âA groundbreaking example of comics representation in literature.â<b><i><br /><b>â<i>Publishers Weekly</i></b><br /><br /></i></b>âPenguin provides introductory essays; superb analyses by the series editor, Ben Saunders; and extensive bibliographies.â<b><i><br /></i><b>âMichael Dirda, <i>The Washington Post<br /><br /></i></b></b>âStories become classics when generations of readers sort through them, talk about them, imitate them, and recommend them. In this case, baby boomers read them when they dĂŠbuted, Gen X-ers grew up with their sequels, and millennials encountered them through Marvel movies. Each generation of fansâinitially fanboys, increasingly fangirls, and these days nonbinary fans, tooâfound new ways not just to read the comics but to use them. Thatâs how canons form. Amateurs and professionals, over decades, come to something like consensus about which books matter and whyâor else they love to argue about it, and we get to follow the arguments. Canons rise and fall, gain works and lose others, when one generation of people with the power to publish, teach, and edit diverges from the one before ... A top-flight comic by Kirbyâor his successor on âCaptain America,â Jim Sterankoâbarely needed words. You could follow the story just by watching the characters act and react. Thankfully, Penguin volumes do justice to these images. They reproduce sixties comics in bright, flat, colorful inks on thick white paperâunlike the dot-based process used on old newsprint, but perhaps truer to their bold, thrill-chasing spirit.â<b><i><br /></i><b>âStephanie Burt,</b><i><i><b> The New Yorker</b></i><br /><br /></i></b>âAs before, all three of these volumes re-present Professor Ben Saundersâ learned general series intro which does an excellent job of succinctly explaining the rise of Marvel Comics and the Marvel Method.â<b><i><b><br /><i><b>âForces of Geek</b></i></b></i></b>