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Paperback X-Factor - Volume 1: The Longest Night Book

ISBN: 0785118179

ISBN13: 9780785118176

X-Factor - Volume 1: The Longest Night

(Part of the X-Factor (2005) (Single Issues) Series)

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Book Overview

In the fallout from 'House of M' and following the surprise film-noir hit 'Madrox', a new mutant team is forged X-Factor is an investigative mutant agency that includes Madrox, Guido, Wolfsbane,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

This is one of the better X-Men titles this year!

I usually balk at buying more x-Men comics, but X-Factor is definately worth the money. Peter Davis is a great storyteller, and each issue has you clamoring for the next one! If you have to get an X-Men comic I recommend X-Factor.

Peter David Surprises With X-Factor Reboot

X-Factor has been many things, from a team reprising the original X-Men line-up to a cast of B-characters led by Cyclops's brother Havok. With "The Longest Night," however, Peter David uses the team name for Madrox's new mutant detective agency. While many of the team members have been on previous X-Factor incarnations, the title isn't bogged down with the past like the main X-books often seem. Instead, this is a fresh start for X-Factor that even non-superhero fans will find appealing with its neo-noir artwork and pacing.

I love this book.

I thought that this book was the X-book that got dropped on its head a few too many times and walked away better for it. Madrox is one of the most fun and interesting characters I have ever had the pleasure to read. When I saw how Peter David fully brought out the fears and other emotions of rictor and what happened to him when he lost his powers. This really is the Jamie Madrox and friends stories but thats ok because Peter David has made the early 1990's kinda boring multiple man to the character that he is now. Personally I think that Jamie Madrox aka the Multiple Man is the new spider man if not more intriguing. You really feel like you are finding out things about him at the same time he does.

Among the best X-Titles there's ever been

Peter David transformed mutant Jamie Madrox in his earlier miniseries, 'Madrox'. Jamie Madrox had been something of a joke before then, and the fact that he was essentially forgotten was something that didn't bother many people. Until 'Madrox'. Now, Madrox catches a second wind in X-Factor. This is the first volume, detailing Peter David's attempt to turn a group of unimportant, forgotten, or flat-out hated characters into a group of the most interesting people currently inhabitting the Marvel Universe. The book is difficult to compare to anything else in the Marvel Universe. It's clearly more of a traditional superhero book than 'Madrox' was. It's clearly more noir than New Avengers, or other traditional superhero books. It's somewhere right in the middle. This first book deals with two entwined plots. The first is their confrontation with the sinister Singularity Investigations, a group of people who cater to the rich and famous, covering up their crimes and stomping all over anyone who gets in the way. X-Factor Investigations investigate a suspected mind-control plot, and the murder that follows. At the same time, they have to deal with a newcomer to the team - Layla Miller, the walking MacGuffin from 'House of M', who invited herself onto the team and proceeded to make herself indispensible...and creepy as hell. Why did she show up? How do she know what she knows? All questions that the people at X-Factor Investigations are curious about, but they have bigger things on their plate for now. The book deals with both of these plots and more, resolving issues that Marvel left hanging in a number of different poorly planned crossovers. You don't have to have read them to follow what's going on, but the sense of approaching closure will be appreciated by those who were deeply unsatisfied with the endings to those crossovers. As always, Peter David is NOT one to pull the punches, emotionally or physically, and some of the imagery and plots are pretty dark. While the book doesn't fall prey to the 'extreme grim 'n' gritty' plague that's sweeping comics, it doesn't sugar-coat anything for you either, so be prepared to deal with some fairly realistic, depressing violence. For me, it was a welcome change from the consequence-free cartoon violence that is pervasive in our media, but it still may initially surprise some. My advice: push through. When you come out the other end, you'll realize that it really does contribute positively to the story.

Peter David & X-Factor: a perfect match

Peter David's new X-FACTOR series rivals Joss Whedon and John Cassaday's ASTONISHING X-MEN in excellence. Thanks largely to the success of the 5-issued MADROX: MULTIPLE CHOICE limited series, Peter David was able to resuscitate the X-Factor title. In the aftermath of the sweeping HOUSE OF M and DECIMATION story arcs and as a direct continuation of the aforementioned Madrox limited series, Jamie Madrox is still heavily invested in his work in the private investigator field. However, his detective firm undergoes a name change, from XXX Investigations to X-Factor Investigations (because its members thought it sounded too much like they were investigating pornography). In addition to Jamie Madrox (Multiple Man), Guido (Strong Guy), and Rahne Sinclair (Wolfsbane), new members now include Theresa Cassidy (Siryn), Monet St. Croix (M), and the depowered Rictor. A mysterious and manipulative young girl named Layla Miller (Butterfly), who professes to "know stuff," rather abruptly makes herself welcome to the group. Because X-Factor's purview is New York's Mutant Town, the team is constantly reminded of M-Day, the inexplicable event in which 90% of the world's mutants lost their powers (again, see HOUSE OF M and DECIMATION). So, besides their everyday cases, the team is also trying to unearth what really happened on M-Day. X-FACTOR VOL. 1: THE LONGEST NIGHT presents the first six episodes. And writer Peter David reliably does not disappoint. Now X-Factor is still a "mutant" title; thus, the angst tends to flow heavy and often, as well as a certain sense of bleakness. Peter David does keep the dark tone from being too oppresive by, as always, wisely injecting his trademark humor into the proceedings. The narrative is told from Jamie Madrox's point of view, so the storytelling is somewhat irreverent, in spite of the somber issues raised in the story arcs. Fans of X-Factor and the Madrox limited series, of course, realize that Jamie's flippant side serves to hide a minefield of devastating psychological proportions. Naturally, Multiple Man isn't the only one with problems. In fact, the intrigue of this series doesn't lie in their adversaries or in the action scenes, but, rather, in the interpersonal conflict amongst the team members themselves. This is such a mismatched band of characters: The insufferably condescending, self-absorbed Monet; the brooding, now "ordinary" Rictor; Siryn, who is a recovering alcoholic; Rahne, who persists in opting for violence and who teeters on the verge of losing control, even as she fervently follows her religion; and the very cryptic young Layla Miller. The most complex is Jamie Madrox, whose "Multiple Man" powers are enough to mess up anyone. It's gotten to the point where, at times, Jamie now even questions whether it was he or his duplicate who had slept with someone. Of all of them, Guido seems to be the most "normal" of the lot. Writer Peter David continues to be a boon for comic book fans. X-FACTOR VOL. 1: T
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