American Century | |
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File:American Century no 1.jpg | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Vertigo |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre | Crime |
Publication date | May 2001 – October 2003 |
Number of issues | 27 |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) |
Howard Chaykin David Tischman |
Penciller(s) |
Marc Laming Luke Ross Lan Medina |
Inker(s) |
John Stokes Digital Chameleon |
Creator(s) |
Howard Chaykin David Tischman |
Collected editions | |
Scars & Stripes | ISBN 1-56389-791-1 |
Hollywood Babylon | ISBN 1563898853 |
American Century was a comic book series published by DC Comics as a part of the Vertigo imprint starting in early 2001. It was co-written by Howard Chaykin and David Tischman.[1]
The story concerned a former American pilot who fakes his death and goes on the run in the 1950s. Chaykin intended it as a "left-wing version of Steve Canyon",[2] and wrote all of the issues. The comic ran for approximately two years.
Plot[]
Harry Block, a World War II veteran, fakes his own death and makes his way to Central America to create a new identity for himself as Harry Kraft, a hard-drinking smuggler. During a war in Guatemala, a CIA operative blackmails Block into assassinating Rosa de Santiis, a popular leader in opposition to the CIA puppet dictator General Zavala. Afterward, he heads back to the United States, taking a road trip from Hollywood to Chicago to New York, exploring myriad avenues of 1950s American culture.
The comic ends with Block essentially turning into the character he had created for the fictional "Starburst Comics", a vigilante known as "Dr. Dream".[1]
Collected editions[]
Some of the series has been collected into two trade paperbacks
- Scars & Stripes (collects issues #1-4, DC/Vertigo, 2001, ISBN 1-56389-791-1)
- Hollywood Babylon (collects issues #5-9, DC/Vertigo, 2002, ISBN 1-56389-885-3)
Notes[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Irvine, Alex (2008). "American Century". In Dougall, Alastair. The Vertigo Encyclopedia. New York: Dorling Kindersley. pp. 20. ISBN 0-7566-4122-5. OCLC 213309015.
- ↑ American Century #1
References[]
- American Century at the Grand Comics Database
- American Century at the Comic Book DB
- 'American Century at the Big Comic Book DataBase
External links[]
This section includes a list of references, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. (April 2010) |
- Arnold, Andrew D. (May 25, 2001). An 'American Century' of Unrepentant Crime. Time.
- Heidi MacDonald (March 25, 2003). David Tischman on Century's End. The Pulse. Comicon.com. Retrieved on February 16, 2010.
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