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Jurassic Park Comics
Series · 4 books · 1993-2012

Books in series

Classic Jurassic Park, Volume 1 book cover
#1

Classic Jurassic Park, Volume 1

1993

Relive the magic and majesty of Jurassic Park in this re-presentation of the 1993 series from Topps. Adapted to the comics page by Walter Simonson, with art by Gil Kane and George Perez, Michael Crighton's best-selling, genre-expanding story comes to vivid life in this 4-issue collection.
Classic Jurassic Park 2 book cover
#2

Classic Jurassic Park 2

Raptor's Revenge

2011

The action from Jurassic Park continues in this collection of the movie adaptation #0 prequel issue, the two-part Raptor story "sequel," and the four-part Raptors Attack. With the deadliest dinos on the island starring in their own series, you can expect lightning fast danger and stunning art from masters such as Gil Kane and Dick Giordano!
Jurassic Park book cover
#8

Jurassic Park

The Devils in the Desert

2011

The legendary John Byrne brings his talents to the world of Jurassic Park—and the results have never been more terrifying! Is the dinos' escape from the island the worst thing that could happen? Think again!
Jurassic Park book cover
#9

Jurassic Park

Dangerous Games

2012

Collects all five issues of JURASSIC DANGEROUS GAMES! It is eleven years after the events of the Jurassic Park movies and CIA agent Daniel Espinoza is working undercover to infiltrate infamously brutal Nicaraguan drug lord Gabriel Cazares' drug ring. Cazares and his henchmen have taken over Isla Nubar and converted the main facility into a walled fortress and pleasure palace in the center of a primeval jungle filled with savage monsters. When his deep cover is blown, Espinoza finds himself lost and alone on the dangerous island, hunted by both armed thugs and prehistoric monstrosities. And there's someone else watching him, too - a mysterious figure in the shadows who could be Espinoza's only hope for survival... or the bringer of his ultimate doom! From Greg Bear, the author who brought you Cryptum, The Forge of God, Blood Music, Star Rogue Planet, Darwin's Radio, Eon and Dinosaur Summer.

Authors

John Byrne
John Byrne
Author · 92 books

Librarian note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name John Lindley Byrne is a British-born Canadian-American author and artist of comic books. Since the mid-1970s, Byrne has worked on nearly every major American superhero. Byrne's better-known work has been on Marvel Comics' X-Men and Fantastic Four and the 1986 relaunch of DC Comics’ Superman franchise. Coming into the comics profession exclusively as a penciler, Byrne began co-plotting the X-Men comics during his tenure on them, and launched his writing career in earnest with Fantastic Four (where he also started inking his own pencils). During the 1990s he produced a number of creator-owned works, including Next Men and Danger Unlimited. He also wrote the first issues of Mike Mignola's Hellboy series and produced a number of Star Trek comics for IDW Publishing.

Greg Bear
Greg Bear
Author · 49 books

Greg Bear is one of the world's leading hard SF authors. He sold his first short story, at the age of fifteen, to Robert Lowndes' Famous Science Fiction. A full-time writer, he lives in Washington State with his family. He is married to Astrid Anderson Bear. He is the son-in-law of Poul Anderson. They are the parents of two children, Erik and Alexandra. http://us.macmillan.com/author/gregbear

Steve Englehart
Steve Englehart
Author · 78 books

See also John Harkness. Steve Englehart went to Wesleyan University in Middletown, Connecticut. After a stint in the Army, he moved to New York and began to write for Marvel Comics. That led to long runs on Captain America, The Hulk, The Avengers, Dr. Strange, and a dozen other titles. Midway through that period he moved to California (where he remains), and met and married his wife Terry. He was finally hired away from Marvel by DC Comics, to be their lead writer and revamp their core characters (Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Flash, and Green Lantern). He did, but he also wrote a solo Batman series (immediately dubbed the "definitive" version) that later became Warner Brothers' first Batman film (the good one). After that he left comics for a time, traveled in Europe for a year, wrote a novel (The Point Man™), and came back to design video games for Atari (E.T., Garfield). But he still liked comics, so he created Coyote™, which within its first year was rated one of America's ten best series. Other projects he owned (Scorpio Rose™, The Djinn™) were mixed with company series (Green Lantern [with Joe Staton], Silver Surfer, Fantastic Four). Meanwhile, he continued his game design for Activision, Electronic Arts, Sega, and Brøderbund. And once he and Terry had their two sons, Alex and Eric, he naturally told them stories. Rustle's Christmas Adventure was first devised for them. He went on to add a run of mid-grade books to his bibliography, including the DNAgers™ adventure series, and Countdown to Flight, a biography of the Wright brothers selected by NASA as the basis for their school curriculum on the invention of the airplane. In 1992 Steve was asked to co-create a comics pantheon called the Ultraverse. One of his contributions, The Night Man, became not only a successful comics series, but also a television show. That led to more Hollywood work, including animated series such as Street Fighter, GI Joe, and Team Atlantis for Disney.

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