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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mr. Miracle Part One
There are two volumes of reprints for Kirby's Mister Miracle. This is the first volume which dwells more on the New Gods saga.

The second volume in this series (Jack Kirby's Fourth World Featuring Mister Miracle) takes the series in a different direction as Kirby's Fourth World books (Forever People and New Gods) were cancelled. Mister Miracle found himself...
Published on January 22, 2005 by M. B. RENTZLER

versus
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Where's the Color
As a long fan of Mister Miracle comics and a fellow artist who loves the work of Jack Kirby, I find this book as an insult to a great legacy. I didn't know how important color would of meant to keeping the feel and creative mastery that only a Kirby superhero was capable of.

I don't buy the idea that the publisher of this book found it a problem to reproduce...
Published on July 19, 2005 by Ernest Johnson


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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Mr. Miracle Part One, January 22, 2005
By 
M. B. RENTZLER (Brooklyn, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
There are two volumes of reprints for Kirby's Mister Miracle. This is the first volume which dwells more on the New Gods saga.

The second volume in this series (Jack Kirby's Fourth World Featuring Mister Miracle) takes the series in a different direction as Kirby's Fourth World books (Forever People and New Gods) were cancelled. Mister Miracle found himself in more conventional superhero stories that had less and less to do with the Fourth World.

For the cheaper price you pay you get the art in black and white with grey tones added. The results resembles those old Warren Magazines of the 70's and Kirby's own flirtation into magazines (DC's Days of The Mob).

The story follows young Scott Free as he escapes Granny's orphanage on bleak Apokolips and goes to earth. He assumes the identity of Mister Miracle, escape artist and finds a cast of supporting characters. Similarities between this story and David Copperfield by Charles Dickens abound and are even eluded to by Kirby in the most important story in this book "Himon."

"Himon" deals with a man who goes around the planet Apokolips helping people think for themselves and overcome the brainwashing of the dictator Darkseid. This includes young Scott Free and his future wife Barda, Simon gathers a group of young charges aound him and eventually becomes a martyr for his cause (several times!!!).

The other story of note is the reprint of issue #6 which introduces "Funky Flashman" a very thinly veiled Stan Lee. At the time the story was produced Kirby had just parted ways with Marvel and with Stan Lee (his collaborator) and had felt slighted by him both financially and in creative credit. This was his way of getting it out of his system and it is one of the most biting parodies in comics. Even Roy Thomas catches a bit of the flack in this one.

Vince Colletta inks the earlier stories and is slick in his own way but I personally favor Mike Royer who pencils and letters the stories after Vince left as his strong solid lines really compliment Kirby's pencils and over all general dynamic style.

This is Kirby (as the phrase goes) unleashed and in in his prime.

Well worth it for the price.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Where's the Color, July 19, 2005
By 
Ernest Johnson (Brooklyn, New York) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
As a long fan of Mister Miracle comics and a fellow artist who loves the work of Jack Kirby, I find this book as an insult to a great legacy. I didn't know how important color would of meant to keeping the feel and creative mastery that only a Kirby superhero was capable of.

I don't buy the idea that the publisher of this book found it a problem to reproduce the original color. Even I have some of the original Mister Miracle comics and have created PDF files creating several of them and the color is just fine.

If you are a true Mister Miracle fan or comic book collector of any sort please be advised to skip this one and wait for a color version. Black and white takes away the true feel and excitement that I remember while reading a Mister Miracle comic at an early age.

Stay away.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Kirby's best creation of the 1970s., May 27, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
Jack Kirby was undoubtedly one of the true geniuses of the comics industry. He created, wrote and drew his own characters. Kirby's major strengths were his ability to create unique, refreshing characters and to visualize any manner of setting or situation. Kirby's writing was weaker and somewhat simplistic when compared to his ability to put down on paper the cosmic images in his mind or in those of another writer. In fact, later writers would write better stories with Kirby's characters, but it took Kirby to create them in the first place. Mister Miracle, the super escape artist, was one of Kirby's best charcters from his amazingly fruitful stint at DC during the early 1970s. Coming from the horrendous world of Apokolips, Scott Free yearned to follow his own path while battling those from his former world who would destroy him or take him back to that hell. Who couldn't identify with that kind of charcter? While the plotting and dialogue are rather simple, the images are as breathtaking now as they were 25 years ago when I first saw them. That abilty to draw unique and awe-inspiring worlds was Kirby's alone. Again, only Kirby could have imagined these scenarios and the fact that his characters couldn't engage in more lively banter pales in comparison to the backdrop. I appreciate the fact that DC is holding down the cost of the book by reprinting the first 11 complete issues of Mister Miracle's book in black and white, but I would have loved to see these in color again. Kirby's artwork is still wonderful, but the color definitely added to it.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The best corner of King Kirby's kingdom, January 31, 2003
By 
anomj7t7 "anomj7t7" (Quinton, Va United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
Jack Kirby was to comic books what William Shakespeare was to literature...an undisputed Titan! Not only was the quality of his artwork and visual concepts amazing, but the quantity of art he produced in his career was beyond belief (I can't remember the number of pages he drew in his lifetime offhand...but it was truly staggering) So to say that Mister Miracle was his best creation ever (my opinion of course...other Kirby fans have their own favorites)is saying alot.It was a part of a bigger storyline/universe which through the use of several interrelated and separate comic book titles(The New Gods,Forever People,Mister Miracle)a bigger story unfolded...the "Fourth world" saga.Mister Miracle was the most unique of the bunch and told the story of Scott Free...raised in a very Spartan manner to be a soldier on the dehumanizing world of "Apokolips"...but who escapes to the planet Earth.This comic book had characters and ideas that were not only unique to comics but unique to Kirby
and never really surfaced anywhere else in his prolific career. Big Barda is my favorite character in all of comic history.Never was there a female character like her...Big "Zaftig" and beautiful (Wonder woman was supposed to be an Amazon but was a dried up piece of nothing compared to Barda) powerful and liberated but without ever being the "B" word.There is a really Atypical (For Kirby and for the time period) undercurrent of,well, kink to put it bluntly (see the character of "Lashina" for example)which anyone in the know will notice throughout.It lasted longer than the other titles (New Gods and Forever people) but had a dreadfully undeserved short run.When the other titles collapsed the "Fourth world,New Genesis" aspect was dropped and it became a more routine comic book adventure.This book collects the first ten books of the series.A Noble effort on D.C.s part but...the reason I give it four stars is only because of the black and white format...D.C. should have done what marvel did in reprinting Kirby's classics in graphic novel form...print it affordably in B&W but NEVER substitute the color with hideous tones of grey...it really does Kirby's artwork no justice.If you can't afford (or just dont want to mess up) the original 30 year old magazines...pick this gem up!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars GREAT SCOTT FOR JACK KIRBY!, April 4, 2000
By 
nino (Chicago Illinois.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
Jack Kirby never ceased to amaze me as an artist or as awriter/creator. Mr. Miracle was indeed a very interesting character. Today's Spawn character bears a very strong resemblance to him... Even though the art work is in black and white, it is still very fresh and exciting. The story of a super escape artist was never before tried and it took Jack Kirby to pull it off. This book is a must for fourth world fans ,Kirby Fans, D.C. COMICS fans and grown ups who remember their youth. Mr.Miracle, Big Barda, Granny Goodness, everything Kirby could think of for his fans are in this Book. For the aspiring cartoonist, this book is a great source of inspiration. Do the late "KING KIRBY" a favor and buy yourself this book.The artwork,and the writing are excellent! Jack Kirby's creativity was as amazing as all the superheroes he created. Mr. Miracle was a very entertaining and fun book. END
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What can I say?, September 19, 2002
By 
John E. King (Albuquerque, NM United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
This is classic Kirby. No one else creates mythology like he does. His New Gods / Fourth World books were some of the best comics ever done -- a nice blending of world mythologies with the American comic-book mythos. Mr. Miracle is his Heracles, Horace, Heru, etc., and is just as entertaining today as it was when it was first written. The black and white art may put off some potential readers, but Kirby's art sans the color really brings out the weight and depth of his lines.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Some Love for Mister Miracle!, November 11, 2006
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
Dating me, but: I hooked onto to Mister Miracle back in '71 or '72?. For some reason, the post office comic stand (operated by a blind man) didn't carry "New Gods" or "Forever People" on a frequent basis, but I was always able to pick up "Mister Miracle." I picked up the entire run (and other "Fourth World" titles from the drug store down the street) and I totally dug the Scott Free vibe. These titles are B&W, and that's a shame, but in a way it kinda frees Jack Kirby (and inkers Vince Colletta and Jack Royer) from the very pedestrian coloring of the 1970s. Ignore the cliched and leaden dialogue and just let the images pour over you: Then you'll understand why Kirby is The King. I had a blast reading these comics again after 30 years. Hope you will, too.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A New God's First Bow, December 31, 2009
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
Mr. Miracle holds an odd place in the DC universe and in Jack Kirby's New Gods pantheon. Besides his role in the New Gods saga, Mr. Miracle is perhaps best known for his time in the Justice League International along with his wife Big Barda and his diminutive sidekick Oberon. This collection presents the first Mr. Miracle stories, revealing Mr. Miracle's origins on both Earth and in Apocalypse. The dialogue is often a bit wooden but there is plenty of action and Mr. Miracle is a very unique hero with a great supporting cast. Be warned. While Kirby's sketches hold up well here, this is a black and white book (you'll have to check out the New Gods omnibus from DC for the colored version).

The best stories are both epic and intimate. Think Homer having Hector place his helmet on his son's head between battle scenes in the Iliad or Natasha playing with her doll as the armies of France and Russia collide in "War and Peace." Kirby understood this and, while Mr. Miracle is no Achilles or Pierre Bezukov, he does a fine job of showing an epic space saga and moments like Scott Free trying to impress Barda with his cooking skills. Kirby is also very good at showing glimpses behind the curtain. Most of the times Mr. Miracle makes a bold escape, he tells Oberon or Barda or even the bad guys how he managed to pull it off. Sometimes, as the old Masked Magician tv specials showed, learning how the trick was performed is more interesting than the trick. Kirby uses it as an interesting narrative device.

While not colored, this book shows the origins of one of the funnest, most interesting but alas underutilized characters on the DC roster. It also offers a glimpse at the work of Jack Kirby, one of the titans of comic books.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kirby's Fourth World, September 11, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
This was the King at his finest and most creative. Taken together with New Gods and Forever People, this was a pulse pounding and exciting series, far ahead of its time. Too bad DC curtailed this in the 70s. Will they release a volume called "Jack Kirby's Jimmy Olsen"? They should!
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Get Scott Free!, April 10, 1999
This review is from: Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle (Paperback)
Scott Free aka Mr. Miracle is the brain child of comicdoms greatest mind Jack "The King" Kirby! Based on his friend Jim Sternako, an amateur escape artist, Mr. Miracle is a look at a Super escape artist! He's quite different than the normal fist flinging fighters of other comics. Do your self a favor and make Granny Goodness happy and order this book! You wouldn't like to see her upset would you? (gulp!)
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Jack Kirby's Mister  Miracle
Jack Kirby's Mister Miracle by Jack Kirby (Paperback - September 1, 1998)
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