This second hardback collection of Ro-busters completed the collection of stories of the team of Rojaws, Hammerstein and their various colleagues within the Ro-busters organisation.
The two major stories here are the Terrameks story and the Fall and Rise of Rojaws and Hammerstein, These are both excellent, fun and entertaining stories and the kind of quirky sci-fi that led me to love 2000AD as a kid (and keep reading it now).
This collection also collects various stories from Starlord as well as 2000AD and some solo Ro-Jaws stories.
Overall a great collection, well bound, lovely cover and good quality.
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Ro-Busters: The Complete Nuts and Bolts Volume Two (Volume 2) Hardcover – 11 Aug. 2016
The robots are in revolt! The boss of Ro-Busters Howard Quartz also known as Mr. Ten Per Cent (90% of him is robotic), has seen his stocks plummet due to his involvement in the attempted demolition of Northpool. In order to stop from going bankrupt, Quartz plans to destroy a number of his robots in a staged accident, including Hammerstein & Ro-Jaws! Having gotten wind of Quartz's plan, the duo seek out the robot underground, who organise the safe evacuation of unwanted robots to a distant moon. Before long, it's man Vs machine in a battle for freedom! This action-packed finale to the Ro-Busters strip includes star-studded backup stories from Alan Moore, Steve Dillon and Bryan Talbot.
- Print length246 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publisher2000 AD
- Publication date11 Aug. 2016
- Dimensions21.7 x 2.2 x 27.9 cm
- ISBN-101781084475
- ISBN-13978-1781084472
Product description
About the Author
Pat Mills is the creator and first editor of 2000 AD. He developed Judge Dredd and is the writer-creator of many of 2000 AD’s most popular stories such as Sláine, Nemesis and A.B.C. Warriors. Amongst his credits are Marshal Law (Marvel and DC Comics), co-created with Kevin O’Neill, the French graphic novel series Requiem, Vampire Knight with artist Olivier Ledroit, and Be Pure! Be Vigilant! Behave! The Secret History of 2000 AD and Judge Dredd. His current projects include Joe Pineapples: Tin Man, illustrated by Simon Bisley and Clint Langley, Spacewarp, and Kiss My Axe! The Secret History of Sláine the Warped Warrior.
Kevin O’Neill was a 2000 AD legend. From working as an art assistant on the very first prog, he quickly became involved in the creative side of the comic, co-creating classics like A.B.C. Warriors, Bonjo From Beyond The Stars, Metalzoic and Nemesis the Warlock. Outside the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic, O’Neill was briefly notorious as the only artist ever to have his work rejected wholesale by the Comics Code Authority! Happily, his notoriety quickly became fame and acclaim, as his work on strips like Marshal Law and most recently The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen raised him to a very high profile.
Dave Gibbons is one of 2000 AD’s most popular artists, having co-created Harlem Heroes and Rogue Trooper. He has also pencilled A.B.C. Warriors, Dan Dare, Judge Dredd, Mega-City One, Ro-Busters, Tharg the Mighty, Tharg’s Future Shocks and Time Twisters, as well as having scripted several Rogue Trooper stories – making Gibbons one of the few 2000 AD creators to have served as writer, artist and letterer! Beyond 2000 AD, Gibbons is unquestionably best known for his work on the award-winning classic Watchmen (with Alan Moore), but he has also drawn Batman, Doctor Who, Give Me Liberty, Green Lantern, Superman, Star Wars and his graphic novel, The Originals.
Perhaps the most widely respected comic writer of the modern era, Alan Moore’s contribution to the comics world is incalculable. Creator of some of 2000 AD’s most popular series, including Abelard Snazz, The Ballad of Halo Jones, D.R. & Quinch and Skizz, he has also worked on A.B.C. Warriors, Ro-Busters, Rogue Trooper, Ro-Jaws’ Robo-Tales, Tharg the Mighty, Time Twisters and several one-off strips. Outside of the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic, Moore is best known for his work on the classic Watchmen, which redefined the superhero genre in 1986, but this is simply touching the surface of a career which has included 1963, A1’s Warpsmiths, Bojeffries Saga and Maxwell the Magic Cat, AARGH!, Batman, Big Numbers, Brought to Light, Captain Britain, Deathblow, Flesh and Bones, From Hell, Glory, Green Lantern Corps, Lost Girls, Miracleman, A Small Killing, Snakes and Ladders, Spawn, Supreme, Swamp Thing, Superman , V For Vendetta, WildC.A.T.S. and Youngblood. Moore is now owner and chief writer of the America’s Best Comics line, distributed by WildStorm, and including Promethea, Tom Strong, Tomorrow Stories, Top Ten and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, which has been made into a major Hollywood movie.
Kevin O’Neill was a 2000 AD legend. From working as an art assistant on the very first prog, he quickly became involved in the creative side of the comic, co-creating classics like A.B.C. Warriors, Bonjo From Beyond The Stars, Metalzoic and Nemesis the Warlock. Outside the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic, O’Neill was briefly notorious as the only artist ever to have his work rejected wholesale by the Comics Code Authority! Happily, his notoriety quickly became fame and acclaim, as his work on strips like Marshal Law and most recently The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen raised him to a very high profile.
Dave Gibbons is one of 2000 AD’s most popular artists, having co-created Harlem Heroes and Rogue Trooper. He has also pencilled A.B.C. Warriors, Dan Dare, Judge Dredd, Mega-City One, Ro-Busters, Tharg the Mighty, Tharg’s Future Shocks and Time Twisters, as well as having scripted several Rogue Trooper stories – making Gibbons one of the few 2000 AD creators to have served as writer, artist and letterer! Beyond 2000 AD, Gibbons is unquestionably best known for his work on the award-winning classic Watchmen (with Alan Moore), but he has also drawn Batman, Doctor Who, Give Me Liberty, Green Lantern, Superman, Star Wars and his graphic novel, The Originals.
Perhaps the most widely respected comic writer of the modern era, Alan Moore’s contribution to the comics world is incalculable. Creator of some of 2000 AD’s most popular series, including Abelard Snazz, The Ballad of Halo Jones, D.R. & Quinch and Skizz, he has also worked on A.B.C. Warriors, Ro-Busters, Rogue Trooper, Ro-Jaws’ Robo-Tales, Tharg the Mighty, Time Twisters and several one-off strips. Outside of the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic, Moore is best known for his work on the classic Watchmen, which redefined the superhero genre in 1986, but this is simply touching the surface of a career which has included 1963, A1’s Warpsmiths, Bojeffries Saga and Maxwell the Magic Cat, AARGH!, Batman, Big Numbers, Brought to Light, Captain Britain, Deathblow, Flesh and Bones, From Hell, Glory, Green Lantern Corps, Lost Girls, Miracleman, A Small Killing, Snakes and Ladders, Spawn, Supreme, Swamp Thing, Superman , V For Vendetta, WildC.A.T.S. and Youngblood. Moore is now owner and chief writer of the America’s Best Comics line, distributed by WildStorm, and including Promethea, Tom Strong, Tomorrow Stories, Top Ten and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, which has been made into a major Hollywood movie.
Product details
- Publisher : 2000 AD; 1st edition (11 Aug. 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 246 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1781084475
- ISBN-13 : 978-1781084472
- Dimensions : 21.7 x 2.2 x 27.9 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 976,139 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 20,091 in Super-Hero Graphic Novels
- 173,126 in Science Fiction & Fantasy (Books)
- Customer reviews:
Customer reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
46 global ratings
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Top reviews from United Kingdom
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Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 25 January 2017
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 August 2017
Great stuff! Different forms of art for each story but The Terra-Meks (by the fantastic Dave Gibbons, who also drew the cover to this compilation) topped the lot. This story alone is worth anyone (especially anyone who remembers this from way back when) buying this book.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 6 April 2018
I bought this purely for the Dave Gibbons' drawn stories - of which there are seven - which are all excellent, especially the superb story of the giant robot, Charlie. Fans of 2000 AD will probably find the other stories just as impressive, although, with one or two exceptions, the rest of of the artwork is dire. A handsomely presented book, though.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 October 2017
Classic of the genre. Great way to introduce yourself to the Ro Busters
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 August 2018
Bought for my son, he likes, my happy.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 August 2016
This second and final Ro-Busters hardback is built around two long-ish stories.
Continuing his increasing disinterest with the strip’s ostensible disaster-solving format, Pat Mills kicks things off with a tale in which neither of the strip’s leads ever actually appear and Ro-Busters are very much the bad guys! The Terra-Meks is the tale of Charlie, a gentle giant of a droid who works on the docks of soon-to-be-demolished port town Northpool. When the terrifying Terra-Mek demolition droids rock into town and find a loophole in their programming that will allow them to slaughter the residents with impunity, peace-loving Charlie is all that stands in their way… if the townsfolk can convince him to overcome his pacifist principles! Mills is really on fire here, but it’s Dave Gibbons’ art that makes this a tale for the ages. I doubt there was a dry eye in the house when this was first published!
After the Northpool disaster Howard Quartz decides to cut his losses, blow up all his droids and make a killing on the insurance in the final Ro-Busters story – The Rise and Fall of Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein. This sprawling tale (with art by Kev O’Neill, Mick McMahon and Mike Dorey) is a fitting send-off for our heroes, chock full of the sort of distinctive characters you quite frankly wish had appeared much earlier in the run - Doctor Feeley-Good has 'classic character' written all over him! - with one memorable sequence that would sow the seeds for the Nemesis the Warlock saga.
Rounding out the book are the annual stories. Needless to say the quality is hugely variable, but at the good end of the spectrum you have Alan Moore (yes, *that* one) and Steve Dillon crafting one of the finest little six-pagers ever to appear in 2000AD, plus Bryan Talbot on another Moore-penned tale that sees a cameo from a certain Joe Pineapples. A nice unexpected bonus is O'Neill's rarely reprinted 3-page ‘Inside Story’ from prog 144. Padding out the page count a bit are six Dave Gibbons-drawn ‘Ro-Jaws’ Robo Tales’. Fluff pieces all, but good fun nevertheless. Overall, an essential purchase if you have the first Ro-Busters collection.
Continuing his increasing disinterest with the strip’s ostensible disaster-solving format, Pat Mills kicks things off with a tale in which neither of the strip’s leads ever actually appear and Ro-Busters are very much the bad guys! The Terra-Meks is the tale of Charlie, a gentle giant of a droid who works on the docks of soon-to-be-demolished port town Northpool. When the terrifying Terra-Mek demolition droids rock into town and find a loophole in their programming that will allow them to slaughter the residents with impunity, peace-loving Charlie is all that stands in their way… if the townsfolk can convince him to overcome his pacifist principles! Mills is really on fire here, but it’s Dave Gibbons’ art that makes this a tale for the ages. I doubt there was a dry eye in the house when this was first published!
After the Northpool disaster Howard Quartz decides to cut his losses, blow up all his droids and make a killing on the insurance in the final Ro-Busters story – The Rise and Fall of Ro-Jaws and Hammerstein. This sprawling tale (with art by Kev O’Neill, Mick McMahon and Mike Dorey) is a fitting send-off for our heroes, chock full of the sort of distinctive characters you quite frankly wish had appeared much earlier in the run - Doctor Feeley-Good has 'classic character' written all over him! - with one memorable sequence that would sow the seeds for the Nemesis the Warlock saga.
Rounding out the book are the annual stories. Needless to say the quality is hugely variable, but at the good end of the spectrum you have Alan Moore (yes, *that* one) and Steve Dillon crafting one of the finest little six-pagers ever to appear in 2000AD, plus Bryan Talbot on another Moore-penned tale that sees a cameo from a certain Joe Pineapples. A nice unexpected bonus is O'Neill's rarely reprinted 3-page ‘Inside Story’ from prog 144. Padding out the page count a bit are six Dave Gibbons-drawn ‘Ro-Jaws’ Robo Tales’. Fluff pieces all, but good fun nevertheless. Overall, an essential purchase if you have the first Ro-Busters collection.