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Invincible: The Ultimate Collection, Volume 2 by Ryan Ottley β€” book cover
Image Comics & Graphic Novels

Invincible: The Ultimate Collection, Volume 2

by Ryan Ottley (Artist), Robert Kirkman, Bill Crabtree
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Overview

Continuing the definitive collection of what is probably the best superhero comic book in the universe

What now?

After the cataclysmic events of the last volume, Mark is left to pick up the pieces of his life. Everything is different now-his family, his friends, his colleagues. The world is a very strange and unfamiliar place for our young superhero. He is faced with insurmountable odds, countless super-villains, otherworldly threats... and graduating high school. Nobody told him being a superhero would be easy, but nobody told him it'd be this hard, either.

This volume contains issues 14-24, the zero issue and the story from the Image Comics Summer Special from Free Comic Book Day 2004.

Synopsis

Continuing the definitive collection of what is probably the best superhero comic book in the universe

What now?

After the cataclysmic events of the last volume, Mark is left to pick up the pieces of his life. Everything is different now-his family, his friends, his colleagues. The world is a very strange and unfamiliar place for our young superhero. He is faced with insurmountable odds, countless super-villains, otherworldly threats... and graduating high school. Nobody told him being a superhero would be easy, but nobody told him it'd be this hard, either.

This volume contains issues 14-24, the zero issue and the story from the Image Comics Summer Special from Free Comic Book Day 2004.

VOYA

Mark is still reeling from the loss of his father, and sometimes pulling on the mask of Invincible is the only way to escape the twin problems of his mother's spiraling depression and his plummeting high school grades as graduation looms. This beautiful volume chronicles the end of one romance, the blossoming of another, and for Mark and his mother, the slow but necessary process of reinventing oneself. The bonus materials at the back of the book hint that the writer knew that these issues were weaker than those in the first volume (Image Comics, 2006/VOYA June 2004), particularly owing to, as Kirkman puts it, "the seventy-nine subplots currently going on in the book." At worst, this book is lost in a sea of planning that has not yet been paid off. But at best, it is still a strong, fresh superhero tale with specific relevance to teen readers. The book takes on topics as important as emerging sexuality, love and trust, and the necessity for young people to choose their own directions in life. The artists use composition and color particularly well to provide dramatic action (as well as touching moments of domesticity) without allowing the panels to become cluttered. The inefficiency of which the first volume was guilty is draining away, replaced by strong timing and excellent pacing, even in scenes full of dialogue. This volume clearly represents a strong series taking a breath between a tremendous opening and a promising future.

About the Author, Ryan Ottley

Robert Kirkman

ROBERT KIRKMAN is best known for his work on The Walking Dead and Invincible for Image Comics and SKYBOUND. He is one of the five partners of Image Comics and is an executive producer and writer on AMC's critically acclaimed television series The Walking Dead. 

JAY BONANSINGA is a critically-acclaimed horror novelist whose works include Perfect Victim, Shattered, Twisted, and Frozen. His debut novel, The BlackMariah, was a finalist for a Bram Stoker award.

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Editorials

VOYA - Joe Sutliff Sanders

Mark is still reeling from the loss of his father, and sometimes pulling on the mask of Invincible is the only way to escape the twin problems of his mother's spiraling depression and his plummeting high school grades as graduation looms. This beautiful volume chronicles the end of one romance, the blossoming of another, and for Mark and his mother, the slow but necessary process of reinventing oneself. The bonus materials at the back of the book hint that the writer knew that these issues were weaker than those in the first volume (Image Comics, 2006/VOYA June 2004), particularly owing to, as Kirkman puts it, "the seventy-nine subplots currently going on in the book." At worst, this book is lost in a sea of planning that has not yet been paid off. But at best, it is still a strong, fresh superhero tale with specific relevance to teen readers. The book takes on topics as important as emerging sexuality, love and trust, and the necessity for young people to choose their own directions in life. The artists use composition and color particularly well to provide dramatic action (as well as touching moments of domesticity) without allowing the panels to become cluttered. The inefficiency of which the first volume was guilty is draining away, replaced by strong timing and excellent pacing, even in scenes full of dialogue. This volume clearly represents a strong series taking a breath between a tremendous opening and a promising future.

Library Journal

At age 17, Mark Grayson began developing the same powers as his superhero father, Omni-Man, so he took the name Invincible and started stopping bad guys himself. All was going well-until Mark's father revealed himself to be an advance scout from the planet Viltrum, here to analyze and weaken the Earth for eventual conquest. After an emotional confrontation with Mark, Omni-Man left Earth. In this second oversized hardcover collection (compiling Vols. 4 and 5 of the paperback edition), Mark reveals his secret identity to his girlfriend; his mom, terribly hurt by her husband's betrayal, turns to alcohol; and one-eyed Allen the Alien reports events on Earth to the Coalition of Planets, giving them hope in their struggle against the Viltrumites. This excellent series has the bright colors of classic superhero comics; the superteam dynamics and multiple overlapping subplots of the 1980s X-Men and New Teen Titans; and an overarching sense of humor and fun, enhanced by art that's cartoonier than what's found in the usual superhero book. The stories are leisurely paced, compelling, and inventive. With blood and gore in some fight scenes, this ongoing series is heartily recommended for superhero fans mid-teen and up.-S.R. Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
July 1, 2006
Publisher
Image Comics
Pages
352
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781582405940

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