographed on cover by Neil Gaiman

Sandman Endless (2003)
1
Preview

Sandman Midnight Theatre ()


Sandman Mystery Theatre (1993)
1-54, Annual 1

Sandman Presents: Bast (2003)
1-3

Sandman Presents: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Dreams (2001)
1

Sandman Presents: Love Street (1999)
1-3

Sandman Presents: Lucifer (1999)
1, 3

Sandman Presents: Petrefax (1999)
1-4

Sandman Presents: The Corinthian (2001)
1-3

Sandman Presents: The Dead Boy Detectives (2001)
1-4

Sandman Presents: The Thessaliad (2002)
1-4, Double 1-4

Sandman: A Gallery of Dreams (1994)
1

Sandman: Everything You Wanted to Know About Dreams… But Were Afraid to Ask (2001)
1

Satan’s Sodomy Baby (2007)
1
“Satan’s $@#%* Baby” on cover

Scalped (2007)
1-25

Scarab (1993)
1-3

Sea Bear & Grizzly Shark (2010)
1
1 Cover autographed by Ryan Ottley)

Secret History, The (2007)
1-5

Secret Invasion (2008)
1-8, Variant 1D

Secret Invasion: Amazing Spider-man (2008)
1-3

Secret Invasion: Fantastic Four (2008)
1-3, Double 3

Secret Invasion: Front Line (2008)
1-5

Secret Invasion: Inhumans (2008)
1-4

Secret Invasion: Runaways / Young Avengers (2008)
1-3

Secret Invasion: Thor (2008)
1-3

Secret Invasion: Who Do You Trust (2008)
1

Secret Invasion: X-Men (2008)
1-4

Secret Origins (1986)
22-22

Secret War (2004)
5

Secret Wars II (1985)
1-9

Secrets of the House of M (2005)
1

Seekers Into the Mystery (1996)
1-15

Sensational Spider-man (2006)
23-25, 27-28, 30, 32, 34, 36-41, Annual 1

Sentinel Squad O*N*E (2006)
1-2, 4

Serenity (2005)
1-Mal, 1-Inara, 1-Jayne, 2-Kaylee, 2-Shepherd Book, 2-Zoë, 3-Simon, 3-Wash, 3-River
2-Kaylee autographed by Jewel Staite, 2-Shepherd Book autographed by Ron Glass, 3-River autographed by Summer Glau

Serenity: Better Days (2008)
1-3, Double 1

Serenity: Float Out (2010)
1, Variant 1

Sergio Aragones Destroys DC (1996)
1

Seventh Shrine (2005)
1

Shade the Changing Man (1990)
1-7,11-12,14-16
1-7,11-12, 15-16 Cover autographed by Chris Bachalo

Shadow Hawk (1992)
1

Shadows Fall (1994)
1-6

Shazam: The New Beginning (1987)
1-4

Sidekick (2006)
1-5

Silver Surfer (1987)
Annual 1

Simon Dark (2007)
3

Small Gods (2004)
1, 6, 8-12, Special 1

Smax (2003)
1-5, Double 2-3

Snake Plissken Chronicles (2003)
1A, 1B, 1C, 2A, 2B, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B

Sold Out (1986)
1

Son of M (2006)
1-6

Sonic Disruptors (1987)
1-4

Spawn (1992)
1-20, 22, 24-51, 53-62, (Note: also “Cerebus the Spawn” pin-up)

Spawn: Batman (1994)
1

Spawn: Blood Feud (1995)
1-4

Spectacular Spider-man (1976)
1, 84, 131-135, 138, 164-168, 169,171-172, 177, Annual 7

Spectre, The (1987)
10-11

Speed Racer (1987)
1-12

Spellbound (1988)
1-6

Spider-man (1990)
1, 1A, 1B, 2-4, 6-17, Double 1B, 1-4, 7, 16
Also a sealed poly bagged 1

Spider-man and Daredevil (1984)
1

Spider-man Brand New Day – Extra (2008)
1-2
That’s indica, comicspriceguide names it “Amazing Spider-man: Extra!”

Spider-man Saga (1991)
1-3, Double 3

Spider-man Versus Wolverine (1987)
1
1 is $16.00-$20.00 Death of Ned Leeds, the original Hobgoblin

Spider-man/Black Cat: The Evil That Men Do (2002)
1-2

Spider-man: Blue (2002)
1-2

Spider-man: House of M (2005)
1-5

Spider-man: Reign (2006)
1-4
1 is $9.60-$12.00 or $19.20-$24.00

Spider-woman (1978)
1-50
2 per bag

St. George (1988)
1, Double 1

Stand, The: Sketchbook (2008)
1

Star Brand (1986)
11-15

Star Trek: The Next Generation (1988)
1-6

Star Wars: Dark Empire (1991)
1-6

Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi (1993)
3-5

Starslayer (1982)
1-6
Includes first appearance of the Rocketeer & Second appearance of Groo

Starslayer (1983)
7-10, 13-14

Strange Tales (1987)
18

Suicide Squad (1987)
9-10, 13

Sumerset Holmes (1983)
1

Supergirl (1982)
1-2
2 per bag

Superman (1987)
1-14, 78, Double 4, 6-7, 9-13, Triple 1-3, 5
Some 2 per bag

Superman: The Man of Steel (1991)
22

Superman: The Ten Cent Adventure (2003)
1

Superman: The Wedding Album (1996)
1

Supermarket (2006)
1, 3-4

Super-villain Classics
1

Super-villain Team-up: Modok’s 11 (2007)
1-5

Swamp Thing (1972)
5,8-10, 12-13, 17-19, 21, 24

Swamp Thing (1986)
46-171, Annual 1-7, Double 121, 160, 162, 164-167, 171 Triple 163

Swamp Thing (2000)
1-20

Swamp Thing (2004)
1-29

Swamp Thing: Roots (1998)
1

Sword, The (2007)
1-14

Tales From the Boneyard (2010)
1
1 Autographed by Danny Robberts

Tales of Suspense Marvel Select Edition (2004)
1

Tales of the New Teen Titans (1982)
1-4

Tales of the Teen Titans (1984)
41-50, Annual 3

Tales of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987)
1-2, 4

Team America (1982)
4-9, 11-12

Teen Titans Spotlight (1986)
18-19

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1984)
12

Teknophage (1995)
1-2

Testament (2006)
1-18

The Eaters (1995)
1

Thing, The (1983)
1-4, Double 1
2 per bag

Thor (1966)
337-339, 373-374, 600-Marko Djurdjevic Variant
First Beta Ray Bill. 2 per bag

Thor (1998)
56-60, 62-

Thor (2007)
1-12

Thunderbolt Jaxon (2006)
1-5

Tigers of Terra (1986)
1-2
2 per bag

Tomb of Dracula (1991)
1-3

Top Ten: Beyond the Farthest Precinct (2005)
1-5

Transmetropolitan (1997)
11-14, 16, 18, 20, 22-23, 25-26, 30-31,33-44, 46-53, Double 48, 52-53

Trenchcoat Brigade (1999)
1-4

Tron (2006)
1-3

Twelve, The (2008)
0, ½, 1-8

Twilight Zone (1990)
1B

Ultimate Extinction (2006)
1

Ultimates, The (2002)
1-2

Ultra (2004)
1-8, Double 3-6

Uncanny X-Force (2010)
1-4

Uncanny X-Men (1963)
32, 120-236, 262-286, 462-468, 485-494, Annuals 6-12, 14-15, Double 225, 281, 286
32 lower condition $10.00-$20.00? 120 is $80.00-$160.00, 121 is $70.00-$140.00, 122-128, 130-132, 134-135, 137, 139-142 are $40.00-$80.00 each, 129 is $50.00-$100.00, 133, 136, 138 are $30.00-$60.00 each, 143 is $20.00-$40.00, 144 is $10.00-$20.00, 201 is $24.00-$30.00, 210 is $16.00-20.00, 221 is $20.00-$25.00, 222 is $19.00-$24.00, 266 is $48.00-$60.00 few others $10.00+ range   Note: Some 2 per bag

Uncle Sam (1997)
1-2

Un-men, The (2007)
1-6

Usagi Yojimbo (1987)
1

V For Vendetta (1988)
1

Vampire Companion, The (1992)
1

Vertigo Gallery (1995)
1

Vertigo Jam (1993)
1

Vertigo Preview (1992)
1

Vertigo Preview Sampler (2012)
1

Vertigo Rave (1994)
1

Vertigo Resurrected (2010)
1

Vertigo Resurrected: Winter's Edge (2011)
1

Vertigo Secret Files: Hellblazer (2000)
1

Vertigo Visions: Dr. Occult (1994)
1

Vertigo Visions: Phantom Stranger (1993)
1

Vertigo Visions: Prez (1995)
1

Vertigo X Anniversary Preview (2003)
1

Vertigo: Winter’s Edge (1998)
1-3

Vietnam Journal (1988)
1

Vigilante (1983)
1-8, 10-11
2 per bag

Vimanarama (2005)
1-2

Vision and the Scarlet Witch (1982)
1-2
2 per bag

Walking Dead, The ()
1-2, 4-5, 7-58
1 is $315.00-750.00, 2 is $248.00-$310.00, 4 is $96.00-120.00, 5, 7 is $48.00-60.00, 8, 33 is $32.00-40.00, 9-18, 43, 46 are around $16.00-20.00ish each. 19 is $200.00-$250.00, 27 is 160.00-$200.00, 48 is $48.00-$60.00 and a bunch more that are around the $10.00+ range 

Wanderers, The (1988)
1

War Story: D-Day Dodgers (2001)
1

War Story: Johann’s Tiger (2001)
1

War Story: Nightingale (2001)
1

War Story: Screaming Eagles (2001)
1

Warlord, The (1976)
3, 8, 23, 30-31, 34-45, 47-56, 58, 62-83, 85, 87, 89, 122-131, Annual 1-3, 6
First Arion

Warlord, The (1992)
1-2

Warlord, The (2006)
1-10

Wasteland (1987)
1-4, 6, 6A
6 is 5 with the wrong cover and 6A is 6

Wasteland (2006)
1-13, 15, 17-23

Watchmen (1986)
1-12, Double 1, 9, 12
1 is $9.60-$12.00

Web of Spider-man (1985)
1, 29, 31-33, 67-69, Annual 3

Weird, The (1988)
1-4

West Coast Avengers (1984)
1-4

What If Special (1988)
1

What If? Avengers Disassembled (2007)
1

What If? Captain America (2006)
1

What If? Spider-man - The Other (2007)
1

What If? Spider-man versus Wolverine (2008)
1

What If? Wolverine Enemy of the State (2007)
1

What If…? (1977)
1-30, 32-47
1 is $16.00-$32.00 (condition?), 31 is $10.00-$20.00

What If…? (1989)
1-21, 23-34

What The?!
1-3

Wheel of Time: New Spring (2005)
1

Wheel of Worlds (1996)
0

Whisper (1983)
1-2

Who’s Who: Definitive Directory of the DC Univers (1985)
1-26

Who’s Who: Update ‘87
1-2, 4-5

Who’s Who: Update ‘88
1

Wild Cards (1990)
1-4, Double 1-4

Wild Dog (1987)
1-4

WildC.A.T.S Covert Action Teams
1, Double 1

Winter Soldier: Winter Kills (2007)
1

Witchcraft (1994)
1-3

Witching (2004)
1-10

Wolfpack (1988)
1-3

Wolverine (1982)
1-4
1 is $30.00-$60.00, 2-4 are $15.00-$30.00 each

Wolverine (1988)
29-34, 37-43, 45-46, 48-51

Wolverine (2003)
33-35, 37-52, 66-68, Double 67

Wolverine: Rahne of Terra (1991)
1

Wonder Woman (1987)
12-13

World of Krypton, The (1987)
1-2

World of Warcraft (2008)
1-16, Variant 1, 3, Double 1

World of Warcraft: Ashbringer (2008)
1-3

World War Hulk (2007)
1-5, Double 3

World War Hulk Prologue: World Breaker (2007)
1

World War Hulk: Frontline (2007)
1-6

World War Hulk: Gamma Corps (2007)
1-4

World War Hulk: Gamma Files (2007)
1

World War Hulk: X-men (2007)
1-3

World’s Finest (1990)
1-3

Wyrms (2007)
1

X-23 (2005)
1-6

X-Factor (1986)
1-59, 63, 67, 69-75, Annual 1-6, Special, Double 1-21, 23-31 Triple 22
Some 6 is 5 with the wrong cover and 6A is 6

X-Factor (2006)
1-40

X-Factor Special: Layla Miller (2008)
1

X-Factor: The Quick and the Dead (2008)
1

X-Files (1995)
13-19

X-Force (1991)
1, 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D, 1E, 1F-7, Double 2, 4
1-1D are poly-bagged with card

X-Men (1991)
1, 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D-4, 177, 179-183, 185, 187-207, Annual 1, Double 1, 1B, 1C, 1D, 2, 188, 200, Triple 1A

X-Men and Alpha Flight (1985)
1-2
2 per bag

X-Men and the Micronauts (1984)
1-4, Double 1-4

X-Men Unlimited (1993)
1
1 Autographed on cover by Chris Bachalo

X-Men vs. The Avengers (1987)
1-4
2 per bag

X-Men: Deadly Genesis (2005)
4-5

X-Men: Die by the Sword (2007)
1

X-Men: Endangered Species (2007)
1

X-Men: Messiah Complex (2007)
1

X-Men: Phoenix - Endsong (2005)
1-5

X-Men: The 198 (2006)
1-2

X-Men: Unlimited (2004)
13

X-Terminators (1984)
1-4

Y the Last Man (2002)
1-60
1 is $32.00-$40.00, 2 is $16.00-$20.00, 3 is $14.00-$18.00

Young All-Stars (1987)
8-9

Young Avengers Presents (2008)
1-6

Youngblood (1992)
2A

Zatanna: Everyday Magic (2003)
1, Double 1