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Comics: Hellen Killer
Comics: Hellen Killer
#1
"In 1901, twenty-one year old college student Helen Keller, with the aid of a fantastical device invented
by her friend and mentor Alexander Graham Bell, regains her sight and hearing as well as near super-human strength and agility. Helen is enlisted by the Secret
Service to protect President William McKinley, who has been targeted for assassination by anarchists."

http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fu ... =311082465

I would totally buy it.

Edit: still not used to Yuku. urgh. Anyway, additional links to cleaner pages:

http://superpunch.blogspot.com/2008/02/ ... iller.html

http://lohcacb.blogspot.com/2008/02/this-just-in.html

And a more detailed summary.

Blind and deaf since contracting a fever at the age of two, Helen was
eventually taught to communicate by Anne Sullivan. She was accepted to Radcliffe University (now a part of Harvard) in 1900. When we pick up our story, Helen
is a sophomore in college, enjoying the rigors of University life and her budding fame as a lecturer and author.

What the public doesn't know is that she has secretly agreed to test a device developed by her lifelong friend and mentor
Alexander Graham Bell, which allows the blind and deaf to see and hear. The device is a success, however along with restoring Helen's lost senses, when the
device is active she is endowed with superhuman strength and agility. In addition, she can see into a man's soul and determine if he intends to commit
violence. When her abilities come to the attention of the secret service, Helen is enlisted by the Secret Service to protect President McKinley from
assassination by Anarchists. Fearless and patriotic, Helen quickly signs on for the mission.

But the true danger may come from within Helen herself. The black secret of the Omnicle is while it does grant Helen with
amazing powers, it also increases her rage and violent tendencies. If unchecked, Helen could become a danger to those around her. Her struggle to maintain
control is at the heart of her journey. With or without her enhanced powers, Helen is an amazing young woman, beautiful, intelligent, brave and funny.
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#2
Two comments: One, that looks very odd. And two, the page could be tad less... busy.
-- Bob
---------
Then the horns kicked in...
...and my shoes began to squeak.
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#3
It's already on my pull list. I mean, #1 will be worth the price for the conversation value alone, and an idea like that deserves a chance to sell me on
issue #2.

Aaron Nowack
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