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Jeffrey Veregge

Author of Marvel's Voices: Heritage

2+ Works 20 Members 4 Reviews

Series

Works by Jeffrey Veregge

Marvel's Voices: Heritage (2022) — Author; Illustrator — 11 copies, 2 reviews
Marvel's Voices: Indigenous Voices #1 (2020) 9 copies, 2 reviews

Associated Works

Romeo and/or Juliet: A Chooseable-Path Adventure (2016) — Illustrator — 667 copies, 19 reviews
Love Beyond Body, Space, and Time: An Indigenous LGBT Sci-Fi Anthology (2016) — Contributor — 193 copies, 9 reviews
Dreaming in Indian: Contemporary Native American Voices (2016) — Contributor — 190 copies, 15 reviews
Angel Catbird Volume 2: To Castle Catula (2017) — Contributor, some editions — 94 copies, 2 reviews
Moonshot: The Indigenous Comics Collection, Volume 2 (2017) — Contributor — 70 copies, 2 reviews
Moonshot: The Indigenous Comics Collection, Volume 3 (2019) — Contributor — 37 copies, 1 review
Star Trek: Voyager: Seven's Reckoning (2021) — Cover artist, some editions — 17 copies
Werewolf By Night: New Wolf Rising (2021) — Illustrator — 9 copies, 1 review
G.I. Joe: The Fall of G.I. Joe, Volume 1 (2015) — Cover artist, some editions — 7 copies
G.I. Joe: The Fall of G.I. Joe, Volume 2 (2015) — Cover artist, some editions — 6 copies

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Members

Reviews

Amazing anthology of Indigenous & Native authors and artists bringing much needed depth and understanding to Marvel’s many Native characters. Even without complete story arcs in this collection, it makes me want to find more on many of the characters I’d not seen before (a Native Werewolf by Night? I want more on this guy!).
 
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SESchend | 1 other review | Feb 2, 2024 |
One of those anthologies that is awesome in concept but a bit disappointing in execution as we are given shallow little glimpses of a lot of characters. A couple of the longer stories offered are first issues of mini-series where the rest of the story will be continued elsewhere.

There are a few gems that make it worthwhile to flip through it though.

The Watcher ~ 3 stars

Uatu provides a roll call of all the Marvel heroes with Indigenous roots. I'd forgotten about some of these characters, so it was nice to get a reminder right off the top.

Hitting Back ~ 2 stars

Echo gets called to help an alien race defeat a swamp god who is terrorizing him. A martial artist vs. a god? "Super easy, barely an inconvenience." More a prelude to developments in Maya Lopez's life than a story.

Multifaceted ~ 3 stars

New Mutants Mirage and Wolfsbane do the standard X-Men thing, showing up to help a new mutants whose first display of power has gotten him in trouble with the local authorities. Nicely done, though, with charming character interactions.

Blue Moon ~ 2 stars

In the distant past Silver Fox and Trigo, a wife and husband of the Blackfoot Confederacy, sabotage a fort so it will fail and slow down white settlers. Dark and depressing for many reasons.

The Unexpected ~ 2 stars

Indigenous members of the X-Men play whack-a-mole with a weird but easily defeated giant thingywhatsit. Less a story, more a statement.

The Tuurngait's Song ~ 2 stars

Snowguard of the Champions returns home to Nunavut to recruit help for her village against some sea witches. Stiff and silly.

Not Dead Yet ~ 3 stars

Set in the 2070s, American Eagle shows us that aging is not the same as being washed up when he stumbles into a bank robbery.

A Friend in Need ~ 2 stars

Another prelude to the upcoming series starring Maya Lopez introduces readers to River -- short for Riverwalker -- a young man who does the old "I see dead people" thing. Meh.

An Interview with Writer Rebecca Roanhorse

Roanhorse complains of "one-dimensional characters where there's always a spirit animal or someone's always changing into an animal." The editor maybe shouldn't have placed this article right before the next two stories.

Champions Annual #1 ~ 2 stars

Snowguard, a shapeshifter, returns to Nunavut for the second time in this collection to deal with still more mythical creatures endangering her hometown. She's a more interesting character this time around, but it's all so earnest it gets a little boring.

Werewolf by Night #1 ~ 2 stars

When he's not protecting his people by turning into a werewolf at night, Jake Gomez works as a janitor at an evil corporation. Seems like those two things are going to collide at some point. And Red Wolf is hanging out in the background keeping his eye on everything. Seems a little generic as far as first issues go, but I might pick up the series collection to see if it builds momentum.

The United States of Captain America #3 ~3 stars

This short excerpt introduces us to Joe Gomez, a Kickapoo construction worker from Kansas, who ends up using a tower crane to battle Bulldozer when the villain attacks his construction site. Gomez's regular guy rising to a moment of heroism is cool. It's a shame they didn't do more with him instead of making him yet another new Captain America in a series that gave us a half dozen or so.

Phoenix Song: Echo #1 ~ 2 stars

Oh, look, here's what those previous two stories about Echo were hinting at. I've seen Maya Lopez in various places around the Marvel Universe, but she never seems to be anything but angry. This first issue from her new mini-series seems to be more of the same at first, but might be moving toward something a little deeper. I'm not totally won over, but I might check out the full collection later.

Honor the Sacred ~ 3 stars

A nice tribute to Red Wolf with some dynamic art and design.

FOR REFERENCE:

Contents:

• Introduction / Lee Francis IV, writer

Marvel's Voices: Indigenous Voices (2020) #1, cover art by Jim Terry
• The Watcher / Jeffrey Veregge, writer and artist
• Hitting Back [Echo] / Rebecca Roanhorse, writer; Weshoyot Alvitre, artist
• Multifaceted [New Mutants] / Darcie Little Badger, writer; Kyle Charles, artist
• Blue Moon [Silver Fox] / Stephen Graham Jones, writer; David Cutler, penciller; Roberto Poggi, inker
• Afterword / Taboo and B. Earl

Marvel's Voices: Heritage (2021) #1, cover art by Kyle Charles
• The Unexpected [X-Men] / Jim Terry, writer and artist
• The Tuurngait's Song [Snowguard] / Nyla Innuksuk, writer; Natasha Donovan, artist
• Not Dead Yet [American Eagle] / Steven Paul Judd, writer; David Cutler, penciller, José Marzan Jr., inker
• A Friend in Need [River] / Rebecca Roanhorse, writer; Shaun Beyale, penciller, Belardino Brabo, inker
• An Interview with Writer Rebecca Roanhorse / Angélique Roché

Champions Annual (2018) #1, cover art by R. B. Silva
• [Snowguard] / Jim Zub and Nyla Innuksuk, writers; Marcus To, artist

Werewolf by Night (2020) #1, cover art by Mike McKone
• [New Wolf Rising, Part 1] / Taboo and B. Earl, writers; Scot Eaton, artist; Scott Hanna, inker

The United States of Captain America (2021) #3, cover art by Gerard Parel
• [Excerpt featuring Joe Gomez, the Captain America of the Kickapoo Tribe] / Darcie Little Badger, writer; David Cutler, penciller; Roberto Poggi, inker

Phoenix Song: Echo (2021) #1, cover art by Cory Smith
• [Phoenix Song: Echo, Part 1] / Rebecca Roanhorse, writer; Luca Maresca, artist

Marvel Comics (2019) #1000
• Honor the Sacred [Excerpt featuring Red Wolf] / Taboo and B. Earl, writers; Jeffrey Veregge, artist

• Marvel's Voices Essay / Darcie Little Badger, writer
• Marvel's Voices Essay / Karla Pacheco, writer
• We Are Here! Indigenous Presence and Imagined Futures / Amanda R. Tachine, writer
• Variant Cover Gallery / David Mack, Afua Richardson, Jeffrey Veregge, Roy Boney, Jim Terry, Bill Sienkiewicz, Babs Tarr, and Maria Wolf, illustrators
… (more)
 
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villemezbrown | 1 other review | Mar 22, 2023 |
This was a fun collection of essentially graphic short stories. However, they were very short, and since I didn't already know the characters it felt like there was a lot of context missing. I am glad this was written and drawn by indigenous artists and authors, but it still feels like a token gesture on Marvel's part. (I hope I'm wrong. I hope it's more than a token. That's just the impression I get.)
½
 
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ca.bookwyrm | 1 other review | May 5, 2021 |
I really loved Veregge's art in the intro "The Watcher". "Echo: Hitting Back" made me want to know more about that character, and I liked the tie-in to the larger mutant universe in "Mirage: Multifaceted". "Silver Fox: Blue Moon" wasn't as much to my taste, and felt like I was missing some context. I had no idea there were so many Native American / First Nations characters in Marvel Comics!
 
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lavaturtle | 1 other review | Jan 25, 2021 |

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Associated Authors

Taboo Author
Jim Terry Author, Illustrator
Belardino Brabo Illustrator
Kyle Charles Illustrator
Weshoyot Alvitre Illustrator
Luca Maresca Illustrator
Jim Zub Author
José Marzan Jr. Illustrator
Natasha Donovan Illustrator
Marcus To Illustrator
Shaun Beyale Illustrator
Scot Eaton Illustrator
Scott Hanna Illustrator
B. Earl Author
Roberto Poggi Illustrator
David Cutler Illustrator
Lee Francis IV Introduction
Angélique Roché Contributor
David Mack Illustrator
R.B. Silva Illustrator
Babs Tarr Illustrator
Cory Smith Illustrator
Afua Richardson Illustrator
Roy Boney Illustrator
Mike McKone Illustrator
Maria Wolf Illustrator
Bill Sienkiewicz Illustrator
Gerard Parel Illustrator

Statistics

Works
2
Also by
10
Members
20
Popularity
#589,235
Rating
½ 3.8
Reviews
4
ISBNs
2