Collected Editions
There has been an assortment of volumes reprinting the original comic books.
The first three story arcs in the series were originally collected in large-size hardcovers which were published in a format similar to European comic book collections. Beginning in 2005, the first two of these same story arcs were published in traditional American comic book size softcover edition:
- Innocence of Nihilism, collecting Stray Bullets #1-7 (Hardcover: ISBN 0-9653280-2-3; Softcover: ISBN 0-9727145-6-1).
- Somewhere Out West, collecting #8-14 (Hardcover: ISBN 0-9653280-5-8; Softcover: ISBN 0-9727145-7-X).
- Other People, collecting #15-21 (Hardcover: ISBN 0-9653280-9-0).
The first 32 issues of the comic book have also been collected in eight softcovers, each of which reprint the contents of four individual issues:
- Stray Bullets Volume 1, reprinting #1-4 (ISBN 0-9653280-3-1).
- Stray Bullets Volume 2, reprinting #5-8 (ISBN 0-9653280-4-X).
- Stray Bullets Volume 3, reprinting #9-12 (ISBN 0-9653280-6-6).
- Stray Bullets Volume 4, reprinting #13-16 (ISBN 0-9653280-7-4).
- Stray Bullets Volume 5, reprinting #17-20 (ISBN 0-9653280-8-2).
- Stray Bullets Volume 6, reprinting #21-24 (ISBN 0-9727145-0-2).
- Stray Bullets Volume 7, reprinting #25-28 (ISBN 0-9727145-2-9).
- Stray Bullets Volume 8, reprinting #29-32 (ISBN 0-9727145-4-5).
- Amy Racecar Volume 1 (ISBN 0-9727145-1-0) (collects the Stray Bullets issues featuring Amy Racecar as well as both issues of Amy Racecar Color Special.
Read more about this topic: Stray Bullets
Famous quotes containing the words collected and/or editions:
“The offender never pardons.”
—English proverb, collected in George Herbert, Outlandish Proverbs (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. Pauls, like the editions of Balbec and Palmyra.”
—Horace Walpole (17171797)