Top products from r/marvelmemes
We found 11 product mentions on r/marvelmemes. We ranked the 10 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.
2. Three Parts Dead (Craft Sequence)
Sentiment score: -1
Number of reviews: 1
Tor Books
4. The Threat of Thanos (Marvel Avengers) (Little Golden Book)
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
5. E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial: The Classic Illustrated Storybook (Pop Classics)
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Steven Spielberg's classic sci-fi story of interplanetary friendship makes a perfect picture book for the whole family. When E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial was released in theaters back in 1982, its bittersweet story enchanted millions.Now the cinematic blockbuster is transformed into an illustrated sto...
7. The Cultural Front: The Laboring of American Culture in the Twentieth Century
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
Used Book in Good Condition
8. Help Your Dragon Learn From Mistakes: Teach Your Dragon It’s OK to Make Mistakes. A Cute Children Story To Teach Kids About Perfectionism and How To Accept Failures. (My Dragon Books)
Sentiment score: 0
Number of reviews: 1
You can call the similarities superficial all you want, but it's totally copied homework at the end of the day. It's like the time in high school that I got a bunch of awards for an "original" fiction piece that lifted setting and plot notes from a book I had read with my own characters and a few other changes. You could say I made an original work, and that it still took a lot of skill and creativity to do. But one thing's for sure, if any of the judges along the way had been familiar with the book, I wouldn't have been winning awards for an 'original story'
Oh wow, you guys get these so late.
I can remember them transitioning from cassette to CD haha.
We're currently on 103
https://www.amazon.co.uk/NOW-Thats-What-Call-Music/dp/B07S21DDS5/
>Steve Rogers grew up poor in the Great Depression, the son of a single mother who insisted he stayed in school despite the trend of the time (his father died when he was a child; in some versions, his father is a brave WWI veteran, in others an alcoholic, either or both of which would be appropriate given what happened to WWI veterans in the Great Depression) and then orphaned in his late teens when his mother died of TB.[2] And he came of age in New York City at a time when the New Deal was in full swing, Fiorello LaGuardia was mayor, the American Labor Party was a major force in city politics, labor unions were on the move, the Abraham Lincoln Brigade was organizing to fight fascism in Spain in the name of the Popular Front, and a militant anti-racist movement was growing, that equated segregation at home with Nazism abroad that will eventually feed into the “Double V” campaign.
>
>Then he became a fine arts student. To be an artist in New York City in the 1930s was to be surrounded by the “Cultural Front.” We’re talking the WPA Arts and Theater Projects, Diego Rivera painting socialist murals in Rockefeller Center, Orson Welles turning Julius Caesar into an anti-fascist play and running an all-black Macbeth and “The Cradle Will Rock,” Paul Robeson was a major star, and so on. You couldn’t really be an artist and have escaped left-wing politics. And if a poor kid like Steve Rogers was going to college as a fine arts student, odds are very good that he was going to the City College of New York at a time when an 80% Jewish student body is organizing student trade unions, anti-fascist rallies, and the “New York Intellectuals” were busily debating Trotskyism vs. Stalinism vs. Norman Thomas Socialism vs. the New Deal in the dining halls and study carrels.
>
>And this Steve Rogers, who’s been exposed to all of what New York City has to offer, becomes an explicit anti-fascist. In the fall of 1940, over a year before Pearl Harbor, he first volunteers to join the army to fight the Nazis specifically. This isn’t an apolitical patriotism forged out of a sense that the U.S has been attacked; rather, Steve Rogers had come to believe that Nazism posed an existential threat to the America he believed in. New Deal America.
Italicized for emphasis.
Yup! I've bought a bunch of those for them and for myself as well. Not Golden Books, but these were big hits when I got them last year:
Night Night, Groot https://www.amazon.com/dp/1484732820/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_sieTBbXYNP4KZ
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial: The Classic Illustrated Storybook (Pop Classics) https://www.amazon.com/dp/1683690109/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_4neTBbRMB055V
Alien Next Door https://www.amazon.com/dp/1785650262/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_8peTBb61QXT9Q
Relevant. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Bob-Builder-Legend-Golden-Hammer/dp/B002W87QFK
Sony needs to read this very educational book, give us Spider-Man back, and get their crap together.
If this idea interests you, allow me to recommend Three Parts Dead.
>A god has died, and it's up to Tara, first-year associate in the international necromantic firm of Kelethres, Albrecht, and Ao, to bring Him back to life before His city falls apart.
>Her client is Kos, recently deceased fire god of the city of Alt Coulumb. Without Him, the metropolis's steam generators will shut down, its trains will cease running, and its four million citizens will riot.
>Tara's job: resurrect Kos before chaos sets in. Her only help: Abelard, a chain-smoking priest of the dead god, who's having an understandable crisis of faith.
>When Tara and Abelard discover that Kos was murdered, they have to make a case in Alt Coulumb's courts and their quest for the truth endangers their partnership, their lives, and Alt Coulumb's slim hope of survival.
>Set in a phenomenally built world in which lawyers ride lightning bolts, souls are currency, and cities are powered by the remains of fallen gods, Max Gladstone's Craft Sequence introduces readers to a modern fantasy landscape and an epic struggle to build a just society.