tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1497388721455949749.post9059575890745609030..comments2023-10-02T09:39:25.464-05:00Comments on The Pouch Files: Review: Namor, the Sub-Mariner #34Dobsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08884152078310514684noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1497388721455949749.post-49041809167929288102014-02-25T15:42:04.281-06:002014-02-25T15:42:04.281-06:00Byrne stopped writing the book as well a few month...<i>Byrne stopped writing the book as well a few months later, and was replaced by Bob Harras, then the editor of the X-Men franchise</i><br /><br />Does this coincide at all with his time on Avengers? It must, right? <br /><br /><i>This is slightly more excusable when the X-Men comics do it, bringing back obscure dudes like Warhawk, because he's an obscure character who showed up a story that was reprinted multiple times and was still somewhat relevant despite being a 15 year old comic (Uncanny X-Men #110)</i><br /><br />Actually, for whatever reason, Uncanny #110 <i>didn't</i> get reprinted very often - it was skipped over in <i>Classic X-Men</i>, for example, and as a result, when he popped up in that Maverick back up story I was infuriated that the footnote didn't tell me where else he appeared, and because his only other X-appearance went unreprinted in the reprint series that, at the time, was my only gateway to the old stuff, I had no idea who he was, nor, in hindsight, any affordable way to find out. <br /><br />Still, your point stands. :)Austin Gortonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14281239771248780430noreply@blogger.com