Marvel 1602: New World
by Greg Pak, Greg Tocchini (Illustrator)
Marvel 1602 Universe (New World 1-5), Marvel 1602: New World (Collections and Selections — 1-5)
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When Captain America was thrust back in time, it changed reality as we know it. In this return to the world of 1602, dinosaurs still roam the earth, and the Marvel super heroes we know came to exist 500 years earlier.Tags
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Member Reviews
While not as great as the previous two, it certainly works. The strength of the whole series is capturing the sense of the 17th century and placing the characters in that context in a way we can still recognize them. In this volume, J.Jonah Jameson is definitely recognizable, so to speak. Some things never change, and seeing him was most amusing. The end of the tale seem a bit of a compromise, but the very last scene does leave things open. Overall, it was a pretty quick read, and maybe that is why I did not rate it as high as the others. It did not quite feel as immersive as the others. I did find myself missing Rojhaz (Steve Rogers).
In a follow-up to Gaiman’s wonderful take on an early 17th-century Marvel Universe, Greg Pak bears the torch all the way the Roanoke colony. Here, Peter Parquagh, who works for the broadsheet The Daily Trumpet, gets bitten by a strange spider, and all of a sudden, he has these super powers.
Meanwhile, King John sends his advisor, a wicked man by the name of David Banner, to the Americas, where he will keep tabs on the colony. Banner, though, carries a horrible secret: when brought to anger, he transforms into a giant beast, strong and frightening, but truly less of a monster than Banner. This hulking creature to which he transforms is a hero, while Banner is a miserable, vile, tortuous man.
It is these two witchbreed, and the shape show more shifting Virginia Dare, who must prevent Norman Osborne from swindling the native American people, all the while looking out for a Spaniard dressed in an iron suit of armor, with a bone to pick with Banner.
While not living up to its predecessor in storytelling or art, 1602: New World does provide further story to whet the appetite of those who enjoyed the first volume, furthering the adventures of that universe’s Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk. Definitely worth a read if you’re a fan of the first volume. Maybe worth skipping if Marvel 1602 didn’t catch your fancy. show less
Meanwhile, King John sends his advisor, a wicked man by the name of David Banner, to the Americas, where he will keep tabs on the colony. Banner, though, carries a horrible secret: when brought to anger, he transforms into a giant beast, strong and frightening, but truly less of a monster than Banner. This hulking creature to which he transforms is a hero, while Banner is a miserable, vile, tortuous man.
It is these two witchbreed, and the shape show more shifting Virginia Dare, who must prevent Norman Osborne from swindling the native American people, all the while looking out for a Spaniard dressed in an iron suit of armor, with a bone to pick with Banner.
While not living up to its predecessor in storytelling or art, 1602: New World does provide further story to whet the appetite of those who enjoyed the first volume, furthering the adventures of that universe’s Spider-Man and the Incredible Hulk. Definitely worth a read if you’re a fan of the first volume. Maybe worth skipping if Marvel 1602 didn’t catch your fancy. show less
Graphic Novel Book Club:
Sadly, while I was really excited to read the 1602 series/universe all as one, I was not very impressed by the actual use of the characters, plotlines, and especially side series. A lot of it felt like really big shoutouts being tenuously connected so that old fans would understand but the new reader wouldn't understand what was going on at all.
Sadly, while I was really excited to read the 1602 series/universe all as one, I was not very impressed by the actual use of the characters, plotlines, and especially side series. A lot of it felt like really big shoutouts being tenuously connected so that old fans would understand but the new reader wouldn't understand what was going on at all.
An unconvincing sequel to Marvel 1602...
This was just really really awful.
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418 works; 7 members
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Series

Marvel 1602 Universe
5 works (New World 1-5)

Marvel 1602: New World
5 works (Collections and Selections — 1-5)
Belongs to Publisher Series
100% Marvel (23)
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Marvel 1602: New World
- Original publication date
- 2005
- People/Characters
- Hulk; James VI and I, King of Scots and King of England; David Banner; Peter Parquagh; Spider-Man; Virginia Dare (show all 22); Norman Osborne; Jonah Jameson; Nick Fury (Nicholas Fury); Ananias Dare; Rojhaz; Captain America; Lord Iron; Iron Man; Captain Ross; James Rhodes; Steve Rogers; Spider; Marioac; J. Jonah Jameson; Thunderbolt Ross; Dum Dum Dugan
- Important places
- Roanoke Island, North Carolina, USA; London, England, UK; Earth-311
- Important events
- Roanoke Colony; 17th century; 1600s; Jacobean Era
Classifications
- Genre
- Graphic Novels & Comics
- DDC/MDS
- 741 — Arts & recreation Drawing & decorative arts Drawing
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 142
- Popularity
- 229,694
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (2.98)
- Languages
- 6 — English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 5
- ASINs
- 3






























































