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The Gunslinger Born (The Dark Tower Graphic Novels, Book 1)
The Gunslinger Born (The Dark Tower Graphic Novels, Book 1)

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Authors: Peter David, Stephen King, Robin Furth
Creator: Jae Lee
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Category: Book

List Price: $24.99
Buy Used: $7.48
You Save: $17.51 (70%)



New (72) Used (33) from $7.48

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 71 reviews
Sales Rank: 3105

Media: Hardcover Comic
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5
Dimensions (in): 10.4 x 6.9 x 0.7

ISBN: 0785121447
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785121442
ASIN: 0785121447

Publication Date: November 21, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Over 600,000 Feedbacks Posted!!! Great Buy!!!*** Never Used*** May Have a Publisher's Mark~We have over 2,500,000 Books Sold!!!

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
"The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed." With those words, millions of readers were introduced to Stephen King's Roland -- an implacable gunslinger in search of the enigmatic Dark Tower, powering his way through a dangerous land filled with ancient technology and deadly magic. Now, in a comic book personally overseen by King himself, Roland's past is revealed! Sumptuously drawn by Jae Lee and Richard Isanove, adapted by long-time Stephen King expert Robin Furth (author of Stephen King's The Dark Tower: A Concordance) and scripted by New York Times Best-seller Peter David, this series delves deep into Roland's origins -- the perfect introduction to this incredibly realized world, while long-time fans will thrill to adventures merely hinted at in the novels. Be there for the very beginning of a modern classic of fantasy literature!

Amazon.com Review

"The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed." With those words, millions of readers were introduced to Stephen King's Roland - an implacable gunslinger in search of the enigmatic Dark Tower, powering his way through a dangerous land filled with ancient technology and deadly magic. Now, in a comic book personally overseen by King himself, Roland's past is revealed! Sumptuously drawn by Jae Lee and Richard Isanove, adapted by long-time Stephen King expert Robin Furth (author of Stephen King's The Dark Tower: A Concordance) and scripted by New York Times bestseller Peter David, this series delves in depth into Roland's origins - the perfect introduction to this incredibly realized world; while long-time fans will thrill to adventures merely hinted at in the novels. Be there for the very beginning of a modern classic of fantasy literature! Collects Dark Tower: The Gunslinger Born #1-7.

Questions for The Dark Tower Illustrators, Peter David and Robin Furth

Amazon.com: How closely did you work with Stephen King on this project?

Peter David: Robin worked far more closely with Steve before the fact, as it were, working out the overall story arcs and beats. My association was more after the fact: I wrote the scripting, which then went to King who provided the line edits and tweaks.

Robin Furth: I've been working with Steve King (and Roland!) for about seven years now, so the three of us have quite a long history. While working on The Gunslinger Born, I ran my outlines by Steve King and Chuck Verrill (Steve's editor) at the same time that I ran them by our Marvel editors. After all, The Dark Tower is Steve's child so it's only right for him to have first dibs on any changes. I feel it's really important that Steve has final say about The Long Road Home. Hence, I always try to make sure he sees everything as soon as I can send drafts to him, and that includes the articles I write and which are at the end of each issue.

Steve has been really supportive of this whole project which has been great. I was lucky enough to be with Steve while he looked through some of Jae's early sketches for The Gunslinger Born and his reaction was a lot like mine—it felt as though somebody had reached into his imagination and had taken his characters and given them a physical existence. I think that's pretty high praise, don't you?

Amazon.com: Roland is one of the most iconic characters King has ever created. How hard was it to get him (and the other characters) "right" on the page? Did any iterations get vetoed by King?

Robin Furth: We were really lucky with The Gunslinger Born because we could adapt scenes directly from Wizard and Glass. We could really stick to Steve's descriptions. (Occasionally we dipped into other Dark Tower novels, but on the whole, Wizard and Glass was our template.) The Long Road Home was a little more complicated since we spun the story from scattered tales that Roland tells about his youth—stories that are found throughout the Dark Tower books. (As you can imagine, I used my Concordance quite a lot while I was working on the outlines!)

To tell the truth, Roland has such a strong personality that he feels almost human. I even dream about the guy, and once or twice I swear I've seen his shadow pacing past my writing room door. (No joke.) But even when it comes to writing about someone you know well, every person has their own perspective. As long as Steve King feels like we've caught Roland's youthful self, I'm happy. If longtime Dark Tower fans feel we have, then I'll be INCREDIBLY happy. So far Steve has been pleased with our approach. Fingers crossed that the fans will feel the same way!

Peter David: King was very supportive of the license we took in terms of both the story compression and narrative stylizations that Robin and I undertook that were required to take a work of such massive scope and transform it into something that works as a graphic series.

Amazon.com: What was the most challenging aspect of this particular project?

Peter David: For me? Stage fright. Steve had stated that, as "a words guy," he was awaiting the scripts with great anticipation. That's pretty daunting, knowing that Stephen King is going to be going over my interpretation of what is arguably is most personal work.

Robin Furth: I suppose the biggest challenge has always been (in Mid-World speak) to stand true. In other words, to remain true to our original mission and to translate the Dark Tower universe from novel form to comic book form. The Dark Tower universe is so big that we have to do a lot of condensing. It's both scary and exhilarating.

Amazon.com: Robin, I imagine it is challenging to fit a several thousand page series into a graphic novel. As the DT aficionado, was it hard to adapt this series? What parts of the book did you wish you could include but had to cut because it just wouldn't fit?

Robin Furth: It certainly has been challenging (you should see the state of my fingernails), but it has also been a really great experience. I have learned huge amounts about comics and about storytelling. I have always loved Roland, Alain, Cuthbert, and Susan so it has been wonderful to work with them again. There's something very moving about working with young Roland—the boy who grew into such a hard and (at times) unforgiving man. You see the wounds that later become calluses, if you know what I mean.

As for the parts of the book I had to cut—there are many! When we first started working on these comics, The Gunslinger Born was supposed to be six issues long. I handed in eight issues! In the end we managed to cut back to seven, which worked well. In retrospect, I guess the greatest challenge has been to know when to stick to the plot of Wizard and Glass and when to borrow from other books (or occasionally even other parts of the Dark Tower universe) in order to fill out Mid-World for those who don't know the novels, or to make the comics ring true for long-term fans. That takes a lot of careful planning and sometimes it means taking risks, but if it works it's really worth it.

Amazon.com: Peter, What was it like to work with Robin and King on this project? Have you worked closely with writers before on adaptations of their work?

Peter David: It was both exciting and daunting: exciting being part of something as ambitious and potentially groundbreaking as this endeavor, and daunting in that King is a writing god whom I desperately wanted to please with my interpretations. No, I've never worked with a writer adapting his work before, which is why this was new territory for me: And what a place to start, huh? It's difficult to imagine any subsequent experience with adapting someone's work measuring up to this.

Amazon.com: What is your favorite panel?

Robin Furth: I must say I like them all, so I don't know if I could choose. However Jae recently sent me the cover for the first issue of The Long Road Home, and I think that would be in my top ten!

Peter David: I'm torn on that. In terms of story narrative, the one where Roland and Susan give in to their passion. In terms of pure iconic power, that two-page spread early on where we first see Roland, as the gunslinger, in pursuit of the man in black. You never have a second chance to make a good first impression, and Jae and Richard just absolutely nailed it.




Customer Reviews:   Read 66 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Where are the stories from the individual issues, Marvel??   November 9, 2007
 200 out of 215 found this review helpful

As a huge Dark Tower fan I was ecstatic when I first heard news of this comic series and, even though the story itself is mostly a re-telling of Roland's flashback story from WIZARD AND GLASS, it was still very enjoyable. I wish that I had just stuck with buying the individual issues instead of the hardcover in addition.
What I loved most about the individual issues were the stories that Robin Furth wrote at the end of each issue which were really interesting and really helped flesh out some of the mythology previously established in the book series (Arthur Eld's backstory, the forging of Roland's guns, the creation of Maerlyn's Rainbow, Rhea's backstory, Jonas's backstory, , Roland's TRUE relationship to the Crimson King, etc.). I enjoyed the story enough that I felt warranted in buying the hardcover so I could read it in one convenient collection.
HOWEVER, Marvel, for some reason I cannot imagine (other than to save money by cutting down on the number of pages) DID NOT include these stories in the hardcover. There is a nice collection of sketches and alternate covers but not a single one of the stories from the issues. GODDAMN is that annoying. I pretty much had no reason to buy this hardcover, since, if I want to read any of those nifty back stories I now have to dig up the individual issues, so I might as well read those instead.
Way to drop the ball, Marvel.
From now on, before buying any Marvel comic collection I'll have to wait until somebody else I know gets it first to find out if I'm being gypped on material that should have been in there in the first place. I'm sure you'll release the SUPER DELUXE EDITION FAN COLLECTION when the second comic series begins in February, containing those stories that should have been in this one, following the film studios in double-dipping popular comic releases instead of just releasing the better collection in the first place. I really hope that when the hardcover collection for the second series comes out the sales are as terrible as the duping of your fans because they realized how you suckered them the first time around.
Thanks for nothing.
To anyone interested in reading the story do yourself a favor and buy the individual seven issues so you can get the stories in the end. If you're a fan of the DT books you won't regret getting them over this abysmal hardcover.



5 out of 5 stars Ka is the wind   November 7, 2007
 25 out of 36 found this review helpful

"The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed."

Those words opened the first book of Stephen King's "Dark Tower" series, and they open the chilling, richly-drawn "Dark Tower: The Gunslinger Born." This intense comic series reintroduces readers to a younger, less cynical Roland, and the harrowing tale of how he became a true gunslinger.

It opens with the gunslinger and the man in black, endlessly pursuing and pursued across the desert, and introduces us to their timeless natures.

Then the comic takes us back many years, to when Roland of Gilead was a teenage boy. He and a bunch of other boys are being tutored by Cort, a bondsman who knows all the fighting tricks, and is supposed to teach them to be gunslingers -- or be exiled forever. And when Roland sees his mother in bed with his father's wizard, Marten, he angrily goes off to take Cort's final challenge.

But when his father comes back to Gilead, he reveals that Roland has been manipulated by Marten. To save Roland's life, he is sent to Hambry on an undercover mission for the Affiliation. There he meets Susan Delgado, a beautiful girl who's been bought as the mayor's gilly. As you can guess, they fall deeply in love.

But Roland is still unaware of the dangers that surround him, or a horrific conspiracy to destroy Gilead and the gunslingers -- led by the distant, demonic Crimson King. As Roland's ka-tet splinters, they are framed for the murder of the local mayor -- and the resulting battle will begin the destruction of everything Roland loves...

"Gunslinger Born" is basically adapted from the flashbacks from Stephen King's "Wizard and Glass" novel, so fans of the book will probably already be acquainted with the tragic story of Roland's past. But it's almost as striking in comic form as in book form.

Part of that comes from Jae Lee and Richard Isanove. A lot of adaptations fall flat ("Anita Blake", anyone?), but their detailed artwork gives vibrant life to the story -- sun-dried fields, ruined buildings, ominously darkened chambers, and faces that seem to be riddled with shadows. There are moments of beauty (Roland and Susan's only tryst) and others of pure ugliness like Roland's fight with Cort, or the face of the shadowed, bloody Crimson King.

But artwork alone doesn't make a comic book good. Robin Furth and Peter David recrafted King's unique prose for this -- the dialogue is spare and understated, while the narration has an ironic, regretful quality, as if Roland himself were telling the readers of his story. It's even peppered with the language of this postapocalyptic world ("... set your watch and warrant on it.")

And we get to see Roland back when he was a brash teenager, very different from the grizzled gunslinger at the start. He's strong, brave and honorable, but also very naive. And we get to see other characters from his past -- his careworn father, the malignant Marten, his first ka-tet of teen boys, and his first, tragic love Susan.

And each part of the story has an extra one at the ending, fleshing out the history of the post-apocalyptic Mid-world -- stories of Maerlyn's mirror, the origin of the gunslingers, the devastating event that changed the world, the Crimson King and his ties to Roland, the history of Rhea the witch, and the Charyou Tree ritual. A lot of it has to do with Arthur Eld, the Mid-world version of King Arther.

"The Gunslinger Born" is a haunting, dark comic book experience, nearly as intense as the original text by Stephen King. A brilliant piece of work.



1 out of 5 stars Poorly done, Marvel!   November 19, 2007
 14 out of 15 found this review helpful

This would have been a 4 star review, if it were for the series (NOT the hardcover). The series had wonderful prose and backstories on origins of Dark Tower events and characters, filling in many gaps. This 25.00 book doesn't include those. Most Marvel hardcovers are in the 30.00 range, which should have meant by boosting the price a bit, fans could get the prose (perhaps sequentially in the back), along with the interviews, and possibly the Gunslinger's Guidebook. In the end, Marvel's negligence should NOT be rewarded with anything over a one star review for screwing over Stephen's fans.


3 out of 5 stars Old Ground, But Well-Covered   November 7, 2007
 12 out of 13 found this review helpful

The first descriptions of this book gave me the impression that it would cover parts of the story that were left untold in the original books - most notably the infamous battle at Jericho Hill, or the mysterious Jamie whom we hear about in the series but never meet.

I was disappointed, then, to find out that what I was handed was a rehash of Roland's trial of manhood and a quick synopsis of Wizard and Glass. There is no material that is at all new to any reader of the series.

But my disappointment was offset by the care taken in presentation. An excellent adaptation, in my opinion; it allows the reader a more tactile glimpse of characters who were already well-fleshed in the mind and only needed a little nudge to reach the next level of realism. The artwork is splendid, very gothic with heavy emphasis on shadows and blood-spatter.

It puts one in mind of early Frank Miller with an airbrush stapled to his hand. After a night's heavy drinking. And a bar fight or two. Such a treatment is perfect for the story of a young man's descent into fate and tragedy.

The scripting is a little overblown in its attempt to recreate King's Outer Arc "patois" at times (I got a bit tired of seeing "do ye ken" and "may it do ya" and such) but adds to the overall flavor of the latter part of the series. The overall feeling is dark, and savage, and very bloody - which is appropriate. Richard Isoanove apparently took inspiration from the Tower work by Michael Whelan; his use of color and scale is similar enough to induce feelings of deja vu. A very nice touch, if not an all-out homage.

I do not think it would be an appropriate book for those who have not read the series, only because so much of the plot in Wizard and Glass had to be trimmed for length. Roland's (and Susan's) motivations may not be understood by someone who is exposed only to the outline given here. It may serve as an introduction, but I would hope that anyone who uses it as their first step in the direction of the Tower continues by reading the original series to understand things a bit better.

The book itself is a nice departure from the standard softcover format - good thick hardback binding, nice glossy dust jacket, and a ton of pages at the back that show all the various covers and alternates for the original seven-part comic series. While not quite heavy enough to qualify as a lethal weapon when thrown, it's still a volume with satisfying weight to it. Overall a high-quality offering that is a step above the usual graphic novel fare.

As an avid Tower buff since the first book twenty years ago, I am very glad I got my hands on this little project - though as I said, I was disappointed that I didn't learn any more about Roland than King himself has already given us. Still, for any collector of All Things Tower, it's most definitely a good purchase. I would recommend it to anyone who has the collecting bug. While it wasn't what I had originally thought it would be as far as story goes, I am certainly glad I bought it and would not hesitate to suggest it to anyone who enjoyed the series, particularly those (like myself) who enjoyed the fourth book's gentler treatment of a notoriously un-gentle protagonist.



5 out of 5 stars New beginnings   November 7, 2007
 11 out of 16 found this review helpful

Stephen King's Dark Tower saga ranks not only as the popular horror author's most imaginitive works, but some of the finest fantasy you'll ever read, period. King oversees legendary Incredible Hulk writer Peter David team up with King expert Robin Furth to script and flesh out the origins of grizzled gunslinger Roland. When The Gunslinger Born begins, we see a different Roland then what we have seen in King's novels (although much of what happens here has been alluded to in the novels, so fans will feel instantly familiar), as a somewhat naive teenager on the path to becoming a gunslinger. Without giving too much away, Roland's world gets turned upside down, setting him on the path to become the gunslinger we all know and love. What is even more notable about this lavish endeavor from Marvel is the just plain gorgeous artwork from Jae Lee and Richard Isanove. Lee's haunting renditions combined with Isanove's digital colorings make King's world come to life like never before, and are reason enough to check this handsome hardcover out even if you've never read any of King's Dark Tower books. Still, it would help a little if you did, but either way, there is no denying what a finely weaved masterpiece The Gunslinger Born is. All in all, it goes without saying that The Gunslinger Born is definitely worth picking up for Dark Tower readers and comic/King fans alike. It is also needless to say that you will not be disappointed here.

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