| Arizona's #1 Comic SuperStore! |
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All About Books & Comics has been serving both the Phoenix Area and worldwide customers for over 25 years. We provide Arizona's largest selection of new comics, back issue comics, toys, manga, ccg's, cmg's, statues, supplies and more. Our knowledgeable staff can supply the answers to all of your comic and mail order questions. We are proud to have been named the 2003 Will Eisner Retailer of the Year as well as THE BEST OF PHOENIX and Best of The REP for well over a decade. As the original comic book superstore in Phoenix we are proud of our 25 years of service and we look forward to continue providing you with the largest inventory and most efficient and friendly customer service in the industry! |
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| Location |
Telephone
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5060
N. Central, Phoenix, AZ 85012 |
(602)
277-0757 |
Other
Information |
Telephone
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FAX
Number (located in Phoenix) |
(602)
678-0065 |
Worldwide
Mail Order - Call Now! |
(602)
277-0757 |
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| Will Eisner Spirit of Comics Award - 2003 |
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All About Books and Comics is Honored with 2003 Will Eisner Spirit of Comics Retailing Award. As part of the Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards (a.k.a. the Eisners), we are proud to be the 2003 Will Eisner Spirit of Comics Retailing Award Recipient! Thanks to everyone that helped make it possible! For more information on the Eisners and the competition, click here. AABC: NATIONAL WINNER 2003! |
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| New Times Best of Phoenix |
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2006 ~ |
Are your "Spidey senses" tingling? Okay, you didn't need superpowers to guess that AABC would be our pick. After 25 years of serving comic book junkies, theis eight-time Best of Phoenix winner is still hailed as a geek's wet dream. The shelves are stuffed with more than a million back issues, from golden age originals like The Avengers and Green Lantern to the modern cult classic Sandman. While waiting for the next installment of Witchblade, you can stock up for your party, which, in this case, means a couple of 20-sided dice, some Magic: The Gathering cards and a plastic model of the buxom Lady Death to keep you company.
Forget Internet dating - this is the best place for a true geek-to-geek hookup. "Where did you meet Mommy?" " Our eyes met over a rare copy of Uncanny X-men #247, son, and I knew she was the one for me." With any luck, their kind will multiply like Tribbles, producing an endless supply of customers for AABC. |
New Times Archive |
~
1991 ~ |
Comics
aren't just for kids anymore, but you'd never know it by walking into most comic-book
shops in Phoenix. Unless you share an interest with your 9-year-old nephew in
the serial exploits of Wolverine or Lobo, most shops will hardly service you.
Thus, quantity means quality. And the store with the largest stock of current
commercial comics and back issues is easily All About books and Comics.
At
the recently expanded flagship store on Camelback Road, you'll find a staff that's
intelligent and informed, racks sensibly arranged with signs noting "New
This Week" or " New Last Week" and just enough underground comics
and graphic novels to keep an adult reader's interest. Personally, we'd like to
see more Hate, Yummy Fur and Eightball and fewer prebagged copies of X-men, but
until alternative readers outnumber adolescent fanboys that's as likely to happen
as the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles drawing social security. |
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It's
clear comics aren't just for kids anymore; in the last year, Art Spiegelman's
Maus: A Survivors Tale II was reviewed in The New York Times Book Review and won
a Pulitzer. However, most comic shops are for kids. All About Books and Comics
owners Alan and Marsha Giroux know where their bread is buttered-they stock plenty
of titles featuring muscled guys with big capes. But we salute the headquarters
of their three-store operation for carrying cutting-edge comics like Eightball,
Hate, and Yummy Fur and for having a sensible, spacious layout that invites bigger
folks to browse. Readers Picks:
1. All About Books and Comics |
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1993 ~ |
Practically
everyone knows exactly what they were doing on November 22, 1963, the day JFK
was assassinated.
But how many of us can recall what we were doing on the
only-slightly-less-fateful day of November 15, 1992?
The folks at All About
Books and Comics do. That was the memorable day that thousands of Valley mortals
(and not a few members of the media) descended on this East Camelback comic-book
shop to mourn the death of Kal-El, better known to the rest of the world as Superman.
A more appropriate place to commemorate the passing of the world's greatest superhero
would be hard to imagine. (A three-store minichain, All About Books and Comics
also operates smaller branches in Paradise Valley and West Phoenix.) In addition
to back issues and reprints featuring virtually every one of the Man of Steel's
exploits, the shop also carries thousands of other comic and related genre
magazine titles, as well as role-playing games, action figures, collector cards,
tee shirts and other funny business.
Great Caesar's ghost! Comics don't get
much more serious than this. |
~ 1994
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Pow!
Wham! Zap!
The All About Books and Comics flagship store clobbers the competition-
including its own smaller sister stores. This spacious comics cove is packed to
the rafters with hundreds of thousands of funny books representing everything
from vintage superheroism to anthologies of the latest postpunk panels. In addition,
the shop also carries an impressive assortment of related gimcracks guaranteed
to ring a bell with anyone who every wanted to grow up to be Illya Kuryakin, Forrest
J. Ackerman or Ed "Big Daddy" Roth.
If you're eager to get back
in touch with the Superboy within, we can't think of a better place to start looking. |
~ 1995
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No,
need to read our thought bubble. If you've got even the slightest interest in
comics and related pop culture memorabilia, you'd have to be a Bizarro not to
already know about this joint. Now celebrating its 19th anniversary, the four-store
minichain has conquered the local comic book universe with its galactic selection
of new and used titles. In addition to everything you'd expect and plenty you
wouldn't (comics run the gamut from Superman and Casper to Beanworld, Hell Baby
and Kill Your Boyfriend), this comics conglomerate carries scads of other way
cool stuff like ED Wood Jr. trading cards, video compilations of old TV commercials,
The Man From U.N.C.L.E. collectibles and cheesy bondage pinups from the Fifties.
We're especially partial to the mind-blowing selection at the East Camelback Flagship
store, an outlet that has so much merchandise that management actually opened
a discount annex next door to handle slightly shopworn books and comics. In short,
shopping here is almost as much fun as visiting the Ackermansion. And If you have
to ask what that is, well, you're in the wrong store. |
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1996 ~ |
If
we were comic-book artists, we'd be drawing a blank right about now. A big Blank.
Think of a huge cartoon speech balloon with nothing in it and, well, you get the
picture.
Yep, we're finally speechless. What could we possibly say about this
flagship fortress of funny books that we haven't told you upmteen times in the
past? That this citadel of comics has been sweeping this category since Krypton
exploded? That this Bastion of superheroics is a great place to get in touch with
your inner Superboy? That anyone who's remotely interested in comic-book culture
would have to be a Bizarro not to already know about it? #+$%@*?!!! End of this
panel discussion. |
~ 1999
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Where
it is written that grown-ups can't enjoy comic books in a clean, well-lighted
place? The way some stores treat them (adults slinking out, their purchases wrapped
in plain brown paper), you'd think they were pornography. If anything, the grow-up
world has gotten more like a comic book:
Pamela Anderson clones with zero-gravity
for breasts, Tae-Bo classes, sci-fi diseases that melt flesh. We think the world
might be a better place if we had Batman around to kick a little ass. That's the
spirit at AABC: Gee-whiz lives on. The cool stuff we wanted as a kid - that we
still want - is all there. Like Flash's lightning bolt. And there are newer, darker
icons like Todd McFarlane's Spawn. And nobody treats the customers like social
retards just because they're still reading funnybooks. After all McFarlane plunked
down a bazillion dollars for Mark McGwire's home-run ball.
Not bad for kid
stuff. |
~ 2001
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Great
Caesar's ghost! Did All About Books & Comics really win this category
again? Hey, does Lois Lane have the hots for Superman? A contender long before
anyone ever heard of Spawn, Sandman, or Witchblade, Alan
and Marsha Giroux's fortress of funny books continues to be one-stop shopping
headquarters for two generations of Valley comic-book geeks. In addition to thousands
of comic titles (both new and used), the store stocks scads of related ephemera:
sci-fi trading cards, James Bondabilia, monster-movie merchandise and, well, you
get the idea. Hey, what do you want us to do? Draw you a picture? |
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| Mon-Tues-Thurs-Fri |
| 10:00
AM - 7:00 PM |
| Wednesday |
| 10:00
AM - 8:00 PM |
| Saturday |
| 10:00
AM - 6:00 PM |
| Sunday |
| 12:00
PM - 5:00 PM |
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| Alan and Marsha - Owners |
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| Eddie - Manager |
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| Phil - Manager |
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| Amanda - Sales Associate |
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| Dan - Sales Associate |
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