Selasa, 14 Juli 2015

Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

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Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski



Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

Read and Download Ebook Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

Billionaire philanthropist John King is succeeding where the Queen Foundation failed, bringing healing and hope to cities across the country. Except he’s not saving these cities—he’s conquering them. Green Arrow must overthrow this mad modern-day monarch, but he can’t do it alone. He’ll need the help of a brash and brilliant hacker Felicity Smoak; speedy street kid Mia Dearden; and an army of superhero allies, including Arsenal, Katana, Green Lantern, Batman—and Lex Luthor. And if you come at the King, you’d best not miss. Andrew Kreisberg and Ben Sokolowski—two of the minds behind TV’s Arrow and The Flash—take aim at the comics world in GREEN ARROW: KINGDOM, featuring action-packed art by Daniel Sampere! Collects issues #35-40.

Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #180264 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-17
  • Released on: 2015-11-17
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 10.10" h x .30" w x 6.70" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 144 pages
Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

About the Author Andrew Kreisberg was born in 1971. He is a producer and writer, known for Arrow, The Flash and Boston Legal.


Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

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Most helpful customer reviews

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful. Spoilery Review. Kriesberg forced to make the books TOO much like the show? By NANCY HARTIGAN First and foremost, Andrew Kriesberg’s most recent run of Green Arrow reeks of DC trying to hook in fans of the show by making it more like Arrow. Even though Jeff Lemire found a healthy balance between the Green Arrow, we know and inspiration from Arrow the show. He introduced John Diggle, but he was a new take and not a carbon copy of David Ramsey’s character. Komodo was an engaging villain who was clearly based on Malcolm Merlyn, yet was also original enough to be his own character.Here we’re introduced to a character from the show, Felicity Smoak (who is redundant given we already have an IT girl on the team.) She somehow is even more unbelievably overpowered as a hacker in this book, than she is on the show. Which is saying something. She hacks something that she claims should take a week before she finishes that very sentence. The character in general just falls flat. While I enjoyed Felicity at first in the show, she starts and ends terribly here. Not to mention the worst part of her introduction, the disrespectful marginalization of Noami, who was a better Felicity before Felicity even existed (in her current, Arrow incarnation. I’m aware she was Firestorm’s step-mom.)Diggle gets a more proactive role, and while he fares better than Felicity, he comes off as a different character than he did in Lemire’s run. Bruce Wayne and Lex Luthor appear but are kinda just there. Arsenal appears which should be a big moment for the two, and while they have an enjoyable yet quick exchange, he too is just kinda there. Katana and Cupid (Kriesberg’s creation from his pre-Arrow days as a comic writer.) are there as well. It’s nice to see Katana again, but she isn’t really given a good excuse to be here. Cupid is just there to remind everyone that she exists I guess. Emiko and Naomi finish off the roll call for Green Arrow’s calvary and we’re given a small hint of Naomi’s training, but like everyone else in the calvary, they’re just kinda there to add names to the issue.Green Arrow’s New 52 book and Arrow the tv show seem to be caught in a strange cycle of inspiration. Komodo was clearly inspired by Malcolm Merlyn. His father role to Emiko, daughter of Robert Queen and half sister of Oliver would later be emulated on the show with Malcolm Merlyn and Thea Queen, the show’s versions of Merlyn and Mia Dearden. But then again, we get John King and Mia Dearden in this book, emulating the show which was emulating the previous book.It was nice to finally see a Winter Soldier-esque altercation with Tommy Merlyn. A seed that I hope grows in the future.The end is a slap to the face of what made the previous books (Namely the Jeff Lemire run, at the risk of sounding like a broken record.) great. Taking inspiration from, not copy and pasting from the show.All in all Kingdom felt rushed, crowded, and dull. It serves as an underwhelming re-introduction of Mia Dearden to the Green Arrow world. It marginalizes recurring Green Arrow allies to make Felicity a big deal and appeal to show watchers. Which kind of defeats the purpose of the “If you don’t like the changes they make on the show, you still have the comics.” argument. Kingdom was a disappointing followup to one of the best comic book runs I’ve read in recent years, the Lemire stuff.

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful. How To Rate This? By GoodwinsGal I'm really torn on how to rate this. I am not a comic book reader. I game to this particular stretch of Green Arrow comics (all the issues contained in this anthology were published as individual comic issues over a 6 month span) as a fan of the Arrow TV show on CW. Andrew Kresiberg and Ben Sokolowski wrote this and both work on Arrow. According to them, you didn't need to know anything about the Green Arrow comics to jump into this and enjoy. They were right. I had no problems jumping in and reading. I loved the concept of Green Arrow bringing their own DC Comic versions of Oliver Queen, John Diggle, and Felicity Smoak together in the comics as it had on the show. I also knew going in that these weren't going to be "the same" version of these characters as on the show. I'm good with all that.I guess for concept and the desire to bring two of the best elements of Arrow -- the "Original Team Arrow" trio and Oliver/Felicity -- to Green Arrow, I give this anthology 5 stars. Totally a brilliant move. I love how they re-imagined Felicity Smoak for this and I wanted to now a lot more about her when they ended the run. These three are content and focus I'd come back for in a heartbeat if DC Comics decided to bring them back.So why the three stars? Because Green Arrow didn't have a heck of a lot of Green Arrow in it. I was looking forward to seeing these three people become a team, see why they'd fit together and work better together than apart. I wanted to see them bond and tackle the mystery and baddie together. Instead, I got a lot of crossover heroes from other comics (Katana, Green Lantern, Bruce Wayne, and even Lex Luther make appearances). Whenever there was action, Oliver, Diggle, and Felicity didn't save the day. Some other hero showed up to do it for them. It felt like I was lured in with the promise of Oliver, Felicity, and Diggle and given everything in the kitchen sink BUT them. By the time this was done, I was frustrated. It probably didn't help that -- at the same time -- Marc Guggenheim was writing the Arrow Season 2.5 tie-in comics (with a very similar storyline about a crazy guy bent on taking over the city and ruling it and just killing it in those pages).But I love Oliver, Diggle, and Felicity so I really loved seeing them get the opportunity to show what they could do in this format. But the story and the focus. But.... ugh! See my dilemma? Such good potential but it was never fully utilized. I really wish DC Comics would give this concept another chance and really let the three characters take form in a story focused on *them.*Anyway, I'd still recommend this collection. It's fun. It's unique. And given that this may be the only time we ever see Oliver, Felicity and Diggle together under the Green Arrow title? Definitely worth the purchase.

3 of 5 people found the following review helpful. One Star By Bryan not nearly as good not even close compared to the masterful Jeff Lemire / Andrea Sorrentino run.

See all 7 customer reviews... Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski


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Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski
Green Arrow Vol. 7 (The New 52), by Andrew Kreisberg, Ben Sokolowski

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