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A Wonderful Deck for Personal Readings...
A complete survey of the tarot cards including readings
A Vivid Non-traditional Tarot

solid, entertaining storydanger girl turns out to be the first one i bought. i didnt read comics b4, except for tintin and asterix in french and comics found in the daily newspaper.
as my first real taste of what is a english comic book, with danger girl, it didnt disappoint. it was highly recommanded at the store, for someone who didnt read them b4 and didnt know what to like or dislike in a comic book series.
am sure there a some reviews detailing some of the story line or telling whats danger girl is about.
just gonna say about it is as my first experience reading that kind of comic, i was hooked from the beginning. no wonder its a classic and should be in everyone's comic book collection.
danger girl is a james bond type. the story is great and has excellent graphics and colors. no one should pass this one up and pick up a copy if not already.
Danger Girl the ultimate in campy funDG's potent blender mix of 007, Charlie's Angels, VIP and Austin Powers makes for one of the most fun reads a comic lover could ask for.
Campbell's art is full of campy fun, loaded with gratuitous T&A shots and top-notch action sequences. DG was infamous for its lateness, and the fact that it took more than three years for this story to complete, you can see Campbell's art progress each issue.
This edition has a foreword by Bruce "Evil Dead" Campbell and features sketchbook and promo material in the back exclusive to this edition.
Comic fans, put this one in your shopping cart and prepare to have a ton of fun reading Danger Girl.
Things are about to get Dangerous!Well now comes Danger Girl, which no doubt is a delightful hybrid and homage of the Indiana Jones movies and Charlie's Angels. Comic fans have got to love Campbell's writing style, coming up with stylish one-liners and puns that have littered the guilty pleasures of action-adventure camp. It's also great to see every chapter start off in a splashy monotone spread shortening the story with hilarious summaries.
The story, if there actually is any, is about a roguish archaeologist babe (duh) named Abbey Chase. As we see early on, Chase has a habit of teaching men a lesson or two about what legs are REALLY meant for while she investigates historical findings before any other individual does.
Or so that's how it begins. Chase finds herself hired under the enigmatic and optimistic Deuce, who has hired a league of Danger Girls to stop the notorious crimes of a surviving Nazi faction known as The Hammers. The Hammers intend to steal the artifacts of the semi-angelic beings known as the Ubermensch, whom the Hammers claim descent. But there's no telling what kind of danger can be amounted once The Hammers find them, so it's the Danger Girls to the rescue... The Danger Girls also include the bullwhipping lassie Sydney Savage (who despite her Australian background doesn't seem to carry an accent) and Natalia Kassle, an ex-KGB agent with a sharp mind and even sharper knives. Things don't get any more relaxing for Abbey when some men get into the action, and what men. One is the cool and collected playboy Barracuda, who hopes he gets to kiss Sydney Savage right before he ever dies, and the puzzling Agent Zero, a masked ninja who may hold a past connection with Miss Chase.
The result is a wild crescendo of bullet-flying action and escapist chase sequences. Campbell's intentions for this comic were to make this feel like a movie, and for a medium not made out of film, the comic excels on pace and really has a momentum unprecedented by most other comic books. This speed makes Danger Girl definitely one of the best I've ever seen. And when I'm talking about movement, I'm not talking about a jiggle factor.


Wonderful Romance in an unusual time periodIf you liked Jane Auel, you will love Dark Renegade! Well-researched with vivid characterization and a complex romantic plot, it satisfied me on all levels as a reader.
GREAT!
Very enjoyable

Wild at Hearta narrow tunnel with land mines on either side. It is a
wild and violent ride, full of both brilliant and brutal
prose, but Del Stone, Jr., never lets the story get out of
control. I was never a big fan of Zombie movies but I loved
this book. The lead character, Hitch, IS a zombie, but a
zombie with a twist. He still has his intellect. He knows
what he's lost. And that makes all the difference in this
really excellent novel.
A Unique Take On a Modern MythWhat if, however, our body were to decay in the way of death, but our human essence were to remain inside of us? A rotting, festering mass of human flesh and bone roaming the Earth with conciousness and self-awareness; cognative reason and motor skills. This is what happens to Hitch, the protagonist in Dead Heat. In a world where billions of walking dead roam craving human flesh, Hitch is one of them and yet not. He has no physical feeling, no connection with his body as it rots away before his eyes, but he has a vague recollection of his human life and it's value.
Hitch sets off on a quest to answer the question we all ask: why am I here, different than everyone else, and what is my purpose? An amazingly written, often graphically violent, encompassing novel.
Great Horror by one of the best young horror writers.And for those of you who aren't sure, yes, Del Stone posed for the art work and yes, that is his grin.


A New Perspective
Searching for the soulHe distinguishes between pain and suffering - how pain can and should be alleviated, and why it should not be the cause of seeking a quick death.
His book is important for those who will face death, either themselves or in others. It is a brave attempt to clear the conflict regarding euthanasia.
Best work Peck has done in years.

An eneresting, exciting book, of Diana Ross.
A great book about the best DIVA ever!
Very enjoyable and it kept my attention

The Book
Even better than the 1st editionWell, he's got a new version of the book.
Few books add significant value in their second edition -- fix a few errata, add a new chapter, walla. Instead, Billups has extensively reviewed/updated the WHOLE DARN BOOK, & it's amazing. Now, if you're a frequent visitor to his web site (or read his articles in DV mag, etc.), a lot of the new material you'll have seen before -- albiet it's integrated well w/ the first-edition material.
You'll find LOTS of good, practical advice both on how to use digital cinema, & when *not* to. The recommendation to NOT buy anything over miniDV (& rent instead) is particularly refreshing, as-is the debunking of the "HD is cheaper" school.
Billups is at his best when he gives the technical overview of the Industry, as well as a state-of-digital-hardware... but [again] he goes further & expands his quite-good sections on Cinematography, Production & Directing... all w/ emphasis on digital [ie, small-scale] production.
Only 3 quibbles: (1) some of the pictures from the first text are so small now as to be nearly useless (ie, frame comparisons of miniDV vs HD, of CCD image vs image-on-tape, etc. don't work when they're too-small to see a difference), (2) the highly-useful color plates are gone, & (3) a teensy technical quibble. Billups tries to be objective about hardware, but really isn't when it comes to the XL1/s unit. {techie alert} Sure, it's got a manual lens... but it's crippled by the lower-quality ccd imager (ask DVfilm, etc. about comparisons of film-out w/ PD150, etc.), FAKE "progressive" mode which is death on film-out (he admits this), & non-ideal anamorphic 'squeezing', which again is not-great for film-out. Similarly, the DVX100 is highly-recommended in the book, but it has no 16:9 anamorphic lens available, so you have to lose res. by using the internal "cropping" method. As the book emphasizes "miniDV for film-out", these oversights are a tad glaring. A manual lens that doesn't "never stop spinning" might be absolutely mandatory for high-end production, but quite a few InDiGent features (for example) have used the PD150 PAL + anamorphic via film-out to non-insignificant theatrical release, Sundance Awards, etc. Billups himself used a similar unit for the David Lynch Playstation2 commercial.
Regardless, all is forgiven, however, if the XL2 is as promised, & under $6k. We all want Sony-quality HAD 16:9 ccd imagers coupled w/ Canon manual lens & true 24p/30p operation. Now, about that low-light capability....
I *highly* recommend this book, to be read & re-read. You absolutely *can* make miniDV look *better* than BetaSP, using his methodologies (as I've found-out myself). Thanks, Scott!!
The one-stop solution
TONY KEILY, EDITOR...


Dinosaur Dominion
Dinoverse: a funny book
Great Book!

The birth of AI
Stunning AI!
A tremendous success! I could not put it down!

If you read only one parenting book, let it be this one
At last PRACTICAL Parenting help!!I have been praying about what to do regarding some undesirable behaviour in my children (and in myself), and this book is the answer to those prayers! It is worth every penny.
Every Parent Needs This Book