The Liberators (Marvel Comics) - Factbites
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Topic: The Liberators (Marvel Comics)


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In the News (Tue 29 Dec 09)

  
 NEWSARAMA.COM: MARVEL COMICS SOLICITATIONS FOR MAY 2006
Featuring the Avengers, Captain Marvel, the Defenders, the Fantastic Four, Power Man, the Punisher and the X-Men as they were in the 1970s, as well as'70s-era characters such as Black Brother, the Deadly Dozen, the Faceless One, Golem, Hellcow, Lady Liberators, Manphibian, Ms.
Comics legend, Klaus Janson tells a personal story delving into the effects on a child who is raised by one of Spider-Man's foes.
A conflict has been brewing in the Marvel Universe for over a year, threatening to pit friend against friend, brother against brother--and all it will take is a single misstep to cost thousands their lives and ignite the fuse!
www.newsarama.com /marvelnew/May06/solicitations.html   (7021 words)

  
 The Women of Marvel Comics: The Enchantress!
Favorite storyline: It's a guilty pleasure, but my favourite Enchantress story is the goofy tale from Avengers 83 in which Amora (posing as the heroic Valkyrie) leads a group of frustrated super-heroines in forming the Lady Liberators and revolting against their male colleagues.
The silly "Heroes Reborn" pocket universe to which the Avengers and FF were temporarily exiled featured alternate versions of many existing Marvel characters, including an alternate Enchantress.
This page is not produced by Marvel Comics, but the images and characters featured on this page are trademarked and copyrighted by Marvel Comics.
www.geocities.com /Hollywood/2855/enchantress.html   (535 words)

  
 Warrior (comic) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This was ostensibly because, after Quality published a spin-off Marvelman Special featuring stories from the character's original run, Marvel Comics objected to the publication of a comic with "Marvel" in the title.
This never really happened as Skinn intended, although there were some crossover strips: Big Ben and Warpsmith tied into Marvelman; Grant Morrison's The Liberators was also part of this universe, set in the future of Big Ben's timeline and featuring alien characters in common.
DC Comics editor Len Wein was one regular reader and it was thanks to Warrior that he hired Alan Moore to write Swamp Thing, beginning the "British invasion" of American comics during the 1980s.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Warrior_(comic)   (1595 words)

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