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Alex Segura

Auteur van Secret Identity

30+ Werken 473 Leden 28 Besprekingen

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Bevat de naam: Alex Segura

Fotografie: photo by Irina Peschan

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Werken van Alex Segura

Secret Identity (2022) 171 exemplaren
Star Wars Poe Dameron: Free Fall (2020) 81 exemplaren
Silent City (2013) 54 exemplaren
Archie Meets KISS (2012) 22 exemplaren
Down the Darkest Street (2016) 19 exemplaren
Blackout (2018) 17 exemplaren
Dangerous Ends (2017) 16 exemplaren
Miami Midnight (Pete Fernandez) (2019) 14 exemplaren
The Black Ghost Season One: Hard Revolution (2021) — Auteur — 11 exemplaren
Archie #635 (2012) 4 exemplaren
Scarlet Sisters (2022) — Auteur — 3 exemplaren
Bad Beat (2016) 3 exemplaren
Shallow Grave (2017) 3 exemplaren
The Archies #1 (2017) 3 exemplaren
The mysterious micro-face (2023) 2 exemplaren
Archie #639 (2012) 2 exemplaren
The Archies #3 (2017) 1 exemplaar
The Archies #0 (2017) 1 exemplaar
DARKNESS WE BROUGHT BACK, THE (2023) 1 exemplaar
Archie #660 (2014) 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

Sword Stone Table: Old Legends, New Voices (2021) — Medewerker — 172 exemplaren
The Best American Mystery and Suspense 2021 (2021) — Medewerker — 57 exemplaren
Stories of Jedi and Sith (2022) — Medewerker — 41 exemplaren
The Most Important Comic Book on Earth (2021) — Medewerker — 39 exemplaren
Collectibles (2021) — Medewerker — 20 exemplaren
Witnesses for the Dead: Stories (2022) — Medewerker — 20 exemplaren
Both Sides: Stories from the Border (2020) — Medewerker — 13 exemplaren
Killing Malmon (2010) — Medewerker — 6 exemplaren
Protectors 2: Heroes (2015) — Medewerker — 1 exemplaar

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Algemene kennis

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Alex Segura’s Secret Identity: A Novel follows Carmen Valdez, an assistant at a minor comic book company in 1975 New York City. Growing up in Miami, she loved comic books and has fond memories of sharing them with her father as a little girl. She finally made it to the industry, but the company is struggling and her boss won’t entertain her pitches.

One night, her coworker comes to her asking to partner on creating a new book. It’s the opportunity Carmen has been waiting for, if not perfect, and she sketches out the major points of a character somewhat inspired by her own life. Just as their character is ready to go to print, Carmen finds her friend murdered.

She begins retracing what happened to him and where he went, learning about a seedy underbelly of third-tier comic publishers and slowly discovering people’s secrets as she begins to act more like her character. Complicating matters are ghosts from her own past catching up to her in New York and clouding her instincts.

Segura crafts a solid noir story while fully immersing the reader in the comic book market of the mid-70s, with the clash between those who wanted to elevate the art form and others who viewed it as a way to make a quick buck on something ephemeral. Elements of the story and the world Segura created with fictional publisher Triumph resemble Michael Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, if only in his success in integrating his fictional world into actual history. The rest is pure Segura, with a solid mystery that draws the reader in until they can’t put the book down. Great for comic book fans, but welcoming to newcomers as well.
… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
DarthDeverell | 12 andere besprekingen | Feb 17, 2024 |
I love you Araña. I was never a Peter Parker fan. I didn't hate him, I enjoyed the 90s cartoon a lot! And I enjoyed Tom Holland and Tobey Maguire's Peter Parkers, and I lovvveeeeeeee the Spider-verse movies.

But Araña? I read and loved Anya Corazon. She was a fav and while I lost track of her, after her solo series ended, I still love the comics.

Meanwhile Spider-man 2099, Miguel, has become an obsession since Across the Spider-verse. did I read almost every fic on AO3 for the Miguel x Reader tag? Yes, yes I am. So together they are FUN. Anya is quippy and bantery and Miguel is a surly mess. I love it.

Its a fairly decent way to edge into the Spider-verse too, if like me, the idea of it is sooooo big. As a Marvel novel, Segura does a good job of balancing it without alienating veteran fans or new fans.

Please write more? Please??
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
lexilewords | 2 andere besprekingen | Dec 28, 2023 |
My husband and sons are huge comics geeks. I am not. But somehow I came across this title and thought it would be perfect as a Christmas gift. In fact, I've apparently thought it would be perfect for my husband two Christmases in a row. As I came into the house this year, pleased as punch with my discovery, I glanced down at his bookshelves, only to see this same book already there. I hid this year's copy and asked him about it. He said he has not yet read it but was looking forward to it. Crestfallen (and now needing another gift for my husband), I decided to read it myself so I could best determine which of my sons was getting the duplicate gift. This was completely out of my wheelhouse and I didn't have the insider comics knowledge or interest that I suspect elevates this novel.

Carmen Valdez grew up in Miami, loving comics. When she moves to New York City in 1975, she takes a job with Triumph Comics, a publisher several steps below Marvel and DC. She's the publisher/owner's assistant but what she'd really like to do is to write comics. But the industry, which seems to be fading out, is not welcoming to women and their perspectives. She is frustrated but she continues to try and break into writing despite her boss's constant dismissal of her scripts. So when Harvey, a mediocre writer at Triumph, comes to her and tells her he wants her help writing a script, she agrees despite knowing she can't admit to her involvement with the book, if it even gets published. Carmen and Harvey, but mainly Carmen, create a female superhero named Claudia Calla, the Lynx. After Harvey turns the six scripts in without Carmen's name on them, he is murdered. So now Carmen needs to figure out how to reclaim her character, who turns out to be a runaway hit, who killed Harvey, and if she's now in danger too.

Segura obviously knows the comics industry and its history and he deftly weaves them into a story about much more than comics. Carmen is dealing with the misogyny of her chosen industry, the homophobia of the age, and the gritty reality of living in 1970s New York City. Her feelings about Harvey (he's a friend, he's a jerk, he's a friend, he's only a co-worker acquaintance, he's a friend, he's a double crosser, he's a friend, etc.) are completely inconsistent and change page to page depending on which feeling drives the story better. There are also several plot threads that come to great prominence and then just peter out. Illustrated pages from Lynx's comic book were sprinkled throughout the story but were distracting, not having enough connection to the plot of the story to make them valuable to the story, especially for a non-comic reader like me. I do think that my husband and the son who will be getting this pre-read copy for Christmas this year will enjoy the book more than I did.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
whitreidtan | 12 andere besprekingen | Dec 24, 2023 |
Absolutely loved this book! You don't have to be familiar with the comic business to love this book, but if you are it adds a whole other level. I fell in love with the characters in this book and they all felt very human and real to me, so much so that i audibly said "Oh no!" a few times when reading it!
 
Gemarkeerd
shanembailey | 12 andere besprekingen | Dec 21, 2023 |

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Statistieken

Werken
30
Ook door
10
Leden
473
Populariteit
#52,094
Waardering
½ 3.6
Besprekingen
28
ISBNs
48
Talen
4

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