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Essential Dr. Strange, Vol. 3 (Marvel Essentials)
Essential Dr. Strange, Vol. 3 (Marvel Essentials)

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Authors: Steve Englehart, Frank Brunner, Marv Wolfman, Roy Thomas, Jim Starlin, Roger Stern, Stan Lee, Jim Lawrence, Dan Adkins, Denny O'neil, Gene Colan, Alfredo Alcala, Rudy Nebres, Al Milgrom, Tom Sutton, Steve Ditko, George Tuska
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Category: Book

List Price: $16.99
Buy New: $8.59
You Save: $8.40 (49%)



New (26) Used (7) from $8.59

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 325521

Media: Paperback
Edition: Direct Ed
Reading Level: Young Adult
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 616
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 6.5 x 1.7

ISBN: 078512733X
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785127338
ASIN: 078512733X

Publication Date: January 9, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Ships immediately! Perfect and New! Direct Ed. 2008 Paperback.

Similar Items:

  • Essential Doctor Strange, Vol. 2 (Marvel Essentials)
  • Essential Doctor Strange, Vol. 1
  • Essential Captain America, Vol. 4 (Marvel Essentials)
  • Essential Avengers, Vol. 6 (Marvel Essentials)
  • Essential Iron Man, Vol. 3 (Marvel Essentials)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
After earning the title of Sorcerer Supreme, Doctor Strange must defend his title, his life and his world against enemies old and new! Dormammu, Silver Dagger, Nightmare, Stygyro and more test Strange's sorcery and sanity! And after a civil war in the Dark Dimension, a summoning of sorcerers, a debacle with Dracula and the apparent annihilation of Earth, can the Master of Mystic Arts stand up to something...Stranger Yet? Guest-starring the Avengers, Blade the Vampire Hunter and Nighthawk of the Defenders! Collects Dr. Strange #1-29, Annual #1 and Tomb of Dracula #44-45.


Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars not a bad distraction   April 22, 2008
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

First of all, let's set the terms of this review. I was aware that this was b/w prior to ordering it and I was okay with that. Also, I had never read even a single issue of Doctor Strange, so I really have no frame of reference with regard to the comic's legacy. At age 30 it has probably been nearly 2 decades since I've read comics at all (although I was a passionate Marvel fan back in the day). Because I spend the bulk of my time reading more complex scientific and literary material, I occasionally like to unwind with a lightweight guilty pleasure in between books. That's precisely the function this book was to serve. I went in with low expectations, and admit that I was pleasantly surprised. Yes, the stories and plot devices do strain the credulity at times but hey: it's a comic. (Note: I found the stories in this volume to be less tedious than all the forced human drama in Essential X-Men Vol. 6, a volume I purchased around the same time.) Overall, I really enjoy all the great artwork (I don't mind the b/w a bit), and like the serialized narrative format that encompasses multiple issues. Taken for what it is, I think it was a great purchase. I can flip through a couple issues every now and then, and come back to it later. With ~30 issues, it's already kept me occupied for quite some time. The stories can occasionally get a little redundant, but it hasn't bothered me too much. If you're looking for high brow literature, this isn't for you. But if you want a good rainy day read, or something to keep you occupied for a long train ride, you could do a lot worse.


3 out of 5 stars Pales in black and white   March 11, 2008
 1 out of 5 found this review helpful

Doctor Strange has always been one of the most beautifully rendered comics offered to the mass market.
Although the stories and characters are still there, it looses quite a bit when not printed in full color.
In the same way Jaws without the music is just a fish tale, Doctor Strange without color is just a comic.



1 out of 5 stars Black & white reprints of classic four-color comics...?   April 22, 2008
 1 out of 21 found this review helpful

I honestly don't get the appeal of these books. Why bother making (or reading) black & white reprints of classic four-color comics...? I mean, yeah, the stories are still great and the original comics are hard to find, but a huge part of what made these comics great was the eye-popping artwork, including the bright primary colors: reading them in dull B&W is just plain wrong. Sure, the printing costs are lower, so you can get more pages for your money, but it's more pages of boring, not more pages of fun. It's really a travesty.

This is particularly true of the old Doctor Strange stories, which had such fabulous artwork: you *think* you're reading the stories in this format, but you're really not. Not by a longshot.

On the other hand, it recently occurred to me that these could be used as coloring books... Maybe you could buy a box of crayons to go along with all the artwork that the publishers ruined in this format. (Axton)



4 out of 5 stars Solid B-list comics   May 27, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Doctor Strange had an up and down career as a comic-book. Its high points, in my opinions, were the classic and never-equalled run by Stan Lee and Steve Ditko reprinted in the first Essential Doctor Strange; the Lovecraft-inspired run mostly drawn by Barry Windsor-Smith and Frank Brunner (reprinted in Essential Doctor Strange vol. 2) and possibly the Marshall Rogers-illustrated run that will (hopefully) be reprinted in a later volume. Luckily, there are plenty of good moments in between these high marks, thanks in large part to gene Colan's frequent contribution.

A good thing about Gene's art on this title is that he did not try to imitate Ditko's style nor to copy his version of alternate worlds. Bringing his own vision allowed Colan to really shine in a few stories collected in this book (particularly in a story involving the character Eternity and the possible destruction of our world).

Storywise, Steve Englehart does a fair job here. Many stories focus more on the nature of reality than on confrontation, which is fine in a book about magic. There is a very 1970s feel to many stories, with themes that were also approached by other Marvel writers of the era (Steve Gerber and Don MacGregor, to name but two).

Altogether, it is true that this book lacks the grandeur of Essentials #1 and #2. It is still a pretty entertaining collection with a few gems thrown in. At the price, it is a bargain.



4 out of 5 stars Essential Preservation of Stories   September 5, 2008
Marvel has developed a series of reprint books in its "essential" series, with the comic book pages reduced to their black-and-white essentials. Many issues are crammed into this trade paperback, and for those interested in preserving the basic artwork as well as the stories, it's an excellent way to review them without having to find and preserve the early issues of the comic book.

The Doctor Strange comic book reached a high point about the time where Frank Brunner was the principal artist. In the world of comic books, Doctor Strange was close to being unique, with the only other magicians that came close being Ibis the Invincible and Doctor Fate. Doctor Strange was variously subtitled The Sorcerer Supreme and Master of the Mystic Arts. In the first sequences, the "Silver Dagger" stories, he is attacked by an enemy who leaves him minutes from death. His struggle to keep going is the basis of the story, and leaves him contending with Death, particularly in the fourth issue of the sequence, where the story is much like a Medieval morality play, even to the section involving the Domain of the Dying.

The stories, after the "Silver Dagger" tale are good, but not as grandiose as the opening story. Many of the tales are elevated to rather cosmic (and paracosmic) planes, and might be mild turnoffs to many who like lots of action. IMHO, the book would have been better if the very last tale, that of the Death Stalker adventure, had been eliminated, to be placed in an Essential number 4.

For those who like the idea of comics for grownups, the stories in the book would be an excellent choice.


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