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The Sensational She-Hulk #54 To Die and Live in L.A.! Part 3 of 6 "Alive Again"
Cover Date: August, 1993
The soap opera keeps on rolling as She-Hulk ponders her fate in limbo with her late mother since killed by Rumbler. Meanwhile, Dr. Daniel "Zapper" Ridge undergoes his own personal feelings into reviving She-Hulk with extra radiation to her body bringing ...
Issue Description
The soap opera keeps on rolling as She-Hulk ponders her fate in limbo with her late mother since killed by Rumbler. Meanwhile, Dr. Daniel "Zapper" Ridge undergoes his own personal feelings into reviving She-Hulk with extra radiation to her body bringing her back to life..and making Dr. Ridge's wife very jealous. 'Heartbreak Hospital' undergoes its dramas in learning She-Hulk's death revealed in the media, stirring the attention to another Hulk enroute. Morris Walters reveals to Louise Mason on the Rumblers' dark past with him before another fight takes effect , and She-Hulk sets to ground down Rumbler in another transformed state.
The Sensational She-Hulk
- Publisher
- Marvel
Volume Description
Sensational She-Hulk Volume 1
This is one for the record books. In the late 1980's and early 1990's, Marvel had a breakthrough in new ideas. Ghost Rider was being printed on all black pages, the junior team New Warriors was at bat, and She-Hulk was making us laugh. Not in the conventional "What The--?!" (a series back in the 1970's) way, but in a parody of Marvel and the comic book industry. Before this book, She-Hulk was a secondary character: her story lines were arguably medium to weak and featured lesser-known characters. She suffered much as Supergirl had suffered in the shadow of her big cousin.
Then, something weird happened: John Byrne relaunched her long cancelled solo book. He was the same writer/artist who had put the She-Hulk on the Fantastic Four and developed her from a 2-D character to a very well-rounded and lovable hero. At first, the title followed the Fantastic Four pattern: there was an alien invasion in issue 2, a classic Golden Age hero in issue 4 (the Blonde Phantom), and the villainous Doctor was in issue 5 (Dr. Bong, not Doom - though she met a Doom later).
The rules were thrown out the window: She-Hulk was jumping pages, tearing holes in the paper of the page to escape, and often yelling at the writer. The series was stand-alone, as in not part of the dozen or so crossovers with an X-Men or Spider-Man title. Remember when the X-Men were funny? She-Hulk was sort of like that... with more laughs.
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