Fallen Angel (comics) - Collected Editions

Collected Editions

Both series have been collected into trade paperbacks.

The DC series:

  • Fallen Angel (collects issues #1-6, 144 pages, July 2004, ISBN 1-4012-0225-X)
  • Down To Earth (collects issues #7-12, 144 pages, January 2007, ISBN 1-4012-1268-9)

The IDW series:

  • To Serve in Heaven (collects issues #1-5, 120 pages, September 2006, ISBN 1-933239-77-8)
  • To Serve in Hell (collects issues #6-10, 128 pages, March 2007, ISBN 1-60010-073-2)
  • Back In Noire (collects issues #11-16, 149 pages, August 2007, ISBN 1-60010-099-6)
  • Heroine Addiction (collects issues #17-21, 128 pages, February 2008, ISBN 1-60010-156-9)
  • Red Horse Riding (collects issues #22-26, 146 pages, July 2008, ISBN 1-60010-301-4)
  • Cities of Light and Dark (collects issues #27-33, 136 pages, April 2009, ISBN 1-60010-350-2)
  • Reborn (collects issues #1-4, 104 pages, January 2010, ISBN 1-60010-586-6)
  • Return of the Son (collects issues #1-4, 104 pages, July 2011, ISBN 1-60010-975-1)

There are 2 oversized hardcovers collecting the first twenty-six issues of the IDW run, as well as additional material like the original pitch.

  • Fallen Angel: The Premiere Collection (collects issues #1-13, 320 pages, May 2007, ISBN 1-60010-076-7)
  • Fallen Angel: The Premiere Collection Volume 2 (collects issues #14-26, 328 pages, July 2009, ISBN 1-60010-446-0)

There are 3 Omnibus versions of Fallen Angel which collect issues #1 through #20 of the DC series, #1-33 and Reborn #1-4 of the IDW series. All are published by IDW.

  • Fallen Angel Omnibus Volume 0 (collects issues #1-20 (DC), 464 pages, July 2010, ISBN 1-60010-674-9)
  • Fallen Angel Omnibus Volume 1 (collects issues #1-21 (IDW), 512 pages, March 2009, ISBN 1-60010-382-0)
  • Fallen Angel Omnibus Volume 2 (collects issues #22-33 plus Reborn #1-4 (IDW), 360 pages, January 2011, ISBN 1-60010-847-4)

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Famous quotes containing the words collected and/or editions:

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    Seventeenth-century English proverb, collected in Outlandish Proverbs, George Herbert (1640)

    The next Augustan age will dawn on the other side of the Atlantic. There will, perhaps, be a Thucydides at Boston, a Xenophon at New York, and, in time, a Virgil at Mexico, and a Newton at Peru. At last, some curious traveller from Lima will visit England and give a description of the ruins of St. Paul’s, like the editions of Balbec and Palmyra.
    Horace Walpole (1717–1797)