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Buffy the Vampire Slayer # 51 (Nov. 2002)
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Writer: Scott
Lobdell & Fabian Nicieza |
Artist: Cliff Richards |
Inker: Will
Conrad |
Summary: It's 1996, and Buffy Summers has just accepted her role as the Vampire Slayer. After the destruction of her high school, she flees to Las Vegas to sort out her life. Meanwhile, Watcher Rupert Giles wonders why on Earth his Slayer hasn't arrived in Sunnydale. The comic takes you where the TV show never did, back to the roots of everything, in the summer before Buffy arrived in Sunnydale. And there's a tall, dark, and handsome stranger keeping an eye on her during those dangerous nights in Vegas. |
Art Cover: Brian
Horton & Paul Lee |
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Reveal! # 1 (Nov. 2002)
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Writer: Various |
Artist: Various |
Inker: Various |
Summary: Dark Horse presents a new anthology showcasing what we do best, with a healthy and diverse mix of action-adventure strips by some of the biggest and the best in mainstream and alternative comics creators. In a landmark Buffy story, Scott Lobdell and Jeff Matsuda reveal the first meeting between Angel and Dawn, set before Buffy ever came to Sunnydale, before she and Angel ever met. The X-Men and WILDCATS team of Joe Casey and Sean Phillips presents autobiographics from the mainstream, with a short piece about a comics writer. Peter David and Alex Maleev give us a glimpse into Spyboy's darker adventures, and Francisco Ruiz Velasco provides a short story spin off from Lone Wolf and Cub 2100, which is featured on the cover by X-Men and Highroads artist Leinil Francis Yu. Also featured are new strips by Dave Land
(Star Wars: Infinities) and Craig Thompson (Goodbye, Chunky Rice), and Scott Allie
(Star Wars: Empire) and Paul Lee and Brian Horton (Creatures of Habit
novel). Hellboy editor Scott Allie interviews Hellboy director Guillermo Del Toro
(Blade II) and Hellboy creator Mike Mignola during the early days of production on their Hellboy film. We are also proud to present a special Dark Horse Fine Arts section, with shorts by R. Sikoryak
(Drawn & Quarterly) and the Fillbach Brothers (Poison Elves), and, we kid you not, a two-page comic strip by the most important artist of the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso
(Guernica). |
Art Cover: Leinil Francis Yu |
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Buffy the Vampire Slayer # 52 (Dec. 2002)
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Writer: Scott
Lobdell & Fabian Nicieza |
Artist: Cliff
Richard |
Inker: Will Conrad |
Summary: Frightened and confused by her new-found powers as the Slayer, Buffy has picked up and left her mom and little sister behind. Hiding out in Sin City is no way to avoid trouble, though, especially when the city's gentle citizens are being terrorized by just a few of the many bodies buried without headstones in Vegas's seedier strips. |
Art Cover: Brian
Horton & Paul Lee |
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