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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 741.5973
EAN num: 9781401212513
ISBN number: 1401212514
Label: Vertigo
Manufacturer: Vertigo
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 144
Printing Date: April 07, 2007
Publishing house: Vertigo
Release Date: April 07, 2007
Sale Popularity Level: 102737
Studio: Vertigo
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Product Description:
John Constantine is an unconcerned, somewhat amoral occultist with a British working-class background. He's a hero of sorts, who manages to come out on top through a combination of luck, trickery and genuine magic skill.
In the latest volume, John Constantine's three illegitimate children are back -- and this time, they're going after John's few remaining friends and loved ones. Can an aged and exhausted Constantine battle three beings born with all of his magical talents and the hearts of demons?
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Rated by buyers
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Hellblazer is really one of the great sucess stories in modern comics. Introduced as a minor character (an annoying one at that) in Swamp Thing, John Constantine got his own series in 1988 and will soon be celebrating its 20th anniversary. Contrast that with so many far more well-known comic characters who've had multiple failed series in that timeframe. What has seemingly kept Hellblazer chugging along for two decades is the outstanding consistency of the writing and art, and the uncanny continuity of the storylines no matter who is writing them. This is also a series that is perfect suited to be collected in trade paperback format as the complex storylines work better when read in a single sitting.
"Reasons to be Cheerful" collects issues #201 - 206 of the regular series. The title story makes up the four-issue meat of the book while the outer pieces of bread unfortunately don't fit as well...like a ham sandwich on raisin bread...The opening tale is perfectly fine...a solid story...it just doesn't fit with the rest of the book. When a trio of thieves break into a storage unit owned by Constantine, they make off with a bracelet that holds doom for whomever touches it's grey stone. A nice, cursed artifact type tale.
In the main story, Constantine's trio of offspring by his unholy union with the demoness Rosacarnis have been unleashed on the world, determined to make their father's life a true Hell on Earth. But rather than attack him directly, they instead hurt Constantine where it matters most...by killing all of the people that he cares fore, one by one, and often in the most gruesome ways. Constantine finds aid in an unknown ally...a demonic presence who has hidden himself within the body of Constantine's pal, Chas. But this presence is keeping its true identity a secret for now.
Constantine is brought about as low by these attacks as we've ever seen him. He can handle any attacks on himself but the attacks on his loved ones, including his girlfriend Angie, and niece Gemma, show off a vulnerable side to his humanity that we've rarely seen. Unfortunately, if you want to read the climax to this story you'll have to buy the subsequent trade paperback that comes out because the end of this book segues directly into the next, without benefit of even a hint of a conclusion. I guess one can see it from DC's prospective. Putting the entire story into one book would have doubled its size and trades generally collect only four to eight issues. Still, it left me disappointed a bit, and now, having to wait impatiently until the subsequent volume comes out.
REVIEWED BY TIM JANSON
Rated by buyers
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He almost ruined hellblazer, I'm very pleased he has finally quit, and are now destroying the joy of reading comics with some other title. I just wasted over hundred dollars when I bought all the paperbacks that he wrote.
I have not read anything this pretentious and boring since " Lusifer"
Rated by buyers
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Everyone's favorite chain smoking master of grey magic once again has his hands full. In Mike Carey's previous storyarc, Stations of the Cross, John Constantine finally got his memories back by celebrating a very long birthday that also the birth of his three demonic children. With Reasons to Be Cheerful, Constantine's three begotten kids endeavor to make his life a living hell (literally) as they strike at his friends and loved ones. The only thing you have to know about Reasons to Be Cheerful is that this is the kind of pure Hellblazer you'd come to expect from the series. Carey knows what he's doing, although without any previous knowledge from Carey's excellent run on the title, it's quite easy to get lost quickly. That being said, this TPB features great dialogue as well as more excellent artwork from Leonardo Manco, but the best part of this TPB is the opening issue in which a group of dope heads run afoul of Constantine. All in all, Reasons to Be Cheerful isn't the best Hellblazer story on the market, but it's plenty enjoyable and definitely worth picking up for fans.
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