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X-Factor - Volume 2: Life and Death Matters
 
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X-Factor - Volume 2: Life and Death Matters [Paperback]

Peter David , Ariel Olivetti , Dennis Calero

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X-Factor - Volume 2: Life and Death Matters + X-Factor - Volume 3: Many Lives of Madrox + X-Factor - Volume 1: The Longest Night
Price For All Three: CDN$ 36.43

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  • In Stock.
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  • X-Factor - Volume 3: Many Lives of Madrox CDN$ 12.26

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  • X-Factor - Volume 1: The Longest Night CDN$ 12.26

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 136 pages
  • Publisher: Marvel (Aug 15 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0785121463
  • ISBN-13: 978-0785121466
  • Product Dimensions: 17.1 x 1 x 26.4 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 272 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #116,065 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

Jamie Madrox comes face-to-face with the thing that terrifies him the most: having to make a decision. The divisiveness of Civil War has spread to his own team: Half of them want to cooperate with the government; the other half wants to take a stand against it. It's Jamie's choice that may well decide whether X-Factor stays together or cracks apart. And matters aren't being helped by Quicksilver, who offers Rictor the opportunity to get his powers back - but at what price? Plus: They've been a thorn in X-Factor's side since the beginning, and now things are coming to a head. X-Factor's newest assignment causes them to again cross paths with their arch rivals, Singularity Investigations. The result is revelations that strike to the very core of who and what Jamie Madrox is. Collects X-Factor #7-12.

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Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The Best Marvel in the past decade, Jan 3 2010
By J. Holt - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: X-Factor - Volume 2: Life and Death Matters (Paperback)
Marvel has suffered tremendously in quality since 2000, IMHO. Mainly because they let profitability change the orientation the stories were told -- namely, the form of the comic book itself -- the 30 pages. Instead of monthly adventures, you have a story arc stretched over 6 issues so a TPB can be turned out. Most titles have suffered because of this format. For example, the Incredible Hulk, who, when asked to build dramatic tension over 2+ issues, he fails. Big Green isn't that interesting especially when you have to recall what he was doing 2 months prior.

Enter X-Factor and Peter David. Former scribe on the Hulk, his writing has not only leaped bounds here, but he best represents what the genre is capable of now. And I do think you have to consider the TPB comic a different animal than the individual comics most of us when we were young. David, who had to deal with editorial BS like multi-comic crossovers, here takes one of the worst, the Civil War, and integrates it with finesse, adding to it (questioning its very premise), throwing it aside, and not letting Civil War interfere with his main narrative thread: X-Factor's uncovering the Tryp family's connection with "Decimation." Even if you don't know what "House of M," Decimation," or "Civil War" mean, you can enjoy this story. David leaves no thread left hanging, yet is able to preserve his main interest in the family squabbles of X-Factor.

What I love about X-Factor is that it is most soap opera with superhero antics entirely in the background. Although I love the powers the characters have (Madrox is surely one of the most interesting Marvel characters in recent years), its their personalities that David gives us. Each has their own speech styles, an emotional range, and non-verbal tics. These are interesting people, superhero or not. The supervillain thread, looming in the background, is just icing on the cake (although particularly delicious icing: Tryp is quite interesting and a formidable villain for a whole team). Why haven't I been reading this title regularly?!? Time to catch up!

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The series builds, May 6 2008
By Brian Reaves - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: X-Factor - Volume 2: Life and Death Matters (Paperback)
Having started with "Madrox" and then moving on to volume 1 before reading this, I can easily say this is a great book. It's a little slower than the first one, but the payoff in this book is mind-blowing. Layla is still a part of the team doing her "I know stuff" thing, Quicksilver drops by for a scary guest stint, and there's an incredible moment of betrayal by one of the members of X-Factor you'll never see coming. Banshee's daughter deals with his death (from the pages of X-Men), and perhaps the coolest thing of all is how a simple plot thread from the very first issue of the series plays a huge part in the end of this book. Trust me, the story doesn't always move along at a fast pace, but there are enough shock-and-awe moments to keep you reading.

And through it all, Jamie continues to deal with the multiple personalities that are born whenever he's hit. The difference this time around is that he's slowly growing more in control and that's good. The plot device was a good place to start, but if it hadn't changed in a dozen issues the novelty of it would have worn thin.

This is not the book to start the series out on. Go back to the "Madrox" limited series, then get the first one before coming back here. Peter David is doing an incredible job of storytelling here, and you don't want to spoil anything by missing a key point early on.
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  4.5 out of 5 stars 

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