Rocket Raccoon Volume 1: A Chasing Tale, by Skottie Young
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Rocket Raccoon Volume 1: A Chasing Tale, by Skottie Young

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Rocket Raccoon has been a hero to the weak, a champion of good, a heartthrob to many intergalactic females...but his high-flying life of adventure may be a thing of the past when he's framed for murder - and the authorities aren't the only one on his tail! (Get it? Tail?) The real killer is an imposter who seems to be one step ahead of Rocket at every turn...now, it's up to our hero and his best pal Groot to find the truth! With Macho Gomez and the Ex-Terminators tracking him, can Rocket make it out alive and clear his name? Superstar creator Skottie Young brings his A-game as writer and artist on the series we've been waiting decades for. Because really, this is the only Guardian of the Galaxy you actually care about, right?COLLECTING: Rocket Raccoon 1-6
Rocket Raccoon Volume 1: A Chasing Tale, by Skottie Young- Amazon Sales Rank: #77948 in Books
- Brand: Young, Skottie/ Parker, Jake (ILT)
- Published on: 2015-03-03
- Released on: 2015-03-03
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 10.50" h x .50" w x 7.00" l, .99 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 136 pages
About the Author Skottie Young (born April 3 1978) is an American comic book artist, children's book illustrator and writer. He is best known for his work with various Marvel Comics characters, his comic book adaptations of L. Frank Baum's Oz books with Eric Shanower and a series of novels with Neil Gaiman

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Most helpful customer reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Fun little sci fi comic romp By Tredain Fun little sci fi comic romp. The art is cute, detailed, full of action and really eye popping. It's somewhat standalone, though it really helps to know Rocket's background (particularly his comic origins) Moods swing between endearing, funny, and ass kicking; it's a good mix though there's a fair bit of violence and (censored) swearing, so probably not for little ones. Would make a worthwhile gift for any teen or older that's into the character.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. "Ain't no thing like me, except me." By Anarchy in the US Ever since the release of 2014's Guardians of the Galaxy, Disney/Marvel had had a wealth of success off of the rag-tag team only selective fans knew about for years. And with success, it means way more Guardians to sell the image further beyond the confines of simply being a team. Case in point is Rocket Raccoon and Groot, arguably the two biggest hits of the film with Star-Lord right behind them. Who wouldn't enjoy a crazy talking raccoon and a lovable talking tree? Well, beyond their mega pop culture status now, both Rocket and Groot have had their share of enjoyable stories together over the years (pick up the Rocket Raccoon & Groot: The Complete Collection for example), so giving them their own on-going comic series is a no-brainer (yes, it's predominantly about Rocket and it has his name on the cover, but Groot tags along everywhere Rocket goes). And for the most part, this is one fun series.Collecting issues #1-6, these are the adventures of the aptly named raccoon when he is off duty and not saving the universe with the Guardians of the Galaxy. Currently Rocket is just on a date with an alien girl watching his friend/companion/muscle/houseplant Groot in a wrestling match and all of a sudden, Rocket is wanted for murder. It seems another raccoon is going around killing people that looks just like Rocket and since he is the last of his kind in the universe, everyone thinks Rocket is the culprit. Now on the run from the law, Rocket has to clear his name from this imposter raccoon, while a shadowy organization is in the background following Rockets every movement. That organization? His ex-girlfriends!Thanks to the works of Hawkeye and Daredevil since Marvel NOW!, the company has done a great job at giving more humor and lighter-toned comics in the market place. Ms.Marvel, Secret Avengers, She-Hulk, Squirrel Girl, Superior Foes of Spider-Man, and even the Legendary Star-Lord are examples of this. Rocket Raccoon is another title worthy of that list and is probably the most extreme of the bunch - and that's a good thing.Skottie Young has made a name for himself with his incredibly cartoony variant covers in Marvel, as well as his art work on Oz Omnibus. But as writer, the only thing he's done thus far is Young Marvel: Little X-Men, Little Avengers, Big Trouble. And just like his Young Marvel, the guy can write extremely great humor to match his extremely Looney Tunes-like art work. Young's version of Rocket has tidbits of his usual gun tooting self, but this is his own version of the character not like the film or normal comic versions. He does everything to the extreme in this series to mouthing off, cursing, drinking, killing (hey he keeps count of his kills!), fraternizing with women, and quoting various pop-culture references in movies, music, and general stuff. Sure there's a plot going on with the look-a-like raccoon and armada of ex-girlfriends (you'll see what I mean), but this series revels in its humor and visual design that is akin to Looney Tunes. Everything from running away into a sewer, to go-to and breaking out of jail at the same time, to fighting a whole army of war ships, jumping across the galaxy looking for treasure from a treasure map, and just helping his talking-dog friend, Cosmo, into an investigation of missing robots. This is just crazy and fun stuff.And while issues #1-4 makes up the prime story arc in this volume, issues 5 and 6 are stand-alone stories. Issue #5 is a "I am Groot" tale that Groot actually gives a story to some campers. Because all Groot can say is "I am Groot", the entire tale is said with various expressions of the phrase with the pictures showcasing the characters intent behind the phrase. It's brilliant storytelling as it makes readers diagnose the panels intently on what is going on and shows Youngs great art that a story can be cleverly displayed with the same phrase "I am Groot".Which is one of the reasons why I picked up this book is Young's incredible art work. Tons of stylish detail, numerous little winks and nods in the backgrounds you have to take your time to see (including Jason Arron's Southern Bastards and Neil Gaiman's Sandman series). There is a ton of stuff to look for that Young doesn't disappoint in design. As I already mentioned about issue #5's art style, another big example is Rocket and Groot breaking out of jail in a two-page spread montage sequence that has both characters crawling, shooting, swimming, and digging through a maze-design that begins with "Start" from the lower left corner of the page and you follow the maze through great detail until the very top-right hand side that says "End". This is just amazingly fun art work and pushes the art narrative to extremes.I simply have mentioned Jake Parker picks up the slack on art for issue #5 and does issue #6 reasonably well. It may not be Youngs art, but it does bold well with the tone of the series.So here are the problems I have and explain the 4 stars. Get beyond the crazy humor and insane art, Young's writing is mediocre. All the energy in the first two issues dyes out by issue 3 and 4 and close out the fake raccoon/ex-girlfriends arc in a anti-climatic way, as well as odd reasoning for the villains purpose. Don't get me wrong, Young does show signs of deeper meaning in one page where Rocket breaks down his outer loud-mouth self and cries, yet most of the book is tucked away in 99% of humor to hide the plot. And issues 5 and 6 are stand-alone tales. So I don't know if Young can continue to keep the energy of the series going for long, as well as giving it some plot to maintain itself.Either way, ROCKET RACCOON VOL.1: A CHASING TAIL is one heck on an enjoyable and great looking comic. If you're looking for a hell of a fun time with the Guardians film breakout characters, this is a good opening volume. I don't know if this series can continue on in the same demeanor though for Rocket Raccoon Volume 2. Still a fun pick up.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Rocket hits with both barrels in his solo series By Dan Pace (feral atom) Collects Rocket Raccoon 1-6. Painted hardcover with a digital download copy. There are also 4 pages of alternate covers as extras. The digital download looks great, allowing you to read page by page or panel by panel. Zoom is also supported on any element. Skottie Young's artwork looks great with focus on the details, especially his covers.After the hit movie, Guardians of the Galaxy, Rocket stars in his own series for the first time since the 80s, and that was a 4-issue limited series.Skottie Young writes all six issues and does art duties on 1-5, with Jake Parker on 5 and 6. The first arc intertwines two threads. First, Rocket is wanted but insists there is someone else out there perpetrating these crimes that looks just like him. The fact that he's always bragging that he's the last of his kind is used against him. The second thread deals with an armada of ex-girlfriends that are looking to even the score. (Chasing Tail ;)The covers are amazing! The art and colors are great (if you like skottie young's style, of course). The writing is fun, but probably not for young kids (there's some racy sub-text in a few places). Young does a good job of capturing Rocket's scarcasm and love of big guns that go boom from Abnett & Lanning and James Gunn. Issue #5 takes the "I am Groot" joke to the extreme, probably a bit too far.
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