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by Adrian Alphona,Jo Chen,Brian K. Vaughan

  • ISBN: 0785116842
  • Category: Comics & Graphic
  • Author: Adrian Alphona,Jo Chen,Brian K. Vaughan
  • Subcategory: Graphic Novels
  • Other formats: mbr mobi rtf doc
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: Marvel; 2-3 edition (June 7, 2006)
  • Pages: 144 pages
  • FB2 size: 1724 kb
  • EPUB size: 1403 kb
  • Rating: 4.9
  • Votes: 682
Download Runaways, Vol. 3: The Good Die Young fb2

Brian K. Vaughan (Author), Adrian Alphona (Illustrator).

Brian K. Book 3 of 11 in the Runaways Series. Volume 1 (Books 1-3) and Volume 2 (Books 4-8) were really, really good. Volume 3 (Books 9-1) was mediocre and ends kind of abruptly.

by Brian Vaughan (Author), Adrian Alphona (Illustrator). How to Be a Good Creature: A Memoir in Thirteen Animals" by Sy Montgomery This is a beautiful book - essential reading for anyone who loves animals and knows how much they can teach us about being human. Book 3 of 3 in Runaways (2003-2004) (Collections) (3 Book Series). Books In This Series (3 Books).

Runaways, Vol. 3 book. The Good Die Young is really fun and the pages fly by – a good finale to the first Runaways arc!. World: The art is okay, not the best Alphona but has enough character to make me enjoy it. The world building stepped up with a larger picker and greater scope. The world as we know it is about to end and the Runaways are the. After a lull in the weak second volume, Brian K Vaughan is back with a much more energised and focused third book. The origin story for The Pride is completely bonkers but in keeping with what you’d The Runaways discover the bizarre origins of their parents’ supervillain group, The Pride, before deciding they need to confront them once and for all. But the mole in the group threatens to bring them down, while The Pride have their own insurrectionists. Whatever happens, there will be blood!

Runaways By Brian K. Vaughan & Adrian Alphona Omnibus. Runaways Vol. 7: Live Fast.

Runaways By Brian K. Close X. Learn about new offers and get more deals by joining our newsletter.

Vaughan, Brian . Alphona, Adrian; Chen, Jo. Published by Marvel (2006)

Vaughan, Brian . Published by Marvel (2006). ISBN 10: 0785116842 ISBN 13: 9780785116844.

Comics & Graphic Novels. 3: The Good Die Young. Back to Comics & Graphic Novels. in Comics & Graphic Novels, Superheroes.

com User, September 27, 2007. Brian K. Vaughan really knows what he's doing.

Runaways Vol. 2: Teenage Wasteland is now out of print. com User, September 27, 2007. This volume, collecting issues thirteen through eighteen of the first run of "Runaways," ties up every loose end perfectly.

The Runaways have learned how their parents' criminal organization began, and now they must decide how it should end. As the Runaways' epic battle against their evil parents reaches its shocking conclusion. As the Runaways' epic battle against their evil parents reaches its shocking conclusion, the team's mole stands revealed, and blood must be shed. Which kids will still be standing when the smoke finally clears? This is the story that changes everything (seriously!). Издание на английском языке.

The world as we know it is about to end and the Runaways are the only hope to prevent it! But if our fledgling teenage heroes are going to succeed, they may have to become just as evil as their villainous parents. The Runaways have learned how their parents' criminal organization began, and now they must decide how it should end. As the Runaways' epic battle against their evil parents reaches its shocking conclusion, the team's mole stands revealed, and blood must be shed. Which kids will still be standing when the smoke finally clears? This is the story that changes everything (seriously!).
Reviews about Runaways, Vol. 3: The Good Die Young (7):
Voodoogore
Runaways collects into 3 volumes covering 11 books (or 3 books if you buy the larger volume version) plus two side books. Volume 1 (Books 1-3) and Volume 2 (Books 4-8) were really, really good. Volume 3 (Books 9-1) was mediocre and ends kind of abruptly. The two size stories (Civil War: Young Avengers & Runaways and Secret Invasion: Runaways/Young Avengers) are alright but not really essential. If you want to read Runaways, it is a series to simply read in order since it's not that long. However, I wouldn't fault anyone who stopped reading after finishing Book 8 (Dead End Kids) and didn't bother with the last three books.

Here's the complete reading order for the main series:
Runaways, Vol. 1: Pride & Joy
Runaways, Vol. 2: Teenage Wasteland
Runaways Vol. 3: The Good Die Young
Runaways Volume 4: True Believers (Runaways (Numbered Paperback))
Runaways, Vol. 5: Escape to New York
Runaways Volume 6: Parental Guidance
Runaways, Vol. 8: Dead End Kids
Runaways - Volume 9: Dead Wrong
Runaways: Rock Zombies
Runaways: Homeschooling

(There's apparently a link limit, but the last two are also on Amazon.)
NI_Rak
I'd probably give the actual story 4 stars, but this is the lowest quality graphic novel I've ever seen. The book is shrunk down to almost half the size of a comic, and the paper is incredibly cheap. The absolute worst thing about it though, is the binding, as the book literally fell apart in my hands as I was reading it. The build quality of the book is unacceptable, and I would send it back, but I think it's too late as I bought it a couple of months ago but didn't read it until now.

For the story itself, I enjoyed it, even though the actions of the characters were a little goofy. I liked the idea of a group of unknown but very powerful super villains having kids that upon learning of their parents evil ways runaway from home. They're an interesting collection of characters, although for their design it's a little odd that the youngest one looks like one of the oldest of the group (and talks like a child). For the parents, they look cool and appropriately varied and evil, but their reasoning really bothered me. The first thing they do when their kids (who they love) learn about them, instead of trying to reassure them, is to attack them and then when that doesn't work, threaten to kill the youngest of the kids in her sleep if they all don't immediately come home. The reasoning of the kids was a little off too, you'd think they'd want to say something to their parents to get their side of things, but they're so quick to runaway/call the police. Still, I think I'll continue the series, although I hope the rest of them aren't produced in a similar fashion.
Ce
This is one of my favorite comic series. EVER. The characters are lovable, the premise is original, the angst is minimal. It's just a really grounded, relatable book.

Here's the basic setup:

There's a bunch of kids, most of whom seem really normal. You've got your general mix, of course, the brainiac, the jock, the goth, the gamer. But they find out that their lives aren't as normal as they thought. Their parents are...supervillains! Oh the horror they must be feeling!

And that's how it takes off. The first few issues are a little rough, as the series attempts to find its niche. I don't LOVE the art style, but I like it well enough, and it's certainly well-done. The characters, however, are constantly realistic and earnest. I love them!

But the book...oh the book! I read it through once, no real problems. I opened it again an hour later, and the pages were already coming apart! In fact, the whole book is coming away from the cover! I have Runaways Vol. 2 as well, and its the EXACT SAME PROBLEM! It sucks! And, to add insult to injury, the paper is cheap, thick, and feels like cardboard, so not only does it lack the high-quality gloss of a real comic, the colors are washed out and faded! I want to rate this book highly, cause it's a total must read! But that read might end up being the only one you get out of it.... Try digital? I hate to say it, but it might be more practical here...
Ceroelyu
I am a big fan of "Y: The Last Man", so I took a look at "Runaways". I enjoyed it, and will read on, but I do not think it is as good a comic.

The premise is fun: five wealthy teens (and one pre-teen) discover that their parents are actually Marvel universe super-villains. But the execution is a bit lacking. The characters are "Breakfast Club" stereotypes -- a geek girl, a goth, a jock/bro, a skinny blonde, and a stoic genius. Eleven-year-old Molly comes off more like a nine-year-old. Also, I wasn't crazy about Adrian Alphona's artistic style.

This first collection offers a lot of questions but no real answers -- why are the parents baddies? But this is a fun, light read, and I'll give the next volume a chance.

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