Batman the Rebirth Deluxe Ed Book 3


Book Description

Batman and Catwoman's wedding is drawing closer, but they have some things to work out. First they have to clear Catwoman's name when she is framed for 237 murders by going to a forbidden kingdom where the mother of Batman's son Talia al Ghul resides. They also have to stop Poison Ivy when she takes control of everyone on the planet except for Batman and Catwoman.




Red Hood and the Outlaws Annual (2017-) #2


Book Description

The boys are back-Red Hood and Arsenal, together again! Sort of. While Jason Todd is recovering after a brutal beatdown from the man who taught him everything he knows about brutal beatdowns, Roy Harper divides his time between being a nursemaid to his bestie and tracking down the source of tainted drugs that have killed thousands. It isnÕt long before the two find themselves in Beijing battling the Sisters of Suzie Su! All this andÉthe inexplicable fate of Artemis and Bizarro!




Wolverine Goes to Hell Omnibus


Book Description

Jason Aaron puts Wolverine through Hell -literally! A mysterious organization conspires to possess Wolverine's body with demons, and send his soul to the underworld! Waiting for Logan are the souls of unexpected family and friends - and the Devil himself! Naturally, Wolverine plans to claw his way back out and have his revenge...but that might be exactly what the shadowy group wants! Will the final twist in their plan shatter Wolverine completely? Plus: Wolverine and Spider-Man must survive a trip through time without killing one another, Wolverine faces down Cyclops in a schism over the future of the X-Men, and Logan returns to Japan to prevent an underworld takeover by his oldest foe! COLLECTING: ASTONISHING SPIDER-MAN & WOLVERINE 1-6; WOLVERINE (2010) 1-20, 5.1, 300-304; X-MEN: SCHISM 1-5; MATERIAL FROM WOLVERINE: ROAD TO HELL




Batman Beyond (2016-2020) #48


Book Description

“First Contact” begins! Something is very, very wrong with Bruce Wayne, as he lashes out in anger and tries to kill Batman Beyond! Who else can save him but...Booster Gold?! The greatest hero history never knew is going to take Batman Beyond back in time to the Gotham of old, where Bruce Wayne is Batman-which means Batman and Batman Beyond will meet at last!




Batman Vs. Ra's Al Ghul


Book Description

Ra’s al Ghul has begun to take over Gotham! With Batman gone, only his protégés stand against the League of Assassins-at least until the trials determine who will take the hero’s mantle! Neal Adams triumphantly returns to his most popular battles in Batman Vs. Ra’s al Ghul #1-6.




Heroes vs. Villains/Space Chase! (DC Super Friends)


Book Description

It's two action-packed DC Super Friends paperback storybooks in one—plus over 50 stickers! On one side, boys ages 3-7 will be introduced to Batman, Superman, and all the Super Friends' amazing powers and most notorious villains. Flip the book over for an action-packed story featuring the Super Friends flying into outer space to stop the Joker when he takes over a satellite and broadcasts his bad jokes all over the planet!




The DC Comics Action Figure Archive


Book Description

Alphabetical listings provide release dates, scales, articulations, accessories, first appearance notes, and photographs of more than 1,400 DC Comics action figures.




Iron Man vs. Captain America and Philosophy


Book Description

Iron Man or Captain America? Which one is superior—as a hero, as a role model, or as a personification of American virtue? Philosophers who take different sides come together in Iron Man versus Captain America to debate these issues and arrive at a deeper understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of these iconic characters. The discussion ranges over politics, religion, ethics, psychology, and metaphysics. John Altmann argues that Captain America’s thoughtful patriotism, is superior to Iron Man’s individualist-cosmopolitanism. Matthew William Brake also votes for Cap, maintaining that it’s his ability to believe in the impossible that makes him a hero, and in the end, he is vindicated. Cole Bowman investigates the nature of friendship within the Avengers team, focusing predominantly on the political and social implications of each side of the Civil War as the Avengers are forced to choose between Stark and Rogers. According to Derrida’s Politics of Friendship, Cap is the better friend, but that doesn’t make him the winner! Aron Ericson’s chapter tracks our heroes’ journeys in the movies, culminating with Civil War, where the original attitudes of Tony (trusts only himself) and Steve (trusts “the system”) are inverted. Corey Horn’s chapter focuses on one of the many tensions between the sides of Iron Man and Captain America—the side of Security (Iron Man) versus Liberty (Cap). But Maxwell Henderson contends that if we dig deeper into the true heart of the Marvel Civil War, it isn’t really about security or privacy but more about utilitarianism—what’s best for everybody. Henderson explains why Iron Man was wrong about what was best for everybody and discloses what the philosopher Derek Parfit has to say about evaluating society from this perspective. Daniel Malloy explains that while both Captain America and Iron Man have faced setbacks, only Iron Man has failed at being a hero—and that makes him the better hero! In his other chapter, Malloy shows that where Iron Man trusts technology and systems, Captain America trusts people. Jacob Thomas May explores loss from the two heroes’ points of view and explains why the more tragic losses suffered by Stark clearly make him the better hero and the better person. Louis Melancon unpacks how Captain America and Iron Man each embodies key facets of America attempts to wage wars: through attrition and the prophylactic of technology; neither satisfactorily resolves conflict and the cycle of violence continues. Clara Nisley tests Captain America and Iron Man’s moral obligations to the Avengers and their shared relationship, establishing Captain America’s associative obligations that do not extend to the arbitration and protection of humans that Iron Man advocates. Fernando Pagnoni Berns considers that while Iron Man is too much attached to his time (and the thinking that comes with it), Captain America embraces-historical values, and thinks that there are such things as intrinsic human dignity and rights—an ethical imperative. Christophe Porot claims that the true difference between Captain America and Iron Man stems from the different ways they extend their minds. Cap extends his mind socially while Stark extends his through technology. Heidi Samuelson argues that the true American spirit isn't standing up to bullies, but comes out of the self-interested traditions of liberal capitalism, which is why billionaire, former-arms-industry-giant Tony Stark is ultimately a more appropriate American symbol than Steve Rogers. By contrast, Jeffrey Ewing shows that the core of Captain America: Civil War centers on the challenge superpowers impose on state sovereignty (and the monopoly of coercion it implies). Nicol Smith finds that Cap and Shell-Head’s clash during the Civil War does not necessarily boil down to the issue of freedom vs. regulation but rather stems from the likelihood that both these iconic heroes are political and ideological wannabe supreme rules or “Leviathans.” Craig Van Pelt reconstructs a debate between Captain America and Iron Man about whether robots can ever have objective moral values, because human bias may influence the design and programming. James Holt looks into the nature of God within Captain America’s world and how much this draws on the “previous life” of Captain Steve Rogers. Holt’s inquiry focuses on the God of Moses in the burning bush, as contrasted with David Hume’s understanding of religion. Gerald Browning examines our two heroes in a comparison with the Greek gods Hephaestus and Hercules. Christopher Ketcham supposes that, with the yellow bustard wreaking havoc on Earth, God asks Thomas Aquinas to use his logical process from Summa Theologica to figure which one of the two superheroes would be better at fixing an economic meltdown, and which one would be better at preventing a war. Rob Luzecky and Charlene Elsby argue that gods cannot be heroes, and therefore that the god-like members of the Avengers (Iron Man, with a god’s intelligence; Thor, with a god’s strength, and the Hulk, with a god’s wrath) are not true heroes in the same sense as Captain America. Cap is like Albert Camus’s Sisyphus, heroic in the way that he rallies against abstract entities like the gods and the government.




The Quest for Meaning


Book Description

The Quest for Meaning is designed as a guide to basic semiotic theory and practice, discussing and illustrating the main trends, ideas, and figures of semiotics.




An Away Game


Book Description

Growing up into their early twenties, Ballu, Ajay and Rakesh have just had one dream — to attend the FIFA World Cup final. To reach their goal, each one would have to dribble through parental pressures, financial burdens, career dissatisfaction and agonies of love. Only realising the dream would help them sort their lives, or so they think. Thus they book their ticket to adventure for the 2018 World Cup in Russia. The journey of their lifetime takes the trio through the cities of Rostov, Sochi and Saint Petersburg acting as their muse. They meet a myriad of people and settle age-old debates about the all-time best players, about mountains and beaches and the left and right of society and football. Still looking to lay their hands on the ticket for the final game, they run into their mirror images. And so, they learn who they are; they understand love and longing, and find meaning in mediocracy.