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29+ Works 1,170 Membros 47 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Kev Walker

Também inclui: Kevin Walker (2)

Séries

Obras de Kev Walker

Star Wars: Doctor Aphra Vol. 1: Aphra (2017) — Penciller — 224 cópias
Annihilation Book 1 (2007) — Autor — 168 cópias
SilverFin: The Graphic Novel (Young Bond) (2008) — Ilustrador — 124 cópias
Star Wars: Doctor Aphra Vol. 4: The Catastrophe Con (2019) — Ilustrador — 87 cópias
Avengers Arena, Vol. 1: Kill or Die (2013) — Ilustrador — 85 cópias
New Avengers, Vol. 4: A Perfect World (2014) — Ilustrador — 63 cópias
Marvel Zombies: Battleworld (2015) — Ilustrador — 37 cópias
Dr. Strange, Surgeon Supreme Vol. 1: Under the Knife (2020) — Ilustrador — 29 cópias
Daemonifuge [complete] (2002) 28 cópias
ABC Warriors, Vol 3: Khronicles of Khaos (1992) — Ilustrador — 25 cópias
Judge Anderson: The Psi Files Volume 2 (2012) — Ilustrador — 24 cópias

Associated Works

Draco (1992) — Ilustrador, algumas edições184 cópias
John Constantine, Hellblazer Vol. 04: The Family Man (2012) — Ilustrador — 147 cópias
Bloodlines (1999) — Artista da capa, algumas edições140 cópias
Hellboy: Weird Tales (2014) — Contribuinte — 73 cópias
Realm of Kings (2010) — Ilustrador — 71 cópias
Red Thirst (1990) — Ilustrador, algumas edições54 cópias
Apocrypha Now (1995) — Ilustrador — 44 cópias
Inquisitor Rulebook (2001) — Ilustrador — 35 cópias
Warhammer 40,000 Compendium (1989) — Ilustrador, algumas edições26 cópias
Warhammer 40,000: Wargear (2nd Edition) (1993) — Ilustrador — 26 cópias
Wars and Death (1997) — Ilustrador — 25 cópias
The Uncanny Inhumans: Civil War II (2016) — Ilustrador — 24 cópias
Codex Imperialis (1993) — Ilustrador — 22 cópias
Route 666 (Anthology) (1990) — Ilustrador, algumas edições21 cópias
Index Astartes II (2002) — Ilustrador — 15 cópias
Savage Avengers Vol. 4: King in Black (2022) — Ilustrador — 15 cópias
2000 AD Yearbook 1992 (1991) — Ilustrador — 15 cópias
ABC Warriors: The Medusa War (2004) — Cover illustration, algumas edições11 cópias
Batman: Shadow of the Bat Vol. 4 (2019) — Ilustrador — 6 cópias
The War Machine (2013) — Ilustrador — 5 cópias
Warhammer 40,000 2nd Edition Rulebook (1993) — Ilustrador — 4 cópias
Inferno: v. 4 (1997) — Artista da capa, algumas edições4 cópias
White Dwarf 101 (1988) — Ilustrador — 3 cópias
White Dwarf 105 (1988) — Ilustrador — 2 cópias
White Dwarf 121 (1990) — Contribuinte — 2 cópias
White Dwarf 119 (1989) — Ilustrador — 2 cópias
White Dwarf 116 (1989) — Ilustrador — 2 cópias
ABC Warriors: Hammerstein (1998)algumas edições2 cópias
White Dwarf 108 (1988) — Ilustrador — 2 cópias
White Dwarf 102 (1988) — Ilustrador — 2 cópias
White Dwarf 229 (1999) — Contribuinte — 1 exemplar(es)
Enter The Heroic Age 1 (2010) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
Leonatos: Blood Angel Captain (Warhammer Warriors) (1999) — Artista da capa — 1 exemplar(es)
2000 AD: Free Comic Book Day 2013 — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 118 (1989) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
Ephrael Stern: Sister of Battle (Warhammer Warriors) (1999) — Artista da capa — 1 exemplar(es)
Inferno! Tales of Fantasy & Adventure Issue 1 (1997) — Ilustrador; Artista da capa — 1 exemplar(es)
Kharn the Betrayer: Khorne Berserkere (Warhammer Warriors) (1999) — Artista da capa — 1 exemplar(es)
Eldar Exarch (Warhammer Warriors) (1999) — Artista da capa — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 122 (1990) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 117 (1989) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 112 (1989) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 111 (1989) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 110 (1989) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 109 (1989) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)
Tyranid Warrior (Warhammer Warriors) (1999) — Artista da capa — 1 exemplar(es)
White Dwarf 120 (1989) — Ilustrador — 1 exemplar(es)

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
England

Membros

Resenhas

Access a version of the below that includes illustrations on my blog.

I normally would be doubly skeptical of a story tying into both Secret Wars (ugh) and Marvel Zombies (double ugh), but then I saw it was by Simon Spurrier, who was one of the contributors to Titan's excellent The Eleventh Doctor: Year Two series, so I decided to give it a chance. I read the Ms. Marvel Secret Wars tie-ins back in the day; I only have the foggiest notion what it was about. I think a bunch of timelines got smushed together into the same planet? You don't really even need to know that to understand this, as long as you're willing to accept 1) Elsa Bloodstone is commanding an army against a horde of zombies, and 2) it's possible to run into multiple versions of the same character.

This isn't high art, but it is surprisingly enjoyable and well done for what it is. Spurrier and artist Kev Walker take the post-Nextwave version of Elsa Bloodstone, but treat the character more seriously than Ellis and Immonen did. What would it be like to grow up with all this trauma? How would it affect you as an adult, and how could you relate to others after it happened? Spurrier explores this with a mix of horror and humor, and I wouldn't say I loved it, but it's much better than it needed to be. Walker impressed me as an artist, too; good with both character and action. At one point, I thought, "wow this guy should draw Star Wars"... later I realized he was the artist for Marvel's Doctor Aphra series, and I was probably subconsciously remembering some of the art I'd seen for that.

The collection also contains one issue of the original Marvel Zombies series as a bonus, but no one's tricking me into reading that shit.

Elsa Bloodstone: « Previous in sequence | Next in sequence »
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Stevil2001 | Mar 24, 2024 |
I've read this a bunch of times over the years, but it never ceases to amaze!

The Thrice Born Heretical Saint and one of the greatest to bear the bob and Bolter of the Adepta Sororitas, Ephrael Stern, continues her one-woman crusade to hold the galaxy record for most jumps between an eternal succession of frying pans and fires, as she reckons with what she is becoming after the bizarre torrent of memories of centuries of Sisters of Battle and searches for a way to hurt Slaanesh in a way that doesn't just make them more horny.

In the first volume eleven was already in the distance, so Emperor knows what this is cranked up to now with apostate priests of the Dark Prinze and Black Templars under his thrall, a non-psyker Inquisitor who cosplays as an Astartes, goes Gamora in Commorragh, makes a Pariah pal who gives her a phenomenal view of the Webway--seriously, Kev Walker went absolutely wild with a spread of all manner of Eldar, portals, and at least one of pretty much every vehicle you could find parked on a Craftworld at time of publication--it's wild!

It truly fills my cold, heretical heart with joy to see the Imperium
and the wider galaxy presented in its ridiculously grim, ludicrously epic, and perfectly awful. I feel like as time's gone on the chances of a member of the Inquisition being a pure vessel for evil, tainted by Chaos or just a sadistic bastard, but in Daemonifuge a couple of good ones exist, a one is already lost in the Abyss and reduced to making vague, ominous ghost calls, while the rest are doing the witch walk from Hocus Pocus dressing in ways that would make George Miller say that look to ridiculous and evil. It's horribly glorious.

Walker's art truly is something else and absolutely bursts off the page, making you see the colours of the Warp, despite being in black and white (I really do need to finally track down and get my hands on the 20th Anniversary Colour edition), and the script is silly in its seriousness, which is totally the vibe.

I think the only thing I take any issue with, braids the blasphemy of putting a Battle Sister in Wych's ludicrously tiny knickers, is the not as bad arse a line as it thinks it is when Ephrael says something to the effect of 'I'm no frail, scared woman! You see the bob!? That means I'm Mrs Hereticus'. Well she says at t lesdt the first bit, which, when you're already the gnarliest SoB in the Imperium, a heretical saint with centuries of other Battle Sisters in your mind, force lightning, and a friend who used to be a Harlequin, you really don't have to do misogyny to prove how epic and not like other girls you are.

This really series was one of those first big bits of Warhammer media of a quality, along with things like Gaunt's Ghosts, and the Horus Heresy series that lead to the popularity of the galaxy far beyond the tabletop that made it possible for us to end up with the various media goodies we get to enjoy today, like the stack of genuinely great video games in the vast sea of Warhammer IP, the Horus Heresy series itself, and, I'm not sure if I'm in the minority with this or not, but in my personal opinion, phenemonal animations like Hammer and Bolter, Pariah Nexus, Angels of Death, and Astartes.

Epic comic is epic, even without a Titan in sight...damn, I really do need to reacquainted with Imperius Dictatio after rhe next volume of this!
… (mais)
 
Marcado
RatGrrrl | 1 outra resenha | Feb 6, 2024 |
------------Updated review, *****, Feb 16th 2023

First time I read this book I was little bit puzzled. Reason was simple, I did not have much contact with the W40K universe and [thankfully] I made my first steps through period of relative normalcy in this universe, so called Horus Heresy.

As time went by I started reading additional books (and some comics) and very soon found myself face to face with nightmarish 40th millennium. And while comics weren't always that good, novels and short stories were truly excellent.

And so after reading this collection in 2012 I decided to go through it again, this time with better knowledge of the universe. And I have to say it had a much better effect on me than before so I give it 5 stars (from original 4).

Entire collection is made of comics published in 2000AD-like magazine and it does feel. Story flow is little bit short, you know trying to put as much in in 20-ish pages, but man does it pack the punch.

First thing, art. It is epic and it is something I have not seen up until the Robertson's fantastic covers for Horus Heresy and other series that followed it. FYI, art forW40K was usually like nightmarish Judge Dredd style, slightly cartoonish with exaggerated body language, ornaments, garments, weapons and limbs (and this is reason why W40K comics are general miss and hit for me, unlike books where I create images with my inner eye :)). All our heroes here, and gotta admit even the bad guys, are epic, greater than life. In heavy armor, piercing sight and lightnings coming out from everywhere every page is so full of dark atmosphere, almost suffocating darkness against which our champions stand against. Framing, composition ...... utter brilliance. Even when we move from the beautiful black and white painting style to more pencil style in later issues, entire book remains pure joy for the eyes.

Second thing, atmosphere. If you want to feel the W40K atmosphere - constant witch hunts, suspicions, trials and tribulations, daemons, betrayal, techno barbarians that would make Conan think twice, trust me this is book for you. One of the reviewers said that dialog and behavior in the book are very childish. It is age of puritans seeking evil in everyone, walking on steroids and enhancements and carrying tank-like armor and tank killing weaponry. It is time of zealots that can only utter various prayers to the Emperor, quote whatever passes for the holy book at that time and where even slightest hesitation in utter devotion would qualify entire planet to extermination. Free thinking is dangerous business, everybody is so full of religious zeal and lack of understanding toward the fellow man it is impossible to fathom it. And where you have zealotry and inability to communicate normally you have childish behavior (just look at zealotry in the last few years) - because that is how kids with tantrums behave, it is their way or the highway. Only difference is that tantrum people here are around 5 meters tall, sized like tanks wielding huge handguns and powered cutlery size of ordinary man.

Do note apparently there is a colored version of the book. I did not read that one, I read the black and white one. For me black and white works are higher form of art so I am not sure how would I like one done in color, so depending on your preferences you might want to browse a bit to see original art (b&W) and then compare it to the colored panels and then make a decision.

Story - hey, it is W40K. While one might expect bolter-porn all the way (especially in time when it was originally published) story is very very interesting. Ephrael Stern, one of the high ranking warriors in order of Sisters of Battle finds herself without memory, locked down in the order's monastery, writing down weird texts and talking in tongues. While just lack of memory would put her in front of the Inquisition and flame-throwers (because in this universe you just never know :)) she manages to clear her name (which is epic in and on itself in this universe) and become living weapon against the Chaos. During all of this she will befriend pretty stubborn Inquisitor, evade Ordo Malleus, destroy daemons, smuggle through cordons of hive gangs and police and set herself on the path to mysterious Black Library with another, very very unlikely hero/companion/sidekick. Through this all we see (or do we?) how story ends but by following Miss Stern you will be so much entranced that you will want to scream when you come to .....

The end..... I love cliffhangers, I truly do......but when they lead to something :) Here we are left dry after so much things happening, allies dying left and right and spectacular combat (combat with Culexus was miiii-iighty)...... But again, even with ending such as this it is still 5 stars for me!

With hope that this story gets a proper conclusion at some future date I can only wholeheartedly recommend the book to W40K and in general fans of SF-with-fantasy-elements epic stories.

------------Original review, **** (Dec 16th 2012):

Read this one as part of Daemonifuge (print on demand) from Black Library.
Great art and very interesting story.

Highly recommended for any fan of SF.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
Zare | Jan 23, 2024 |
Read this one as part of Daemonifuge (print on demand) from Black Library.
Great art and very interesting story.

Highly recommended for any fan of SF.
 
Marcado
Zare | 1 outra resenha | Jan 23, 2024 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
29
Also by
48
Membros
1,170
Popularidade
#21,987
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Resenhas
47
ISBNs
65
Idiomas
6

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