Rising Stars: Visitations (Rising Stars (Image Comics)) this question feed

asked by ronmiller on October 31, 2006 9:44 PM
Rising Stars is the story of the Pederson Specials, a group of 113 people empowered by a single event. In the late Sixties a fireball struck the town of Pederson, Illnois granting fantastic powers to the 113 children who were in utero at the time of impact. They grew up as the world watched. Labeled the "Specials" by the Media, their powers were monitored and catalogued by the United States Government. Public perception of them changed often. Were they the future of mankind? A scourge? A random occurrence? Heroes? Villains? Role models or simply caricatures? What would be their impact on culture and society? They were a waried as kids and adults ever are; some were more powerful, some less. As adults they became many things: a policeman, a corporate symbol, a singer, an assassin, a writer, a painter, a thief, a preacher. Some found celebrity, some notoriety, while others simply went to work and raised families like everyone else. But they all carried inside them a seed of something great. Something special. Something that made them stars. As their epic stories unfolded, there were other stories as well...of their lives and the lives of those around them. This book is about those stories. Collected here are the short stories about the Specials, a bit about their beginnings, a bit about their middles and just a little bit about their end.


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This teensy, teeny book (note the cheap price) contains four articles about the Rising Stars. Well, three of the four do. The 4th is about a kid who claims to have powers to escape his mom and schoolmates. No, these are not plot-important stories. These stories are in no particular order and take place outside of the timeline and story arc of the other two Rising Stars books. Personally, i'd read this after Rising Stars 1 (Born In Fire). The stories here are character studies, mostly while the kids are young, so don't expect much action.

If you read Rising Stars, this is mostly worth reading, although hardly as gripping as the story arc stories in the other two volumes. If you don't read Rising Stars, there's no sense in reading this one.

reviewed by teacher on November 13, 2006 7:52 AM

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All of the Rising Star books are perhaps at the top of the art form. I have all of them, and they are gripping reads, and I've read them over and over again
reviewed by selena on November 24, 2006 10:19 PM

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