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Stormwatch: Lightning Strikes (Stormwatch)
Stormwatch: Lightning Strikes (Stormwatch)

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Authors: Warren Ellis, Tom Raney
Creators: Randy Elliott, Jim Lee, Richard Bennett
Publisher: Titan Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £10.99
Buy New: £3.77
You Save: £7.22 (66%)



New (4) Used (2) Collectible (1) from £3.77

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 309651

Media: Paperback
Pages: 144
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 6.6 x 0.3

ISBN: 1840236175
EAN: 9781840236170
ASIN: 1840236175

Publication Date: April 25, 2003
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: In stock and normally despatched within 2 to 3 working days. New paperback. May show some slight shelf wear but content fine and unread.

Also Available In:

  • Library Binding - Lightning Strikes
  • Paperback - Stormwatch: Lightning Strikes (Stormwatch)

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Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Stormwatch shows off   June 10, 2003
Collecting issues 43-47 of the popular Warren Ellis penned Stormwatch, this book lets some of the best of the series characters go solo - well sort of. Jack Hawksmoor tracks a killer, Battalion clashes with anti U.N. terrorists and Jenny Sparks tells the story of her century spanning life.
The Jenny Sparks issue is the best in the book, using retro comic art to illustrate and chart Jenny's career; I loved the famous Gibbons Watchmen pull back, substituting a discarded smiley clock faces dressed doll for the Comedian and his smiley badge; but there's also a century's worth of influences and styles to go with it - just brilliant. Other highlights are the international pub crawl and a whole issue illustrated with full page panels.



4 out of 5 stars Only essential for hardcore Stormwatch and Authority Fans.   May 27, 2003
Set just before "Change or Die", "Lighting Strikes" is a collection of one off stories set in the Wildstorm Universe. Again, Ellis tends to stay away from the previous established Stormwatch characters (with the exception of Jackson King and the Weatherman, Henry Bendix) to focus on his newly introduced characters Jenny Sparks and Jack Hawksmore.

The artwork is adequate in this book, certainly better than the two previous Stormwatch books. In particular, the Jenny Sparks story, where she describes her life is wonderful, with the artwork changing styles to in a homage to the comics of the decade being described.

Whilst the stories are one-offs, they do tie into the main Stormwatch continuity with Jackson Kings story setting up future conflict between America and Stormwatch and Rose Tattoo's story directly leading onto the events in "Change or Die". As a result, its not an essential purchase for non hardcore Stormwatch/Authority fans (I left it until the last of my Stormwatch/Authority purchases).

However the Jenny Sparks life history and Bendix journal stories make this well worth the cost of purchase and certainly essential for fans.


4 out of 5 stars Focus on character development in a mature superhero world.   February 27, 2001
The Wildstorm world is like our own, but with higher technology and a history of superhumans. The United Nations has its own superhuman crisis unit, Stormwatch, who do whatever it takes to combat superhuman threats (hint: their opponents hardly ever end up in prison). This is the second of four volumes collecting the issues written by Warren Ellis which led up to the excellent 'The Authority' title. Much of this volume is taken up with stories focusing on individual team members. Jack Hawksmoor has a detective story in New York, drawing out the abilities of one of the strangest superheroes ever. Jenny Sparks tells Jackson King the story of her nearly 100-year life, with different decades drawn in the appropriate comic/cartoon art style. King, aka Battalion, gets a rumble with some terrorists. We get a lot of character development as established team members go out on a social trip, with humour that's lacking in the other stories here (and a couple of pages in the wrong order, which was confusing), while the ongoing plot with commander Henry Bendix simmers in the background. Finally there's a rather throwaway episode with some of the team in action exploring a hidden complex. Artwork and story are good throughout. It's definitely a stage on the way from somewhere to somewhere else, getting us closer to the characters before the stuff hits the fan in the next volume.

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