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Uncanny X-Men Volume 3: Holy War TPB (Uncanny X-Men)
Uncanny X-Men Volume 3: Holy War TPB (Uncanny X-Men)

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Author: Chuck Austen
Publisher: Marvel Comics
Category: Book

List Price: $17.99
Buy New: $4.46
You Save: $13.53 (75%)



New (8) Used (9) Collectible (1) from $4.46

Avg. Customer Rating: 2.0 out of 5 stars 8 reviews
Sales Rank: 139251

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 10.3 x 6.6 x 0.4

ISBN: 0785111336
Dewey Decimal Number: 741
EAN: 9780785111337
ASIN: 0785111336

Publication Date: October 1, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: THIS BOOK IS NEW AND IN EXCELLENT CONDITION. SAME DAY SHIPPING WEEKDAYS BEFORE 3:00PM EST

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Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
The return of the Canadian super team Alpha Flight... but do they return as friends or foes? The hunt for the mysterious religious sect known as the Church of Humanity concludes, but what secrets will they have in store for one of the X-Men? Plus: A wedding between two of the X-Men's longtime members!


Customer Reviews:   Read 3 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Great stuff...fun read   March 3, 2006
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Although I've read many negative reveiws concerning Chuck Austen's run on Uncanny X-Men, I've had the liberty to read this myself and as far as I'm concern it' really good. The only bad points is there art changes and I dslike the crazy pshyco bit with Polaris bur besides that I grant it four stars and that because of the art. It's a different kind of storytelling and that's alright by me.


1 out of 5 stars Unholy   August 25, 2004
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Chuck Austen has definitely achieved much. He was terrible to start with; but he's surpassed all sorts of boundaries. It's like he's trying to prove something.

And this is him at his absolute worst. This story makes no sense, to begin with. (The following will reveal some of the story; but trust me: you don't want to read this garbage, anyway.) The church of Humanity, run by a nun (who was a man, a few issues ago), uses Kurt to reenact a scene from Protestant mythos, to scare Catholics away from the Catholic church. With exploding communion wafers.

And the other stories included are no better. Believe me. Run. Don't look back.

The artwork is no better, by the way. Phillip Tan struggles grasp the basics and fails.



1 out of 5 stars Beware, true X-men fans!   May 7, 2004
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

The character of Sammy is one of the highlights of this story arc, but any REAL X-men fan should RUN! QUICKLY! at any sign of the name Chuck Austen on an X-men comic... See other reviews for additional details, I can't bear the memory of having paid money for this...


1 out of 5 stars Uneven art, Poor Story   January 19, 2004
 4 out of 5 found this review helpful

Since Austen's run on the book started, it has gotten steadily worse, so it shouldn't be a surprise that this, the third collection gets a one-star rating. The artists are Ron Garney, who's capable of some good work, but is not at all at his best here, and Philip Tan, who might be good with more practice. As usual, the plots are contrived, the characterization randomly changes to fit these plots and the dialogue is some of the worst I've read.


3 out of 5 stars There Are Several Storylines in this Book   January 7, 2004
 8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Their titles in the original issues were "Rules of Engagement" [421-422], "Holy War" [423-424], "Sacred Vows" [425-426], and "The Dead Have No Rights" [427]. The Lorna-Alex-Annie triangle takes up more of the book than anything else, so I guess "Holy War" made the title because its issues were the only ones with Wolverine on the cover. It certainly isn't the best story.

My preference is for the ongoing reformation of the Juggernaut subplot [see UNCANNY X-MEN: HOPE and UXM: DOMINANT SPECIES]. Cain Marko takes a big step in the opening story. I know from early back issues that Professor Xavier has long wished that he and his stepbrother could truly be brothers. Their scene together has a really nice ending. I'm happy for both of them.

Alpha Flight was at a disadvantage in their fight with the X-Men. I think on some level they figured out that their deal with the Governor of New York wasn't as clean as they thought. (The Governor wants to use the riot [see NEW X-MEN: RIOT AT XAVIER'S] to shut down the school.) Unfortunately for Alpha Flight and the cops, the Juggernaut is an extremely loyal friend -- and he considers some of the people at Xavier's to be his friends. (Can you say, I sure hope Prof. X has his checkbook handy? I thought you could.)

Speaking of Prof. X, Sage has suggested that Xavier, Jean, and Emma are too powerful to be trusted [see X-TREME X-MEN: SCHISM]. Perhaps that's why Prof. X doesn't use his telepathy at all during this crisis. Instead, he spends most of it on the phone with his lawyer. (At one point, the tone of X's politely understated request to Mr. White reminded me of CPT Kirk's famous suggestion when he's about to be sucked into the Doomsday Machine.)

Because I'm Catholic, I expected to be deeply offended by "Holy War". I found myself laughing instead. Besides the "The Rapture" error, Mr. Austen has Catholic characters quoting from THE NEW REVISED STANDARD VERSION BIBLE, which is Protestant. The Church of Humanity's discarded plan, which involved Nightcrawler, demonstrates no understanding of how our Pope gets elected. (Not to mention that it would have been more likely that people would have recognized Nightcrawler and wondered what the X-Men were doing than to have had the effect the C of H wanted). The facts that Mr. Austen needed are readily available on the Internet, so there's no excuse for his lack of research.
Not even the aftermath of a sickening attack on the school at "Holy War's" beginning can save it from being the stupidest story in the book.

The runnerup for that title is "Sacred Vows". Even though there's no indication that Cyclops told Prof. X about the way Lorna was acting in "Holy War", her behavior in NEW X-MEN: NEW WORLDS and UNCANNY X-MEN: DOMINANT SPECIES should have made Xavier suspect that Lorna might need therapy before getting married. Alex's spectacularly bad timing didn't help.

Except for the very unsubtle last panel, "The Dead Have No Rights" is a pretty good story. Jubilee has to deal with a bigoted cemetery manager while Husk guards their late mutant friend's grave. I'm assuming that the bigot believes that bodies must remain intact for the Resurrection of the Dead at the Second Coming of Christ. Otherwise, his refusal to wait to see if Xavier will pay doesn't make sense. Archangel gets to do a noble deed that I don't think was very wise, considering the way his power works.

Other bits of this book that I also liked were Lorna's wedding plans phone call with her mom, a joke about Kurt's tail, the bachelor and bachelorette parties, Cain and young Sammy's disagreement over who's the best-looking lady at Xavier's, Alex's kindness to Cain and Cain's repayment, Cain's reaction when Chamber and Husk have an argument while Husk is trying to unbury the big guy, and Cain's gentleness with Carter and Sammy. Some fans might enjoy Stacy X's farewell video to Warren.

I'd recommend buying this book for the Juggernaut reformation subplot. If you enjoy reading jaw-droppingly stupid stories that you have to wonder how they ever got past an editor, you might want to buy it for "Holy War". I'm a little surprised that Marvel allowed those issues to be reprinted without adding a page apologizing for that story's errors of fact as well as the implicit assumption that we Catholics are blithering idiots.

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