Brian Bolland’s cover for DCnU Dial H.
I should probably resume my reviews of #1s now that some books are cancelled.
randomsignal
I would enjoy this, provided the writer and artist team are good.
love-and-radiation
China Mieville is writing this! I don’t think I can overstate the scope of my disappointment if this ends up sucking.
iheartlennyshapiro
China Mieville? YES PLEASE. The man could write me up a fatal diagnosis of brainworms and I’d never stop reading it. And not just because I’d have a head full of deadly brainworms.
Via hello-zombie
Just experimenting with various ways of reblogging and attribution.
It’s a serious hassle to reformat this, although using Markdown at least makes me better at something.
This will look a lot better when viewed through an RSS reader than the default way Tumbler does it. A lot easier to see who said what and final attribution to where I saw it first at the end.
Right - a quick list of benefits of doing it this way:
- Improved flow of reading
- Improved attribution
- Improved preview of RSS article
- If there is no description of the photo/video/whatever, add that first
Any thoughts? I’m probably messing with something nobody cares about ( :
One last thing:
Brian Bolland instant reblog!
</shitstevejobsimpression>
comicsodissey:
Villanos Marvel x Steve Rude
Galactus and Doctor Doom instant reblog!
comicsodissey:
La cocina de Galactus
yup, instant reblog of El Galactus!!
hello-zombie:
cosmicpower:
Damage to Apollo 13
After an oxygen tank exploded and crippled their service module, the Apollo 13 astronauts were forced to abandon plans to make the third manned lunar landing. The extent of the damage is revealed in this grainy, grim photo, taken as the service module was drifting away, jettisoned only hours prior to the command module’s reentry and splashdown. An entire panel on the side of the service module has been blown away and extensive internal damage is apparent. Visible below the gutted compartment is a radio antenna and the large, bell-shaped nozzle of the service module’s rocket engine. On April 17, 1970 the three astronauts returned safely to Earth.
I am pretty sure this counts as a spaceship, hence the reblog.