Bruce Timm: Medusa and Black Bolt
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Black Bolt by Bill Sienkiewicz
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Crystal of The Inhumans by Steve Rude
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The Uncanny Inhumans! Art by John Buscema. I don't know where or when this artwork first appeared but the Uncanny adjective was used in relation to The Inhumans since at least 1971 (where it appeared in their short run in Amazing Adventures). It was then used solely on the The X-Men title from 1978. Nowadays Marvel seem to use these adjectives interchangeably between all their titles but it used to be they were limited to a specific title, team or hero.
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Black Bolt #10 (Cover art by Christian Ward)
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Charles Vess: Medusa and Black Bolt
Marvel Fanfare #45
Marvel
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The Inhumans by Alan Davis and Mark Farmer
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The Inhumans and Other Stories: A Selection of Bengali Science Fiction edited and translated by Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay brings to print a previously untranslated, iconic Bengali sci fi novella from 1935: The Inhumans by Hemendrakumar Roy, a satire that has never gone out of print in its original language but has never been translated despite its well-earned place in the Radium Age of science fiction. Chattopadhyay adds three other early short stories as a bonus. Together, we get a collection of excellent classic sci fi with a non-Western perspective.
The Inhumans is a strange novella, featuring some classics of the early sci fi genre—story within a story, secrets in the predatory jungles of Africa, science's potential to over-reach—but with a uniquely anti-colonial undertone. The story is at turns absurd, funny, and scary as our narrator comes face-to-face with a secret civilization of "advanced" human beings hidden in the African wilderness. As for the short stories, they're a wonderful mix of myth and science, magic and sci fi, that I really enjoyed. Fans of classic, early sci fi will enjoy this, but so will most sci fi readers, and I'm glad that more classics that aren't originally in English are finally becoming more widespread and accessible.
Content warnings for fatphobia, violence/body horror.
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