The Boys Omnibus Vol. 1 TPB
The Boys Omnibus Vol. 1 TPB book cover

The Boys Omnibus Vol. 1 TPB

Paperback – April 2, 2019

Price
$23.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
344
Publisher
Dynamite Entertainment
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1524108595
Dimensions
6 x 1 x 10 inches
Weight
1.6 pounds

Description

LIBRARY JOURNAL -- Wee Hughie is a sweet, moralistic Scotsman, desperately in love with his girlfriend. After she is killed during a battle between a careless superhero and his nemesis, Wee Hughie is recruited to work alongside the Boys, a CIA-backed squad tasked with keeping the world's superpowered population under control. Soon Wee Hughie discovers that many of the greatest heroes are secretly vicious and depraved, driven to extreme behavior by their celebrity status and often protected by corporate interests and political operatives who wield even more power than men and women capable of bending steel with their bare hands. Author Ennis ( Sara ) and illustrator Robertson ( Transmetropolitan: Book One ) revel in graphic sex and violence. And while their often juvenile sense of humor may keep some readers at bay, those willing to stick with the series will discover that the more extreme elements of the story juxtapose fascinatingly with a deeply moralistic, human, and even romantic point of view. VERDICT This omnibus volume collects issues 1-15 of the continuing story line that inspired the highly anticipated upcoming Amazon Prime streaming series and should see high interest from readers. LIBRARY JOURNAL -- Wee Hughie is a sweet, moralistic Scotsman, desperately in love with his girlfriend. After she is killed during a battle between a careless superhero and his nemesis, Wee Hughie is recruited to work alongside the Boys, a CIA-backed squad tasked with keeping the world's superpowered population under control. Soon Wee Hughie discovers that many of the greatest heroes are secretly vicious and depraved, driven to extreme behavior by their celebrity status and often protected by corporate interests and political operatives who wield even more power than men and women capable of bending steel with their bare hands. Author Ennis ( Sara ) and illustrator Robertson ( Transmetropolitan: Book One ) revel in graphic sex and violence. And while their often juvenile sense of humor may keep some readers at bay, those willing to stick with the series will discover that the more extreme elements of the story juxtapose fascinatingly with a deeply moralistic, human, and even romantic point of view. VERDICT This omnibus volume collects issues 1-15 of the continuing story line that inspired the highly anticipated upcoming Amazon Prime streaming series and should see high interest from readers.

Features & Highlights

  • This is going to hurt! In a world where costumed heroes soar through the sky and masked vigilantes prowl the night, someone's got to make sure the "supes" don't get out of line. And someone will! Billy Butcher, Wee Hughie, Mother's Milk, The Frenchman, and The Female are The Boys: A CIA-backed team of very dangerous people, each one dedicated to the struggle against the most dangerous force on Earth - superpower! Some superheroes have to be watched. Some have to be controlled. And some of them - sometimes - need to be taken out of the picture. That's when you call in The Boys! Contains: The Boys Vol. 1: The Name of the Game & The Boys Volume 2: Get Some

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(3.1K)
★★★★
25%
(1.3K)
★★★
15%
(775)
★★
7%
(362)
-7%
(-362)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

SO good!

Gory, disgusting, and foul...I loved every page!
64 people found this helpful
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I think I actually like he show better

I bought this because I missed it when it was coming out, too many books already on the pull list and after loving the show I had to read source material but I have to say unlike the Preacher I liked the show better I think the story was tighter and the protagonist more like able. A little disappointed this first volume just kind of flew around the room like a balloon and then fell flat at the end
45 people found this helpful
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Wow. this comicbook is WAAAAY more violent than the TV show.

Ennis and Robertson made one helluva violent comincbook. There is no way they can show these graphics in a public forum. The TV show is watered down 10X compared to this comic book. You have been warned.

Good read though. I recommend it to anyone that has the stomach of the gore and sex.

Darick-with-one-R does a great job on the artistic visuals. He honed those skills on the excellent Transmetropolitan comic book, which I highly recommend any lover-of-science-fiction to read.
33 people found this helpful
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A truely Original take on superheros

Dark, Twisted, Funny, Heartbreaking, Raunchy, and surprisingly Realistic considering what we are learning about celebrity culture today. If you are up for that much reality, check it out.
17 people found this helpful
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Disappointing

One of the few exceptions where the screen adaptation is far superior to the original. I loved the show but hated the comic. I found it so aggressively homophobic and misogynistic that I found pages difficult to read. Even if you take out the cringe factor, the storylines are hard to follow and have very weak character development
16 people found this helpful
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The Boys

I love this comic! Or should I say graphic novel since it is a bit graphic? Anyway, can't wait for the show!
15 people found this helpful
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A Brilliant Series

The Boys is a masterwork of carnage and obscenity, it is true. However, the author shows a surprisingly talent for humor, and emotion that plays well besides the destruction and conspiracies. The violence is intertwined with surprisingly relevant issues such as abuse, sexual assault, trauma, prejudice, alcoholism, and mental illness. I love it, of course: blood, tears, guts, and all. My only wish is that Amazon series doesn't bung (I think I'm using that right) it up.
12 people found this helpful
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CIA vs corporate America? Seriously?

Graphic art is good, but the central premise is loony. The CIA and corporate America read off the same playbook, both being the creations of Wall Street. This series fits into the populist rebranding of the CIA as a squeaky clean, crime fighting organization fighting for truth, justice and the American Way. Nope. Read "The Old Boys: The American Elite and the Origins of the CIA."
8 people found this helpful
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Meh

The book is fine. It’s the Boys. It’s what I wanted. But the conditions it was boxed in and the quality of the book itself lose it 4 stars. I bought this to complete a collection man. And now my Volume One Omnibus has a massive crease in the corner. Smh
6 people found this helpful
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Terrible - overly gory, homophobic, extremely sexist.

The idea is interesting, but the heroes are made to be overly depraved that it's hard to read. Just too much nastiness.
5 people found this helpful