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Miles Archer

(18,837 posts)
Sun Mar 13, 2016, 04:54 PM Mar 2016

Marvel Comics rebooting "Black Panther," written by Ta-Nehisi Coates

http://collider.com/black-panther-comic-ta-nehisi-coates-images/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=collidersocial

Get Your First Look at the ‘Black Panther’ Comic Written by Ta-Nehisi Coates



Just this past September we received word that The Atlantic correspondent and author of “Between the World and Me” Ta-Nehisi Coates would be writing a year-long issue of “Black Panther” for Marvel Comics. In December, we got our first look at some of that project’s concept art along with an update from Coates himself, but now, with the inaugural issue about to hit comic book stores, we have a solid look at the finished product. The first-look pages come courtesy of one of Coates’ articles for The Atlantic, giving readers a bonus insight into his writing process and the formation of the comic.

For Coates, writing “Black Panther” was the culmination of a long-standing obsession with Marvel comics. Issues of “X-Men” and “Spider-Man” still hold a place in his heart and mind, and were clearly formative in his youth. Though Coates had to, admittedly, switch gears between writing as a journalist and penning a comic book story, his approach at its core wasn’t all that different. He talks about that method at length in The Atlantic article.

Here’s just a brief sample of Coates talking about the opportunity to write “Black Panther” and what it meant to him:

Some of the best days of my life were spent poring over the back issues of The Uncanny X-Men and The Amazing Spider-Man. As a child of the crack-riddled West Baltimore of the 1980s, I found the tales of comic books to be an escape, another reality where, very often, the weak and mocked could transform their fallibility into fantastic power. That is the premise behind the wimpy Steve Rogers mutating into Captain America, behind the nerdy Bruce Banner needing only to grow angry to make his enemies take flight, behind the bespectacled Peter Parker being transfigured by a banal spider bite into something more.

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