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| Iron Man, Vol. 3: Civil War | 
enlarge | Authors: Brian Michael Bendis, Daniel Knauf, Charlie Knauf, Christos Gage Creators: Alex Maleev, Mike Perkins, Jeremy Haun, Patrick Zircher Publisher: Marvel Comics Category: Book
List Price: $11.99 Buy New: $3.45 You Save: $8.54 (71%)
New (46) Used (22) from $2.14
Avg. Customer Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 53487
Media: Paperback Edition: Direct Ed Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 112 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 10 x 6.5 x 0.4
ISBN: 0785123148 Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973 EAN: 9780785123149 ASIN: 0785123148
Publication Date: July 4, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: THIS BOOK IS NEW AND IN EXCELLENT CONDITION. SAME DAY SHIPPING WEEKDAYS BEFORE 3:00PM EST
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Product Description Two tales of suspense ripped from the pages of Civil War! Captain America has fallen into a clash with his government and his friends, and the people close to him are paying the price. The life of Cap's girlfriend, Agent 13, is torn apart as her superiors use her divided loyalties against her. Elsewhere, a new villain emerges; the Red Skull begins to make himself known; and the Winter Soldier again comes face-to-face with Cap. Meanwhile, get inside the mind of of Tony Stark, and learn why he feels superhuman registration is necessary - and why he's taken it upon himself to lead the charge for its implementation! Big changes are in store for Iron Man in the post-Civil War landscape, and the build-up begins here! Collects Captain America #22-24, Iron-Man #13-14 and Iron Man/Captain America Special.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 10 more reviews...
Getting in the heads of the leaders January 2, 2007 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
This volume collects three different story arcs from Marvel's big 2006 event, the Civil War. The three issues of Captain America get inside that character's head, revealing his internal struggles in trying to maintain a normal life while fighting the Civil War (leading the resistance) and holding out against his regular group of foes. Ed Brubaker's writing is excellent throughout this arc. Unfortunately, Mike Perkins' artwork is less consistent. His pencils range from strong to mediocre, though his inking is truly excellent.
The two Iron Man issues get inside Tony's head, and reveal what the war has cost him. Long time fans will want to check this out, as the title seems to be shaping up to take a sharp left turn, and the groundwork is being laid here. This is an interesting story in its own right, and a nice embellishment to the big story. The Knaufs write well, and Zircher pencils are very good.
The weakest entry is the Iron Man / Captain America: Casualties of War special. This wasn't originally approved, but when the main Civil War series started running late, it was approved to give retailers a chance to maintain revenue and momentum in the new slow periods. It shows; it's a nice recap of the history of the relationship between these two, but it doesn't really add anything new. Still, this weak entry (words by Christos N. Gage, pencils by Jeremy Haun, inks by Mark Morales) isn't weak enough to detract from the quality of the other two stories included in this collection. The complete package is definitely worthwhile.
good civil war tie in June 23, 2007 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
This book contains the Captain America/Iron Man Casualties of War oneshot, Iron Man 13-14 and the Civil War Confession. Amazon's discription of this book is wrong.
The highlight of this book is the Civil War Confession. It is a well written story of 2 conversations between Captain America and Iron Man after the civil war. However, it would have been better collected in the upcoming Fallen Son trade.
Overall though, its a good book and a good addition to a civil war tie in collection.
"Registration - It's the Law..." June 14, 2007 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
This Civil War tie-in manages to show us Tony "Iron Man" Stark's point of view as the Civil War between the superheroes reaches it's boiling point. Civil War: Iron Man finds the armored Avenger and his pro-registration followers set their sights on Captain America and his rebels as the cataclysmic events of the Civil War wreak havoc upon the Marvel universe. The TPB as a whole is compelling and only further goes to prove that there is no real right or wrong side in Marvel's mega crossover event, and that the two warring, iconic heroes are truly doing what they believe is the right and best thing for themselves and everyone else involved. There's a bevy of strong talent here including Ed Brubaker and the Knauf's, but there is one major downside to this TPB. Civil War: Iron Man includes a few issues of Captain America that are also featured in the Civil War: Captain America TPB, which can make one TPB pretty much worthless if you already own the other. Despite that though, Civil War: Iron Man is a decent enough pick up that nicely ties into the events surrounding the Civil War, and is worth checking out.
Iron Man tie-in for Marvel's 2006 event October 20, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This trade paperback collects four issues that show the Civil War events from Tony Stark/Iron Man's perspective. The 38 page 'Casualties of War' is the highlight: during the Civil War's rising action Iron Man and Captain America meet for a last-ditch reconciliation attempt that respectfully references key episodes in Marvel Universe history. Iron Man #13 and #14 explore Stark's personal and professional motivations for supporting the Superhero Registration Act while tragedy strikes his confidantes Happy and Pepper. Finally, the Brian Michael Bendis penned 'Civil War: The Confession' provides an elegant denouement with two conversations between Cap and Iron Man. Introductions to each issue help explain the overall story but this is best read with other Civil War tie-ins.
the best iron man February 13, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
First, I'm not a huge Iron Man fan, though I thought after this book I might become one (alas, not I) because this is what Iron Man should be about, not the suit but the man. And Tony Stark is a weak man (as alcoholics are), but this book really pulled it all out. Loved it, in fact, it is the only Iron Man book I've found so far that I liked. You really see something dark in Stark coming out.
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