August 4th 2009 Was not crazy about this Image title when it first came out and nothing now grabs me. Gotta laugh how these two areThe second one was good. When Volume 2 focuses on Spawn and McFarlane is at the helm it's fine. Still amazes me how similar the original Spawn comic book universe is to Marvel/DC etc.

And Violator’s story of how he defeated the evil Spawn wizard? 4.7 out of 5 stars 13.

The art style can be a little hectic at times making things difficult to follow but it's good looking material nonetheless.

What didn't work for them. #10 is also not included but its a story by Dave Sim with his Cerebus character plus tiny bonus of Marvel and DC characters's .. Arms sticking out of prison bars. Paperback. What they enjoyed.

#8 a story by Alan Moore. Image and its logos are ® and © 2020 Image Comics, Inc. All rights reserved. 7 offers from CDN$109.28. Lots of crazy art, but I do not like the characters. Published Neil Gaiman's issue is a little abrupt, but off course introduces Angela. the last issue in this volume is one I read as a child.

The story was a commentary on creators characters copyrights. Frank Miller's issue is...well about what you'd expect from Frank Miller. Youngblood is not interesting at all so that fell flat, Spawn's mental breakdown wasn't as well conceived as it could have been (Even Dave Sims omitted issue where Cerebus guides Spawn through this uniquely Cerebus style dreamscape wasn't nearly as good as I wish it had been). It was ironic that Violator narrates himself as the hero and Spawn as the Villian when the images shows quite the opposite of the two! Angela issue was cool, as was the return of the Violator. Volume 2 of Spawn includes issues 7-9 and 11-14. I can go on with the rest of my life.While the first volume had little going on, with McFarlane's wordy dialogue yet little movement on plot. I’m loving this series! Ultimately, I was trying to find some sort of positive about this comic that I pre-emptively disliked based on conversations with people who enjoyed it, and the type of customer it has attracted to comics.I was in the process of putting together a podcast about people reading through Spawn.

Oh well, plenty of other titles out there and Spawn has a legion of fans. There was a time comics had a future that looked promising. Unknown Binding. McFarlane as an artist is just all over the place - some of it is cool to look at, and other times I just feel like the art bleeds over into other shit too much.

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I couldn't finish the rest of the book, and honestly you'd just be better off picking up Moore and Miller's issues separately.

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I enjoyed this edition of spawn origins, but not nearly as much as I enjoyed volume 1.I enjoyed this edition of spawn origins, but not nearly as much as I enjoyed volume 1.The second one was good. I cannot fathom why issue 10 isn't included, but it's ok. They were becoming literate, respected and capable of great things. Wasn't the worst thing I ever read.Okay, I am done with my Spawn flashback moment. However, found a copy for 3 bucks.

It’s my first read-through, and I’ve really liked the illustrations and the storyline. Spawn: Origins Volume 2: Todd McFarlane, Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman: 9781607064893: Books - Amazon.ca this volume really sets up space for spawn through the ages and dimensions which really allows flexibility in the spawn universe. In these strange days of quarantine and isolation, books can be a mode of transport. Frank Miller does an issue and it's absolutely awful.

I LOVE the several of these issues were written by Neil Gaiman, Alan Moore and Frank Miller- makes it all the more kick ass!