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G**O
Maybe my favorite thing I've ever read?
House of X/Powers of X goes beyond being a great comic to being one of my favorite works of literature. I'm not trying to say it's Shakespeare, but it incapsulates many themes and archetypes that appeal to me as a modern reader. And it also pushes the medium forward by recontextualizing these characters in a genius way and providing an incredible amount of world building through prose sections and diagrams.The art from Pepe Larraz and RB Silva isn't like, Dave Gibbons game-changing, but it does a great job of conveying some very heady concepts while showcasing the emotions of the characters. Both artists also manage to channel some previous eras while still feeling unmistakably modern. There's something very '90s about Sabretooth here. But then there are characters like Marvel Girl who feel right out of the '60s, and not just because of some throw-back costumes.That Hickman's premise can be summarized in one lean sentence only serves to underscore its genius: Moira Mactaggert is a mutant with the power to reincarnate, and the entirety of Marvel continuity up until now has been her tenth life.Half of the storyline deals with the establishment of Krakoa, the latest and greatest mutant nation that Moira has been secretly working toward with Professor X and Magneto's help. It differs from Genosha or Utopia in that the land itself is a living thing, much more capable of adapting to the mutants' needs, and in that all mutants are welcome there, good or evil.While this new status quo is incredibly positive and inspiring, it has some dark implications. Moira, Professor X, and Magneto have all been aware that events might play out a certain way, and still allowed them to happen. One prose section suggests that Moira didn't just happen to have her mutant son Proteus - she specifically chose her husband and had Proteus knowing that the mutants would one day needs his reality-warping power.And while that sort of dark twist might disturb some readers, I think it only serves to make the previously one-note Moira much more interesting, and to present Professor X with some truly interesting dilemmas when it comes to how far he is willing to go to achieve his dream.One of my favorite action sequences in any comic ever occurs when X sends the X-Men to stop the creation of a "Mother Mold" sentinel orbiting the sun. He coldly tells them to "Do whatever it takes" and telepathically watches with determination - and heartbreak - as the team accomplishes their mission, and are killed one by one.Of course, with Krakoa's new resurrection protocols, each is cloned a new body and then implanted with Professor X's back-up memories of them. But are they really their old selves brought back to life, or mere clones?How can you not LOVE this??? It's mind-blowing. Just...so, so satisfying to see the X-Men brought to the cutting-edge of sci-fi storytelling.Speaking of, the other half of the narrative showcases other timelines, Moira's previous lives. We see a timeline where mutant chimeras working for Apocalypse sacrifice themselves to get Moira information on how Nimrod comes to be. And we see an especially long-lasting timeline wherein humans reach a point of technological transcendence and merge with the Phalanx, who, in another profound recontextualization, are revealed to be just the tip of a universe-spanning cluster of artificial intelligences more akin to God. Is it humanity's fate to evolve to this point, or is it better that they retain their individuality?This stuff is so, so cool. I have read it twice and tore through it both times. Grant Morrison's New X-Men is the only thing that comes close. This is really the pinnacle of the franchise.But of course, it can only exist because of what has come before. I'm nearing the end of a two-year marathon reading every issue of X-Men ever, and even I missed some of the references here. Wolverine makes amends with Gorgon, a villain from a Mark Millar solo Wolverine comic run that I somehow hadn't heard of. But overall, I think the series is still accessible to even a casual X-Men fan. I've seen some on here describe it as "convoluted," but if you pay attention to the diagrams and various boxes it's all laid out pretty clearly. And it's all doled out in a really compelling order.While I've yet to read everything that has come after this, it stands on its own as probably the best thing Marvel put out in the 2010s, aside from Hickman's previous big work, Secret Wars. It's just massively entertaining, stimulating, engrossing, packed full of secrets and hugely pleasurable new ways of looking at your favorite characters. It's amazing. I love it. Read it and then be inspired to go read every X-Men issue ever like I was.
M**O
Book came in good condition
The book came in good condition and looked well shipped and well taken care of. The book itself is an awesome read. It's somewhat mind blowing in detail and has some greater concepts than comics usually delve into. Overall, super amazing story.
M**E
If you’re a fan of the X-men you’ve probably bought this
Long review short: buy this book if you like high concept x-men. This is more foundation building, not a climactic finish.Collected in order house of x & powers of x. Great quality. Very sharp printing. Excellent book. The cover & sketch gallery are great additions.This is the starting point for a whole new x universe, while still pulling from all the history that preceded it. It is polarizing X-men fans. People love it or hate it, & that’s fantastic! It’s brought new ideas to these characters, & it feels like the proper next step in their story arc.I’ve been collecting since uncanny x men 275, & I’ve done all the back issues & xmen classic story lines all the way to the beginning. I read the Phoenix saga & xtinction agenda at about the same point in time. HOXPOX is where all the stories & all the recent ups & downs in the x universe come together & actually matter. I highly recommend this book.If you are familiar with Hickmans writing, this is big concept stuff. What I like about this, as opposed to his runs on Fantastic Four & Avengers, is this is starting with this huge idea that we get to see flesh out as they move into the future, rather than all these little seeds moving towards the climactic end. There’s definitely seeds, literally & figuratively, that we will see develop, but to start it all off with such a bang is an interesting approach. So if you’re a fan of his writing, get this. This book really plays with the format of comics, especially superhero comics, & is very similar to hickmans Black Monday Murders, with the didactics inserted in between traditional art/dialogue. That being said, I don’t think this is for kids. But I don’t think comics have been for kids since I was a kid. I think the medium grew up with the readers. Or maybe that’s backwards.For the art, larraz & Silva do wonderfully. They’re both great artists producing some amazing work. They complement each other very well, & the flow of one book to the other is very fluid, while still being distinct enough from one another. Some early complaints I read were that they were both too similar to Immomen in style, & while there are hints of it, & while even if that were true how would that be a bad thing, they both have differences that make for surprises throughout.
K**7
Hooked Me Like Claremont's X-Men Back in the Day!
I feel like a kid again.Way back in the day, I'd ride to my local convivence store on my bike, grab a Coke and may be a moonpie, and a comic.I was hooked back then. I read Battlestar Galactica and Micronauts, but my favorite book--the one I could not miss--was X-Men. This was Chris Claremont's original run. It was AMAZING, and one month to wait was way too long.Sometimes, I'd get to the store too late, and the store would be sold out. Back then, that meant not only no X-Men that month, but never seeing an entire issue. The world would come to an end!I loved that book back then.I lost my love of comics as I got a bit older, learned to drive, found out just how interesting girls really were. And, it was really late in life--past middle age--that I rediscovered them.Part of it is nostalgia. Part of it is that some of these comics are just damn good reads.Which is what this omni is of the twelve issues of House of X/Powers of X.The story is fresh and new, but it has the feel of that old Chris Claremont X-Men series. It focuses one the Man vs. Mutant issue--the core of the X-Men--and it does it in such a way that both side are right. You will side with both sides, depending on what side you happen to be reading at the time.It's a FANTASTIC book, and Hickman's story will go down as one of the great stories told in the X-Men comics.Don't miss this.If you are an X-Men fan, you will love it.
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