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STAR WARS LEGENDS EPIC COLLECTION: THE ORIGINAL MARVEL YEARS - DROIDS & EWOKS

The droids and Ewoks of Star Wars are some of the franchise's most beloved characters, and this volume collects classic all-ages adventures featuring them as the stars!

The most lovable stars of a galaxy far, far away, in a complete collection of their adorable all-ages adventures! Join Wicket and his Ewok friends Teebo and Princess Kneesaa in their forest home of Endor for colorful capers filled with rainbow bridges and rites of power! And in stories set years before they find a home with the Rebels, follow C-3P0 and R2-D2 in their search for a master! The quest will stretch across space and beyond, as a crazy chronal crossover sees them meet the Ewoks again for the very first time! Plus: Get a fresh perspective on the epic events of the film that started it all in a tale that could only be called “Star Wars According to the Droids.” As Threepio might say, “Oh my!”

COLLECTING: Ewoks (1985) 1-14, Droids (1986) 1-8, Ewoks Annual 1989
David Manak is a comic-book writer and artist who worked extensively for DC Comics, Marvel and Archie Comics, with a particular focus on all-ages titles. His extensive contributions to Marvel’s 1980s Star Comics line included Droids, Ewoks, Bullwinkle and Rocky and ALF; at Archie, he developed long associations with Sonic the Hedgehog and Sabrina the Teenage Witch.

Warren Kremer (1921-2003) is an artist best remembered as creator of Hot Stuff the Little Devil and co-creator of Richie Rich, both iconic Harvey Comics characters. His long career also included contributions to Marvel’s Star Comics line on titles including Heathcliff, Planet Terry and Ewoks.

John Romita was born in 1930 and drew for Atlas Era Marvel Comics across many genres. By the time Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko were defining the look and feel of the Marvel Age of Comics during the 1960s, Romita had made the move to DC Comics, where he was working exclusively behind the boards of the company’s many romance comics. It wasn’t until 1966 that he returned to Marvel Comics and the super-hero genre, drawing Daredevil before taking over from Ditko on what was fast becoming Marvel’s most important book, Amazing Spider-Man. Romita’s slick, clean craftsmanship would be a hallmark of his tenure, and his years of drawing beautiful women in DC’s romance books paid off with iconic renderings of Gwen Stacy, Mary Jane Watson and the other women in Peter Parker’s life.

About

The droids and Ewoks of Star Wars are some of the franchise's most beloved characters, and this volume collects classic all-ages adventures featuring them as the stars!

The most lovable stars of a galaxy far, far away, in a complete collection of their adorable all-ages adventures! Join Wicket and his Ewok friends Teebo and Princess Kneesaa in their forest home of Endor for colorful capers filled with rainbow bridges and rites of power! And in stories set years before they find a home with the Rebels, follow C-3P0 and R2-D2 in their search for a master! The quest will stretch across space and beyond, as a crazy chronal crossover sees them meet the Ewoks again for the very first time! Plus: Get a fresh perspective on the epic events of the film that started it all in a tale that could only be called “Star Wars According to the Droids.” As Threepio might say, “Oh my!”

COLLECTING: Ewoks (1985) 1-14, Droids (1986) 1-8, Ewoks Annual 1989

Author

David Manak is a comic-book writer and artist who worked extensively for DC Comics, Marvel and Archie Comics, with a particular focus on all-ages titles. His extensive contributions to Marvel’s 1980s Star Comics line included Droids, Ewoks, Bullwinkle and Rocky and ALF; at Archie, he developed long associations with Sonic the Hedgehog and Sabrina the Teenage Witch.

Warren Kremer (1921-2003) is an artist best remembered as creator of Hot Stuff the Little Devil and co-creator of Richie Rich, both iconic Harvey Comics characters. His long career also included contributions to Marvel’s Star Comics line on titles including Heathcliff, Planet Terry and Ewoks.

John Romita was born in 1930 and drew for Atlas Era Marvel Comics across many genres. By the time Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko were defining the look and feel of the Marvel Age of Comics during the 1960s, Romita had made the move to DC Comics, where he was working exclusively behind the boards of the company’s many romance comics. It wasn’t until 1966 that he returned to Marvel Comics and the super-hero genre, drawing Daredevil before taking over from Ditko on what was fast becoming Marvel’s most important book, Amazing Spider-Man. Romita’s slick, clean craftsmanship would be a hallmark of his tenure, and his years of drawing beautiful women in DC’s romance books paid off with iconic renderings of Gwen Stacy, Mary Jane Watson and the other women in Peter Parker’s life.