4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sgt. Rock Lives On!, September 10, 2009
This review is from: The Sgt. Rock Archives, Vol. 3 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
For all us redblooded American comic book readers, Sgt. Rock was DA MAN in the 1960s. No other comic captured the adventure, excitement, sadness and tragedy of combat better than OUR ARMY AT WAR, featuring Rock and the "combat-happy Joes" of Easy Company. This 2005 Archive Editions resurrects 15 stories from the early '60s to remind all us aging baby boomers what a classic Sgt. Rock really was.
The stories in Volume 3 were published from October 1961 to December 1962. The stories have Rock, Wild Man, Ice Cream Soldier, Bulldozer and assorted dogfaces along with newbies slogging across Europe. Rock and Easy Company seem to exist in a timeless world. You rarely never know where they are or the date. Likewise superior officers rarely make an appearance. And, in the end, that doesn't really matter.
What matters are the stories, the experiences of those men led by their unstoppable Sergeant. The Sgt. Rock stories don't glorify war. Easy Company score victories/achieve objectives/destroy the enemy but always at a cost. Men fight, bleed, grumble, cry and die yet go on, united in the brotherhood of Easy Company and a just cause.
Most of the 15 stories are done by the wonderful Kanigher/Kubert team. No artist produced more dramatic, soulful comic artwork than Joe Kubert. He was perfect for the world of Sgt. Rock. Russ Heath supplied the artwork for several stories. Though Heath was more technically accurate in depicting tanks, airplanes, weapons, etc., no one could top Kubert with his stylishly dramatic artwork.
Re-reading these stories after forty years, it's amazing how well they hold up. Though you sometimes shake your head and wonder how ANY member of Easy could withstand the blizzards of machine-gun fire they frequently encountered, there is such a thing as dramatic license. Likewise the number of German tanks destroyed by one or more Easy Company dogfaces cramming their Thompsons in viewing ports and blazing away is truly awesome! Nevertheless the stories are affecting.
So whether you are revisiting an old (comic book) friend from your youth or sampling an acknowledged classic in the field, sit back and enjoy.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent buy, October 21, 2009
This review is from: The Sgt. Rock Archives, Vol. 3 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
This is without doubt an excellent compilation of stories of character, with the exuberant art of Joe Kubert...
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4 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sgt. Rock Archives Vol 3, January 16, 2007
This review is from: The Sgt. Rock Archives, Vol. 3 (DC Archive Editions) (Hardcover)
It's just the way I remember Sgt. back in the 60's ,camping out and reading comic books all night..Thanks for the memories..
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