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[[Category:Graphic Novels|*]]
[[Category:New Reviews|Graphic Novels]] __NOTOC__<!-- Remove -->
{{newreview
|author=Frank Miller and Brian Azzarello
|title=Batman: Dark Knight III: The Master Race
|rating=3.5
|genre=Graphic Novels
|summary=Batman is not playing ball. He's been videoed duffing up Gotham policemen, and not the baddies he usually biffs. But then he's not Batman – he's a she, and she finally comes up with the news that Batman died in her hands. Elsewhere, Lara, the daughter of Superman and Wonder Woman, is encouraging Ray Palmer/The Atom to turn his technologies concerned with shrinking and expanding life to the miniaturised city of Kandor, the last vestige of Kryptonian existence not to fly about in visible blue pants. What with Superman sitting idle in an exposed Fortress of Solitude having gone into a sulk, and Batman dead, there would appear to be little in the way of help for the world should anything nasty happen – but then, of course, something nasty does happen…
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1401265138</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Orlando Weeks
|summary=What, in the real world, would be the least likely cover for a secret agent but that of super-model? Apart from the advantage of everyone thinking you were gormless, there is the implausible clothing and having to run around after baddies in high heels to consider. But the world of comics isn't the real world, and so you have to ask the opposite – what would be the most visually appealing band of secret agents, if not for a whole cabal of them working undercover as bimbo-looking models? The Showroom is one such, and its main agent is Scarlett Couture, daughter of a male cop and a female fashionista-cum-agency boss. Looking wonderful is incredibly easy for her – but sometimes saving the world is quite a bit tougher…
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1782760628</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Jason Quinn and Naresh Kumar
|title=World War Two: Against the Rising Sun (Campfire Graphic Novels)
|rating=4.5
|genre=Children's Non-Fiction
|summary=World War Two – so often a lesson subject for our primary school children, even after all this time. Nazis, Soviets, Pearl Harbor – but wait. That last wasn't just the clarion call to the Americans to join in with the rest of our Allies – it was a mere episode in a fuller story – the half of the war that was never seen by those in Europe, beyond the fact the British Empire was certainly changed forever. The War in the Pacific is something I was certainly never taught much about in school, at any age. And here's a graphic novel version of the tale from a publisher in India that can serve at last as a salutary lesson.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>9381182051</amazonuk>
}}

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