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Mass Market Paperback X-Men Mutant Empire 1: Siege Book

ISBN: 1572971142

ISBN13: 9781572971141

X-Men Mutant Empire 1: Siege

(Part of the X-Men Mutant Empire (#1) Series and Marvel Comics prose Series)

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Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$7.19
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Book Overview

The X-Men's oldest and deadliest enemy, Magneto, has taken over the Sentinels, powerful mutant-hunting robots, and the X-Men must fight the Acolytes, Magneto's mutant followers, and the United States... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Believe the hype...

This is a REALLY good book! The Marvel novels were on a little roll here, and this one keeps the ball rollin'! Mr. Golden has really done fine work (again). He seems like one of the few writers who wrote these books to truly "get" the characters they are writing about...go figure. Just about every character gets some backstory, to help you truly understand them, and they each have distinct characteristics that set them apart from each other (save for a few of the Acolytes, but oh well). Great job, and I look forward to the rest of the trilogy...

Definitely one of the best X-Men novels

X-Men: Mutant Empire Book 1 - Siege, by Christopher GoldenI'm a longtime fan of the X-Men. I discovered the comic book over 10 years ago and have been following it or one of its cousin books ever since. In that time, I've also managed to compile a sizeable back-issue collection, meaning I have most of the X-Men comics from 1975 and on. That leaves me with huge expectations for every X-Men issue, TV series, movie, and novel that comes out. Needless to say, I've been disappointed by many of them. Sometimes, my only wish is that a new X-Men related product merely be decent, if not great. Siege, the first part of the Mutant Empire trilogy by Christopher Golden, meets and exceeds every single one of my expectations. One thing I love about this series, and about each individual novel in it, is the pacing. With about 350 pages per novel, Golden has a great deal of room to work with, and he puts that to great use. He maintains suspense by actually having two simultaneous plots (although one is clearly a relative subplot). The larger issue is that Magneto has taken control of the Sentinels (mutant-killing robots), and has declared himself ruler of New York City. One half of the X-Men deals with that, and the other half goes into space to rescue Corsair, Cyclops' father. I'll be honest - the latter plot is doomed to be filler from the start, and it doesn't occupy my interest much. But beyond the plot pacing, the characterization is almost dead-on. The X-Men are just how I remember them from the comic books - complete with accurate dialogue, realistic character interaction, and even some personality development. It's a testament to Golden's skills that he continues to flesh out characters with over 20 (and in some cases, 30) years of history. Each of the characters has a particular worldview, and Golden not only gives each one fair representation, but he also gives the reader a deeper understanding of how each character ticks. However, I do find that some parts of the novel degenerate into comfortable, "easy" writing. One of my complaints is Golden's description of both Deathbird and Henry Peter Gyrich (the two main villains in the novel) as "evil and insane." Ho-hum. Although he slips in a bit of irony by having Deathbird's obvious paranoia and insanity justified, he paints Gyrich as so thorough a bigot that he borders on contradicting established comic history (but then, that's a fanboy gripe). I like it that Magneto, soon to be the principle villain of the story, receives very little attention and development in the first novel. His basic motivations and plans are spelled out at the very beginning, and then Golden proceeds to develop the character slowly as the novel proceeds. It's a great way to build suspense toward the inevitable takeover of New York. In short, Siege is one of the best pieces of X-Men literature I have read, including the comic books. Christopher Golden has an excellent handle on the basics of fine writing, as well as the complex his

It was WELL worth the money

I would say that this is the best X-Men book I have read, but I haven't read the other two books yet! I was not in any way let down by this book. The character interacion was great, the storyline was well thought out and original, and I love the details that are given! I would pay three times as much for the next two parts!!!

first X-Men book is one of the best

This book was great, no doubt about it. The characterization was dead-on, and better than in many of the comic books themselves. Michael Golden even gave the Acolytes personalities, something I thought could never be done.

Very thrilling book. Perfect for X-Men fans!!!

The author put a lot more realism into the character than the actual comic. It always gave a hint of the characters background, making you know him/her a little better. It would seem more enjoyable to the reader if they had expressed previous intrest in the Marvel comic. Once you start reading this book, you can't put it down
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