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Star Wars Legends Epic Collection #14

Star Wars Legends Epic Collection: The Menace Revealed, Vol. 4

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More adventures from the Legends continuity of Star Wars, focusing on Attack of the Clones!

Attack of the Clones! As the Separatist Crisis flares, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker are assigned as bodyguards to a senator under threat. Can they protect him from assassination? Bounty hunter Aurra Sing targets a fallen Jedi, but does she still have what it takes to come out on top? Pirate captain Nym, on the run from the Trade Federation, is sent to track down fellow pirate Sol Sixxa — but first he must determine who the real enemy is! The comics adaptation of Attack of the Clones , young Boba Fett’s first mission, Obi-Wan teaches Anakin a lesson in humility — and more!

 Star The Bounty Hunters - Aurra Sing (1999) 1; Star Starfighter - Crossbones (2002) 1-3; Free Comic Book Day 2002: Star Wars 1; Star Republic (2002) 46-48; Star Episode II - Attack of the Clones (2002) 1-4; Star Hasbro/Toys ‘R’ Us Exclusive (2002) 1-4; material from Dark Horse Extra (1998) 44-47; Star Wars Tales (1999) 2, 7, 14, 18, 20, 24

448 pages, Paperback

Published January 30, 2024

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About the author

Timothy Truman

541 books57 followers
Timothy Truman is an American writer, artist and musician. He is best known for his stories and Wild West-style comic book art, and in particular, for his work on Grimjack (with John Ostrander), Scout, and the reinvention of Jonah Hex, with Joe R. Lansdale. Truman is currently writing Conan and is an instructor at the Pennsylvania College of Art and Design.
Truman's first professional comics work was Grimjack with writer John Ostrander, for the independent comics company First Comics. Grimjack first appeared in Starslayer #10 in November 1983, before moving to his own series after issue #18 in 1984, and continued for 81 issues. Along with being a fan favorite and often imitated character, Grimjack almost single-handedly defined the "grim and gritty" action comic character archetype.
Truman has been continuously creative for more than 20 years, displaying his pulp sensitivities in his writing. In 1985, he created Scout, which was followed by Scout: War Shaman, a futuristic western. A year later, he relaunched the Hillman characters Airboy and The Heap for Eclipse Comics. He also developed The Prowler, a Shadow type character, and adapted The Spider for Eclipse. In 1991, at DC Comics he created Hawkworld, a reinvention of Hawkman. With author Joe R. Lansdale, he reinterpreted Jonah Hex as a horror western. In it, their creation of villain Edgar Autumn elicited a complaint from musician Edgar Winter. With his son, Benjamin Truman, he created A Man Named Hawken.
Truman was chosen by Dark Horse Comics to illustrate a newly completed Tarzan novel and wrote a story arc for the comic book. He also wrote virtually the entire run of Turok: Dinosaur Hunter for Valiant Comics, after David Michelinie launched the book with its first three-issue story arc and subsequently departed the series. For the defunct SF imprint of DC, Helix, he created The Black Lamb. He also worked on a typical pulp adventure Guns of the Dragon, featuring Enemy Ace and Bat Lash; and wrote Star Wars at Dark Horse Comics. While at Dark Horse Comics, he took over the writing of Conan from Kurt Busiek in 2006, and after that series ended he started Conan The Cimmerian.
Truman's startling work, Simon Girty, Renegade was a two-volume black and white graphic novel that translated the horrors and triumphs of the American settler's western frontier in a fresh, interesting light. In bold, black and white use of positive and negative space, Truman appealed to both young and old audiences in West Virginia and Pennsylvania. It was especially important for West Virginians that had been struggling against novelist Zane Grey's portrayal of Lewis Wetzel in an overly romanticized, florid light. Truman himself is an avid historian who dislikes nothing more than to see a drawing of a war using the wrong weaponry, and the second volume of his two-volume series on Simon Girty was devoted to the errors caught in his first volume.
Tecumseh! a graphic novel based on the West Virginia Outdoor Theater, is a colored graphic novel that shows the play from beginning to end. It renewed interest in the warrior in Appalachia. When asked why he used "Tecumseh" instead of "Tecumtheh" he explained he didn't want to explain to the mainstream audience the variance in spelling — the movement on pronunciation began with General William Tecumseh Sherman who came from a family that wanted to commemorate the warrior, but felt the lisping "Tecumtheh" would be unmanly.



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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Jackson.
1,011 reviews5 followers
February 21, 2025
This collection is filled with comics that I would describe as neither great nor bad. Just decent all around. The Starfighter comics never really gripped me, as I never felt connected to the cast. The adaptation of Attack of the Clones is solid, but doesn't add anything substantial to the story already presented in film. My favorite story in this volume is Republic issues 46-48, which I felt did a good job at fleshing out the senate guards we see in the background of the prequels, as well as had some good Master and Apprentice moments for Obi-Wan and Anakin.

The weakest part of the volume is the Star Wars Tales comics, but that is the case for pretty much every epic collection.
Profile Image for J.B. Mathias.
938 reviews3 followers
May 30, 2025
The attack of the clones comics and the aurra sing comic were the stars of this collection. Some of it was decent and a few were not that great. I didn't care for the tales comics at the end, they were like a bad mad magazine bit where they somehow made jar jar even worse.

Overall still enjoyable
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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