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    ECHO #1

    ECHO » ECHO #1 released by Abstract Studio on March 2008.

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    Terry Moore is back with a new series, and this time he's going nuclear! Julie Martin is taking photographs in the desert when she witnesses a massive explosion in the sky. Covered in the bizarre, metallic fallout, she races home to find a chunk of the mercury-like metal came with her. When the metal becomes attached to her skin, Julie is unaware that she is host to a new symbiotic technology: a living bomb!

    The first printing of this issue will feature a special silver-embossed cover!

    Near Moon Lake in the Nevada desert Julie Martin innocently photographs the plants and wildlife while high over head an experimental suit is being tested by one of its creators.

    That experiment becomes murder when the test subject Annie Trotter is put in an impossible situation. The resulting explosion rains the suit down in the form of beads all over Julie and her truck. Park ranger Dillon Murphy is in the area and sees the explosion but is prevented from investigating by troops guarding the area.

    Julie escapes home unable to remove the beads on her skin. She finds a hunk of metal in the tailgate of her truck and when she puts it against her chest to see if the shape matches it melds to her body and the beads gather towards it.

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    3.5 stars

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    Indie comics need more attention 0

    This is my first time reading a Terry Moore book. The strange thing is that his name comes in conversations all the time and I have no problem touting his praises. He's not only an amazing artist but he's a swell guy. Though he's nothing like Joss Whedon in terms of his style, Terry Moore is a man who has found success in writing about feminine stories. Echo #1 is already in a 2nd printing! The blogosphere is exploding with recommendations of this title. First of all, because it's a no. 1, it's ...

    1 out of 1 found this review helpful.
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