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 Location:  Home » Web Marketing » General AAS » New Avengers, Vol. 6: Revolution (v. 6)  
New Avengers, Vol. 6: Revolution (v. 6)
New Avengers, Vol. 6: Revolution (v. 6)

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Author: Brian Michael Bendis
Creators: Leinil Francis Yu, Alex Maleev
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Category: Book

List Price: $14.99
Buy Used: $4.23
You Save: $10.76 (72%)



New (42) Used (20) from $4.23

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 178375

Media: Paperback
Reading Level: Young Adult
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 144
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 10 x 6.6 x 0.4

ISBN: 0785124683
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN: 9780785124689
ASIN: 0785124683

Publication Date: December 5, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Nice unused paperback with some shelfwear. Ships in bubble wrap.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - New Avengers Vol. 6: Revolution (v. 6)

Similar Items:

  • New Avengers, Vol. 5: Civil War (v. 5)
  • New Avengers, Vol. 7: The Trust (v. 7)
  • New Avengers Vol. 4: The Collective (v. 4)
  • Mighty Avengers, Vol. 1: The Ultron Initiative
  • New Avengers: Illuminati

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The New Avengers versus the Hand! And the New Avengers versus the Mighty Avengers! And the identity of the new Ronin revealed! Who is the new mystery player in the New Avengers? Find out here! Guest-starring the Mighty Avengers and... Brother Voodoo! Plus: the story Avengers fans have been waiting for. The shocking return of Hawkeye and the Scarlet Witch!! Collects New Avengers #26-31.


Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Interesting Art and Inspired Narrative Technique   June 10, 2008
I really enjoyed this volume of New Avengers. The title gets a bit of a shake-up after the events of Civil War with a revamped, underground Avengers team featuring a black-suited Spider-Man, Luke Cage, Wolverine, Spider-Woman and the welcomed additions of Iron Fist, Dr. Strange and Ronin (a much-missed old friend wearing new duds).

The volume begins with beautifully rendered art by personal-favorite Alex Maleev. (Wonderful to see Bendis and Maleev together again!) I don't want to spoil anything for you, but this tale in particular focuses on a long-missing Avenger and his search for a former teammate. Consequently, he doesn't quite find what he's expecting. Writer Brian Michael Bendis delivers a simplistic story invoking powerful characterization and potent emotion.

The rest of the volume features art by Leinil Yu and the new New Avengers. Yu's art is a conundrum for me. It's not particularly pleasing to the eye, yet it is absolutely charismatic and captivating. Yu is adept at delivering interesting angles and frames while cleanly progressing the story. I find myself studying each and every one of his drawings perhaps more than any other comic book artist in recent memory.

I'd also like to congratulate Brian Michael Bendis. He obviously wrote Revolution with Civil War and the then-upcoming Secret Invasion in mind, and so he's careful to catch the reader up while planting seeds for the future. However, this is not what especially impressed me. What did impress me was the fact that Bendis played with flashbacks and perspective in order to deliver the whole of Revolution. Instead of giving us a linear story playing out from issue to issue, he took an artistic approach and allowed the reader to bridge some gaps and become mentally involved in deciphering the plot. Don't get me wrong, even with the interesting technique, it's a pretty straightforward story, but such added touches go a long way in satisfying me.

Overall, with the eye-catching art, inspired story-telling, and new additions to the team, New Avengers: Revolution was a very good experience.

~Scott William Foley, author of Souls Triumphant



2 out of 5 stars Great Art, But Story Is Scrambled Beyond Understanding   April 30, 2008
I picked this up because the art was really great. Both Yu and Maleev do a great job with the art, and it was very good visually. However, it suffered from a terrible case of scramble-story. Some writers seem to think that it adds something to constantly flip between the present and several different stretches into the past. This writer is one of them, but does so often without any indication that he's switching to another time. This story starts several months ago, then jumps to an undisclosed time in the past which tells a story about an even further time in the past, then to the present, then to yesterday, then jumps to later yesterday, then to the present, then back to yesterday, then the next morning, then to an undisclosed time and place, then to the present, then to earlier today, then finally back to the present. I often had no idea where to place the action, and lost track of all cause and effect. Not only this, but usually the frames would proceed down the left page, and then down the right, but sometimes (and it wasn't clear when) they would proceed horizontally across both pages. if the story had been told sequentially, or with maybe one flashback, it would have been worth keeping. But as it is, it's poorly structured and confusing.


5 out of 5 stars Great Secret Invasion lead-in!!!   April 27, 2008
The Skrulls are coming, and the New Avengers come across a clue to this huge Marvel event in this graphic novel. Love the direction of this book, art, and story, will leave you asking for more. So if your a fan, this is must for New Avengers & Secret Invasion!


4 out of 5 stars Review of New Avengers Vol 6: Revolution   April 9, 2008
Revolution takes place just after the events of Civil War. As a result of Civil War, the New Avengers roster goes through some changes and the New Avengers find themselves on the run as a result of their stance regarding the Superhuman Registration Act.

I stopped reading New Avengers until a friend recommended this trade to me. I loved it. The storyline, unlike past New Avengers storylines, was not disjointed and the story progressed in a logical and orderly fashion. The end of Revolution made me want to read the next trade, New Avengers: The Trust, but I'll have to wait until it comes out in softcover. I disliked Bendis's New Avengers until I read Revolution and it appears Bendis has vastly improved in writing this title.

There were two things I didn't like though. The first was that I didn't like the scene where there were racial overtones between Wolverine and Luke Cage over Wolverine joking that Luke Cage was Jessica Jones "manservant". Even though I am a white American, I thought this should've been left out. The second thing I didn't care for was the issue where a certain resurrected Avenger goes looking for Wanda Maximoff to get some answers to his questions. I thought the idea was good but the ending just seemed disappointing.

I do recommend purchasing this book though.



3 out of 5 stars Leinil F. (GOD!!) Yu is back   January 18, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Ok this was a fun read... the script itself is great but the REAL PLOT is not as good as I expected. Mostly a storyline that takes you nowhere. Anyway I'd recommend this if only for Leinil's awesome artwork. This guy's always been amazing and he just kepps getting better. So many characters per page and he still rocks.

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