Skip to main content
Who is the Black Panther?: A Novel of the Marvel Universe (Marvel Novels #3)

Who is the Black Panther?: A Novel of the Marvel Universe (Marvel Novels #3)

Current price: $9.99
Publication Date: May 8th, 2018
Publisher:
Titan Books
ISBN:
9781785659478
Pages:
368

Description

Third title in Titan Books' Marvel fiction reissue program, featuring the Black Panther.

HE'S KNOWN AS THE BLACK PANTHER.
HIS HOME IS WAKANDA.
WELCOME TO T'CHALLA'S WORLD.

The African nation of Wakanda stood alone as an unconquerable land filled with incredible technological advancements for ten centuries. T'Challa, the latest in a lineage of warrior-kings, is the Black Panther, endowed with enhanced speed and strength, along with a suit made of the indestructible metal that secured his country's future: Vibranium. Now, outsiders have returned to plunder Wakanda's riches-including its store of the rare metal.

Leading this brutal assault is Klaw, an assassin with the blood of T'Challa's father on his hands. Klaw brings with him a powerful army of super-powered mercenaries, all hell-bent on raining death and destruction on this pristine land.

CAN THE BLACK PANTHER PREVAIL AGAINST
SUCH A MASSIVE INVADING FORCE?

About the Author

Jesse J. Holland is a bestselling non-fiction author, longtime comic book and science-fiction fan, and the writer of the children's novel Star Wars: The Force Awakens - Finn's Story, co-author of the late, lamented-by-no-one-except-a-couple-of-diehard-fans collegiate comic strip Hippie and the Black Guy. He is a Race & Ethnicity reporter with The Associated Press in Washington, D.C and currently lives in Bowie, Maryland, with his wife and children.

Praise for Who is the Black Panther?: A Novel of the Marvel Universe (Marvel Novels #3)

Praise for the Film

writer Marc Bernardin wrote for Nerdist. “The chance to fill every corner of their fictional Wakanda with the same level of craft and detail usually reserved for British-star-studded period pieces. An opportunity to tell a story about black lives, which matter and are not defined by their pain but, instead, by their glory. An answer to a culture’s question, ‘When will it be our time in the sun?’”

 The Verge’s Bryan Bishop: “Not only is [the movie] a long-overdue embrace of diversity and representation, it’s a film that actually has something to say — and it’s able to do so without stepping away from the superhero dynamics that make the larger franchise work. It’s gripping, funny and full of spectacle, but it also feels like a turning point, one where the studio has finally recognized that its movies can be about more than just selling the next installment.”