Sentences with phrase «still reading comic»

Did they do this so that adults still reading comic books wouldn't feel so ashamed or embarrassed that they were still reading things intended for children or others with low literacy skills?
I still read comics and books, but most of my news is read via Google.
yet, i still read comics.
As with Comixology's other material, mobile users can still read the comics offline, although they won't permanently own them.

Not exact matches

It is infinitely comic that a man, moved unto tears, so much moved that not only tears but sweat trickle from him, can sit and read, or hear, representations of self - denial, of the nobility of sacrificing one's life for the truth — and then the next instant — one, two, three, slap - dash, almost with the tears still in his eyes — is in full swing, in the sweat of his brow, with all his might and main, helping falsehood to conquer.
food eater... Movie watcher, Star Wars, comic books, real books... yes, reading is still a thing, college football, hockey... Kings fan... No ducks fans, thanx... I'm from Hawaii so I travel a lot and spend my days on a beach when I can... Music is my life, I love everything from reggae to...
please read my post once again, I never said it was not a comic book nor novel adaptation, I can still live with those
If you don't care for reading dialogue and would rather mash X to skip past all of the beautifully drawn comic book - style cutscenes (something I do not recommend doing), then you've still got an addictive and deep game to play through.
If we go back and insert some jokes, some consistently hilarious jokes, and get Sam Rockwell to read out half of it — because Sam Rockwell's comic timing is some of the best in the business — then this could probably still be quite fun to sit through.
Still, Moore's casting of a gay teen hero in a high - concept fantasy marks an significant expansion of GLBTQ literature into genres that reflect teens» diverse reading interests; given the mainstream popularity of comics - inspired tales, the «average, ordinary, gay teen superhero» who comes out and saves the world will raise cheers from within the GLBTQ community and beyond.
I do still read digital comics, but they're limited to Marvel Unlimited, and the review copies we get through Graphic Policy.
Meanwhile, tablets — still the best way to read digital comics — are becoming less relevant.
While there are anime adaptations of the popular Manga titles, people still prefer to read them in comic book format.
I've read comic books forever and still buy several titles a month.
I can see how audio would be popular, but I think it better could be improved instead with: — page turn buttons; — greater processing power / speed for better responsiveness; — better pdf support for manga / comics / textbooks; — and color e-ink and higher ppi for displaying maps and book covers as well reading manga / comics / magazines (which are still sometimes fuzzy or hard to read at 300 ppi, in my opinion).
If you don't have a Kindle device, you can still purchase the digital comics and read them on any device or platform with an official Kindle app or web - browser.
The number of people who own iPads, Kindles, and nooks is much higher than the number of people who read comics, so the capacity for exponential growth is still there, at least for a little while, but realistically it wouldn't be surprising if the rate of growth were to slow a bit in the coming year.
Still, it's free, and the comic is still a good Still, it's free, and the comic is still a good still a good read.
Summer's almost over, but there's still time for some comics reading before school starts in earnest.
It's an unusual format that certainly exploits some of the freedom that digital media provide, but in the end, the comic I read, Stories from the Ashfire Moon, was still basically written in panels — it's just that the borders had dissolved and the background didn't stop at the edges.
my 9 year old has been reading the pokemon comics since a year ago and still loving it.
You can still purchase DC comics on the Comixology site and then download them onto your Kindle Fire through the Comixology app, all this change has done is make it slightly less convenient to read DC's books on the Fire.
Fans of comics and graphic novels tend to be a more technologically adept consumer niche of society, so it just makes sense that these fans would enjoy reading their favorite story lines on high - tech devices; avid collectors may still choose to purchase hard copy editions of the comics for the intrinsic and investment value of the titles, but now readers will not have to choose which format they prefer.
Still, the Kindle was not without its limitations as an e-reader (the iPad too is not without faults) and was never known to be able to read comics, something that the iPad was able to by way of a plethora of comic reading apps while its color screen too acted as a boon.
If I may ask you a question, in portrait mode for reading comic books can you still read the fonts?
Sitting down with a big stack of comic books is something I still do as an adult, and even though I tell myself there are grown - up reasons to do that — it seems more efficient to read a bunch of books in one 45 minute go, than to read each of them in five to ten minutes bites spread thoughout the day — I think we overlook the hidden value in the act.
Most parents still read picture books to their kids — why not offer them kid - friendly comics as an alternative?
I probably would still be reading comics, regardless of whether or not I had internet access, though what I was reading would probably be a tad different.
It also has a marked advantage when attempting to read image - heavy works, like comics, on the thing (though comics on an e-reader is still a big no - go, as far as I'm concerned).
Still, these are the folks who are most likely to read digital comics, so the numbers paint an interesting picture.
Still, I wonder what people who showed up to a comic shop without having read any books in years made of it.
Digital publishing allows us to do so much more and yet still preserve the essential reading experience and storytelling techniques of a comic book.
I'm still mostly a print guy, because I prefer the tactile experience of reading comics like that and reading on a computer isn't the most fluid way of going about it.
On the Mini, it can be a little tough on the eyes to read double - page spreads without rotating the device, which we prefer not to have to do, but it's still possible to read the words, and they don't occur as frequently in comics pre-1990, so it's only an occasional annoyance.
I didn't magically stop liking their comics or the characters or the creators (I've probably written more about Jim Lee - era X-Men post-quitting than anybody who's still reading cape comics) and my curiosity is on par with my guilty conscience in terms of having a continually debilitating effect on my life.
Reblogged this on Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog and commented: For anyone who, like me, still loves reading comics Thanks for the informationReading Ape's Blog and commented: For anyone who, like me, still loves reading comics Thanks for the informationreading comics Thanks for the information Glinda
Although I do the majority of my reading with digital comics now, there's something about holding a comic in my hands that still gets me in a store from time to time.
I buy digital comics on Wednesday still, usually while I'm having breakfast, and I'll read one or two of them at lunch if I'm excited.
After all, digital comics is still a young field, and no matter which platform you chose to buy your digital comics, they would still be around for a while, allowing you to build your collection while the hardware with which to read that collection get better, faster, and more easily able to maintain your books locally.
I still buy a few issues a month of print comics, but I honestly read 20 odd issues a month but only buy 3 - 4 physical issues, and those mostly to add to a collection i have; frequently I have already read the comics I physically buy with the ones I buy digital I only get to my local comic store every three weeks or so.
That main carousel of content and apps and websites that is the trademark of the Fire series no longer has fits and stops and stutters — but there are still some sluggish moments, particularly when reading comic books.
For a while I still picked up a few titles and the last dozen years I haven't really read much at all; some Neil Gaiman stuff, a few recommendations (Invincible, Alias), and whatever they had on free comic day.
While we still have to wait for this to happen, you can already read comics in VR.
There are still big questions to be answered, the same sorts of questions that had to be answered for digital music and still need to be answered for digital books — how do we get the ability to buy a comic and read it in another app, on another platform, etc?
Even if you haven't seen the movie or read the comics, this table should still be enough to entertain you.
Besides Batman and X-Men, I grew up on Archie comics and still read them from time - to - time.
The art style is bold and colorful, making you feel as if you are still reading the original comic material.
The law against crime comics, known originally as the [E. Davie] Fulton Act, was passed in December of 1949, the very moment, almost to the day, when I arrived in Canada, as it happens — still too young to read comics of any sort, of course; but, I now see, already yearning in an inchoate way for Superman and Boston Blackie and Captain Marvel et al..
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