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Scarlet Traces

Scarlet Traces is a Steampunk comic series written by Ian Edginton and illustrated by D'Israeli. It was originally published online before being serialised in 2002, in the British anthology Judge Dredd Megazine. A sequel, Scarlet Traces: The Great Game, followed in 2006.

Scarlet Traces
The cover of the hardcover
Created byIan Edginton
D'Israeli
Publication information
PublisherRebellion Developments
Dark Horse Comics
ScheduleMonthly
Title(s)
Judge Dredd Megazine (vol 4) #16-18
FormatsOriginal material for the series has been published as a strip in the comics anthology(s) Judge Dredd Megazine and a set of limited series.
Genre
Publication dateOctober–December 2002
July–October 2006
Number of issues3
4
Creative team
Writer(s)Ian Edginton
Artist(s)D'Israeli
Letterer(s)D'Israeli
Colourist(s)D'Israeli
Editor(s)Alan Barnes
David Land/Katie Moody
Reprints
Collected editions
Scarlet TracesISBN 1-56971-940-3
The Great GameISBN 1-59307-717-3

Edginton and D'Israeli's 2006 adaptation of H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds is effectively a prequel to Scarlet Traces, as key characters of Scarlet Traces can be glimpsed therein and the same designs for the Martians and their technology are used.

A fourth series, Scarlet Traces: Cold War, appeared in 2000 AD in 2016 and 2017.

Setting edit

Scarlet Traces is based on the premise that Britain was able to reverse engineer alien technology, abandoned after the abortive Martian invasion of The War of the Worlds, to establish economic and political dominance over the remainder of the world.

The artwork shows an imposition of futuristic devices on early 20th century society. In the first series, set in 1908, London cabbies and the Household Cavalry have swapped their horses for mechanical devices with spiderlike legs; homes are heated and lit by modified versions of the Martian heat ray; the pigeons of Trafalgar Square are thinned out by miniature Martian war machines. In the sequel, Britain of the late 1930s is recreated along fairly recognisable lines but with an additional layer of alien derived technology.

Plot edit

Scarlet Traces edit

The story begins ten years after the abortive Martian invasion of Earth, with bodies being washed up on the banks of the river Thames. The bodies are all female and drained of blood, prompting a local drunk, whose dog discovers them, to think that a vampire is on the loose. Emerging from comfortable retirement in fashionable Bedford Square, Major Robert Autumn DSO and his trusty manservant Colour Sergeant Arthur Currie search for the culprits after being informed that Currie's niece is most likely one of the missing girls.

Autumn is represented as a classic Victorian hero: honourable, perceptive and brave but out of his depth in a new age of ruthless exploitation personified by the bullish, cynical government official Dr Davenport Spry.

After following the investigation across England and Scotland the pair, now accompanied by the drunk from London, discover that a single Martian has survived the bacteria by turning its own war machine into a hermetic chamber. In return for its life - and human blood to sustain it, the alien dubbed "Humpty", has been assisting British scientists in mastering advanced Martian technical skills.

In the finale Spry reveals that Britain, having come to dominate Earth using its newly acquired technology, now intends to invade Mars. In an ensuing fight Currie is killed, and Autumn loses an arm. Spry kills the captive Martian which has now served its purpose, and contemptuously dismisses Autumn as a "dusty relic". Later, a crippled and alcoholic Autumn witnesses the departure of Britain's Stella Expeditionary Force to Mars, amid general scenes of patriotic fervor.

Scarlet Traces: The Great Game edit

Thirty years after the events of Scarlet Traces, the counter-invasion of Mars is going badly, with the Martians successfully defending themselves using heat ray weapons against the invaders. Charlotte Hemming, an aristocratic young photojournalist, is saved by Robert Autumn from the thuggish agents of an increasingly repressive British Government - led by Spry, now Prime Minister. Autumn asks her to travel to Mars and investigate why out of the thousands of soldiers sent, only three hundred and seventy two have returned from the war. At the same time, the government is shown to be under pressure from a Nationalistic Scottish breakaway faction; plus Canada, Australia and New Zealand who wish to remove their troops from the space combat.

Hemming's spaceship is shot down as it enters Mars' atmosphere. She survives, but her cover is blown. She discovers that the Martians are not in fact native to Mars, but seem to have originated from a now-destroyed planet that became the asteroid belt. She theorises that a previous civilisation existed on Mars and was itself plunged into warfare by the arrival of the Asteroid "Martians", resulting in their extinction.

Hemming also discovers that the Martians have been using genetic techniques to mimic humanity to an indistinguishable degree - but the government is already aware of this, and has been preventing any substantial return of veterans to Earth, in case they are in fact disguised Martians.

Spry's government is about to deliver a coup de grace in some unknown form, and destroy all the remaining Martians - as well as an expendable rearguard left behind when the main body of the expeditionary force is secretly evacuated.

The expected doomsday weapon is delivered, and turns out to be modified Cavorite in capsule form, which sticks to anything it touches, and lifts it off the planet into the vacuum of space. Hemming is amongst those who survive, but they discover that humanoid Martians have taken control of the Lunar colony, and turned its mass driver into a weapon targeted on Earth. The bulk of the returning expeditionary force has been ambushed and destroyed.

Ultimately the Martians are defeated when a Commonwealth space fleet, originally intended to evacuate their own troops, arrives and with the surviving British ships engage the Martians in a crossfire.

Earth is saved, and the British government falls, with Spry being amongst those killed in the mass driver attacks which have devastated London and much of southern England. Some years later, a retired Hemming is approached by officials of the new government who are worried she will expose the truth, which has been repressed. She assures them that she has no intention of upsetting the status quo, and returns to her garden - which contains several Triffids.

Allusions and cameo appearances edit

References within the story edit

In The Great Game, when Charlotte reaches the cavern with the glyphs, the original inhabitants of the Solar System are revealed to be:[1]

In The Great Game issue 1, Carl Kolchak makes a cameo appearance. In issue 2, Autumn's bookshelf includes a work entitled The Perils of Andrea, a reference to Perelandra. Both references were made by D'Israeli.[1] The fictional Hobbs End underground station is a reference to Quatermass and the Pit.

Captain Haddock, Tintin and Snowy (from The Adventures of Tintin) can be spotted on page 42. There is a cameo by Dan Dare and Digby.

References in other works by Edginton and D'Israeli edit

The War of the Worlds adaptation by Dark Horse Comics contains several references to Scarlet Traces. Autumn and Currie can be seen in a newspaper as having saved Emperor Menelik of Abyssinia from an assassin.[2] Ned Penny can be seen on the Thunder Child.[3] An Archie the dog look-alike appears in the ruins of London.[4] An official figure supervising the removal of Martian tripods after the end of the war resembles a young Dr. Spry, while the two army sergeants awaiting his orders reappear as Coughly and Dravott in Scarlet Traces.[5] The adaptation ends with the narrator reflecting that it may be possible for humans to spread throughout the solar system also.[6] In Kingdom of the Wicked, also by Edginton and D'Israeli, the main character's wife is seen reading Scarlet Traces.

Publication history edit

The original Scarlet Traces was conceived as a partially animated serial, intended for the now-defunct website Cool Beans World. In an interview for 2000AD Review, Edginton said "The Cool Beans version was to have been like a little movie in many ways. It had music, sound effects, zooms, pans and dissolves. There was even going to be some limited animation of the War Machines. A lot of the work was done and in the can when Cool Beans shut down production..."[7]

The website ceased operation after only a fraction of the serial had been published. D'Israeli wrote in his blog:

...when Cool Beans folded, we had a comic which was only 75% complete and which was still owned by the defunct publisher... Having retrieved the property, Ian (Edginton) then managed to license our previously-unpublished comic to Rebellion's Judge Dredd Megazine as a reprint — thus giving us the funds to complete the story while retaining ownership.[8]

D'Israeli reworked Scarlet Traces as a traditional comic book story.[8] This version was serialised in 2002 in the British anthology Judge Dredd Megazine (vol 4) issues 16 to 18. In 2003 it was collected in its own 4-issue limited series (with minor revisions) by US publisher Dark Horse Comics, and subsequently collected into one hardcover volume by Dark Horse Comics in August 2003 (ISBN 1-56971-940-3).

The Great Game was first published in a four-issue mini-series by Dark Horse Comics in 2006. The War of the Worlds was published in the same year. Cold War appeared in 2000 AD #1988–1999 in 2016.

Bibliography edit

  • Scarlet Traces (in Judge Dredd Megazine (vol 4) #16-18, 2002)
  • H. G. Wells's War of the Worlds (in a trade paperback, Dark Horse, 2006, ISBN 1-59307-474-3)
  • The Great Game (in a trade paperback, Dark Horse, May 2007, ISBN 1-59307-717-3)
  • Cold War (in 2000 AD #1988–1999, 2016)
  • Cold War Book 2 (in 2000 AD #2023–2034, 2017)
  • Home Front (in 2000 AD #2126–2129 and 2131–2138, 2019)
  • Storm Front (in 2000 AD #2250–2255 and 2257–2261, 2021) (At the end of the story, text says "Scarlet Traces will return".[9])

Collected editions edit

Dark Horse edit

Rebellion edit

  • Includes War of the Worlds and Scarlet Traces
  • This also came as an exclusive-to-webstore limited edition, which included a numbered bookplate, signed by both the artist and writer, and an exclusive B&W original print by D'Israeli[13]
  • Includes The Great Game, Cold War and Cold War Book 2
  • Includes Home Front and Storm Front

Awards edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Identification of the aliens from The Great Game #3 by Chris Roberson
  2. ^ "War Of The Worlds eComic: Week 2: Page 13". Darkhorse.com. 2006-01-13. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  3. ^ "War Of The Worlds eComic: Week 8: Page 55". Darkhorse.com. 2006-01-13. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  4. ^ "War Of The Worlds eComic: Week 22: Page 103". Darkhorse.com. 2006-01-13. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  5. ^ "War Of The Worlds eComic: Week 26: Page 121". Darkhorse.com. 2006-01-13. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  6. ^ "War Of The Worlds eComic: Week 26: Page 125". Darkhorse.com. 2006-01-13. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  7. ^ Hanly, Gavin. . Archived from the original on 2006-10-12. Retrieved 2007-03-15.
  8. ^ a b Brooker, Matt "D'Israeli" (28 August 2006). "D'Blog of 'Israeli: I Have Often Walked Down This Street Before". Retrieved 2007-03-15.
  9. ^ Ian Edginton (w), D'Israeli (a), Simon Bowland (let). "Scarlet Traces" 2000 AD, no. 2261 (08 Dec 2021). Oxford: Rebellion Publishing.
  10. ^ "Dark Horse page for the Scarlet Traces book". Darkhorse.com. 2003-08-27. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  11. ^ "Dark Horse page for the Great Game book". Darkhorse.com. 2007-05-16. Retrieved 2010-10-05.
  12. ^ "2000AD Shop : Scarlet Traces Volume 1". Rebellion Publishing. 2017-01-11. Retrieved 2022-04-22.
  13. ^ . Rebellion Publishing. 2017-01-11. Archived from the original on 2022-04-22. Retrieved 2022-04-22.
  14. ^ "2000AD Shop : Scarlet Traces Volume 2". Rebellion Publishing. 2017-10-04. Retrieved 2022-04-22.
  15. ^ "2000AD Shop : Scarlet Traces Volume 3". Rebellion Publishing. 2022-03-16. Retrieved 2022-04-22.
  16. ^ . Comic-con.org. 2010-07-21. Archived from the original on 2007-08-08. Retrieved 2010-10-05.

References edit

  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  • Scarlet Traces at Barney
  • The Great Game at the Grand Comics Database

External links edit

  • Scarlet Traces annotations
  • Scarlet Traces and The Great Game at War of the Worlds.co.uk
  • at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)

Reviews edit

scarlet, traces, steampunk, comic, series, written, edginton, illustrated, israeli, originally, published, online, before, being, serialised, 2002, british, anthology, judge, dredd, megazine, sequel, great, game, followed, 2006, cover, hardcovercreated, byian,. Scarlet Traces is a Steampunk comic series written by Ian Edginton and illustrated by D Israeli It was originally published online before being serialised in 2002 in the British anthology Judge Dredd Megazine A sequel Scarlet Traces The Great Game followed in 2006 Scarlet TracesThe cover of the hardcoverCreated byIan EdgintonD IsraeliPublication informationPublisherRebellion DevelopmentsDark Horse ComicsScheduleMonthlyTitle s Judge Dredd Megazine vol 4 16 18FormatsOriginal material for the series has been published as a strip in the comics anthology s Judge Dredd Megazine and a set of limited series GenreAlternate history steampunkPublication dateOctober December 2002July October 2006Number of issues34Creative teamWriter s Ian EdgintonArtist s D IsraeliLetterer s D IsraeliColourist s D IsraeliEditor s Alan BarnesDavid Land Katie MoodyReprintsCollected editionsScarlet TracesISBN 1 56971 940 3The Great GameISBN 1 59307 717 3Edginton and D Israeli s 2006 adaptation of H G Wells The War of the Worlds is effectively a prequel to Scarlet Traces as key characters of Scarlet Traces can be glimpsed therein and the same designs for the Martians and their technology are used A fourth series Scarlet Traces Cold War appeared in 2000 AD in 2016 and 2017 Contents 1 Setting 2 Plot 2 1 Scarlet Traces 2 2 Scarlet Traces The Great Game 3 Allusions and cameo appearances 3 1 References within the story 3 2 References in other works by Edginton and D Israeli 4 Publication history 4 1 Bibliography 4 2 Collected editions 4 2 1 Dark Horse 4 2 2 Rebellion 5 Awards 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External links 9 1 ReviewsSetting editScarlet Traces is based on the premise that Britain was able to reverse engineer alien technology abandoned after the abortive Martian invasion of The War of the Worlds to establish economic and political dominance over the remainder of the world The artwork shows an imposition of futuristic devices on early 20th century society In the first series set in 1908 London cabbies and the Household Cavalry have swapped their horses for mechanical devices with spiderlike legs homes are heated and lit by modified versions of the Martian heat ray the pigeons of Trafalgar Square are thinned out by miniature Martian war machines In the sequel Britain of the late 1930s is recreated along fairly recognisable lines but with an additional layer of alien derived technology Plot editScarlet Traces edit The story begins ten years after the abortive Martian invasion of Earth with bodies being washed up on the banks of the river Thames The bodies are all female and drained of blood prompting a local drunk whose dog discovers them to think that a vampire is on the loose Emerging from comfortable retirement in fashionable Bedford Square Major Robert Autumn DSO and his trusty manservant Colour Sergeant Arthur Currie search for the culprits after being informed that Currie s niece is most likely one of the missing girls Autumn is represented as a classic Victorian hero honourable perceptive and brave but out of his depth in a new age of ruthless exploitation personified by the bullish cynical government official Dr Davenport Spry After following the investigation across England and Scotland the pair now accompanied by the drunk from London discover that a single Martian has survived the bacteria by turning its own war machine into a hermetic chamber In return for its life and human blood to sustain it the alien dubbed Humpty has been assisting British scientists in mastering advanced Martian technical skills In the finale Spry reveals that Britain having come to dominate Earth using its newly acquired technology now intends to invade Mars In an ensuing fight Currie is killed and Autumn loses an arm Spry kills the captive Martian which has now served its purpose and contemptuously dismisses Autumn as a dusty relic Later a crippled and alcoholic Autumn witnesses the departure of Britain s Stella Expeditionary Force to Mars amid general scenes of patriotic fervor Scarlet Traces The Great Game edit Thirty years after the events of Scarlet Traces the counter invasion of Mars is going badly with the Martians successfully defending themselves using heat ray weapons against the invaders Charlotte Hemming an aristocratic young photojournalist is saved by Robert Autumn from the thuggish agents of an increasingly repressive British Government led by Spry now Prime Minister Autumn asks her to travel to Mars and investigate why out of the thousands of soldiers sent only three hundred and seventy two have returned from the war At the same time the government is shown to be under pressure from a Nationalistic Scottish breakaway faction plus Canada Australia and New Zealand who wish to remove their troops from the space combat Hemming s spaceship is shot down as it enters Mars atmosphere She survives but her cover is blown She discovers that the Martians are not in fact native to Mars but seem to have originated from a now destroyed planet that became the asteroid belt She theorises that a previous civilisation existed on Mars and was itself plunged into warfare by the arrival of the Asteroid Martians resulting in their extinction Hemming also discovers that the Martians have been using genetic techniques to mimic humanity to an indistinguishable degree but the government is already aware of this and has been preventing any substantial return of veterans to Earth in case they are in fact disguised Martians Spry s government is about to deliver a coup de grace in some unknown form and destroy all the remaining Martians as well as an expendable rearguard left behind when the main body of the expeditionary force is secretly evacuated The expected doomsday weapon is delivered and turns out to be modified Cavorite in capsule form which sticks to anything it touches and lifts it off the planet into the vacuum of space Hemming is amongst those who survive but they discover that humanoid Martians have taken control of the Lunar colony and turned its mass driver into a weapon targeted on Earth The bulk of the returning expeditionary force has been ambushed and destroyed Ultimately the Martians are defeated when a Commonwealth space fleet originally intended to evacuate their own troops arrives and with the surviving British ships engage the Martians in a crossfire Earth is saved and the British government falls with Spry being amongst those killed in the mass driver attacks which have devastated London and much of southern England Some years later a retired Hemming is approached by officials of the new government who are worried she will expose the truth which has been repressed She assures them that she has no intention of upsetting the status quo and returns to her garden which contains several Triffids Allusions and cameo appearances editReferences within the story edit In The Great Game when Charlotte reaches the cavern with the glyphs the original inhabitants of the Solar System are revealed to be 1 Mercury Mercurians from Dan Dare Venus A Treen and a Theron from Dan Dare Earth Silurians and Sea Devils from Doctor Who The Moon The Watcher from Marvel Comics and a Selenite from H G Wells The First Men in the Moon Mars A Green Martian from Barsoom a fictional version of Mars and a hrossa seroni and pfifltriggi from Out of the Silent Planet by C S Lewis Asteroid belt The Martian invaders from The War of the Worlds In The Great Game issue 1 Carl Kolchak makes a cameo appearance In issue 2 Autumn s bookshelf includes a work entitled The Perils of Andrea a reference to Perelandra Both references were made by D Israeli 1 The fictional Hobbs End underground station is a reference to Quatermass and the Pit Captain Haddock Tintin and Snowy from The Adventures of Tintin can be spotted on page 42 There is a cameo by Dan Dare and Digby References in other works by Edginton and D Israeli edit The War of the Worlds adaptation by Dark Horse Comics contains several references to Scarlet Traces Autumn and Currie can be seen in a newspaper as having saved Emperor Menelik of Abyssinia from an assassin 2 Ned Penny can be seen on the Thunder Child 3 An Archie the dog look alike appears in the ruins of London 4 An official figure supervising the removal of Martian tripods after the end of the war resembles a young Dr Spry while the two army sergeants awaiting his orders reappear as Coughly and Dravott in Scarlet Traces 5 The adaptation ends with the narrator reflecting that it may be possible for humans to spread throughout the solar system also 6 In Kingdom of the Wicked also by Edginton and D Israeli the main character s wife is seen reading Scarlet Traces Publication history editThe original Scarlet Traces was conceived as a partially animated serial intended for the now defunct website Cool Beans World In an interview for 2000AD Review Edginton said The Cool Beans version was to have been like a little movie in many ways It had music sound effects zooms pans and dissolves There was even going to be some limited animation of the War Machines A lot of the work was done and in the can when Cool Beans shut down production 7 The website ceased operation after only a fraction of the serial had been published D Israeli wrote in his blog when Cool Beans folded we had a comic which was only 75 complete and which was still owned by the defunct publisher Having retrieved the property Ian Edginton then managed to license our previously unpublished comic to Rebellion s Judge Dredd Megazine as a reprint thus giving us the funds to complete the story while retaining ownership 8 D Israeli reworked Scarlet Traces as a traditional comic book story 8 This version was serialised in 2002 in the British anthology Judge Dredd Megazine vol 4 issues 16 to 18 In 2003 it was collected in its own 4 issue limited series with minor revisions by US publisher Dark Horse Comics and subsequently collected into one hardcover volume by Dark Horse Comics in August 2003 ISBN 1 56971 940 3 The Great Game was first published in a four issue mini series by Dark Horse Comics in 2006 The War of the Worlds was published in the same year Cold War appeared in 2000 AD 1988 1999 in 2016 Bibliography edit Scarlet Traces in Judge Dredd Megazine vol 4 16 18 2002 H G Wells s War of the Worlds in a trade paperback Dark Horse 2006 ISBN 1 59307 474 3 The Great Game in a trade paperback Dark Horse May 2007 ISBN 1 59307 717 3 Cold War in 2000 AD 1988 1999 2016 Cold War Book 2 in 2000 AD 2023 2034 2017 Home Front in 2000 AD 2126 2129 and 2131 2138 2019 Storm Front in 2000 AD 2250 2255 and 2257 2261 2021 At the end of the story text says Scarlet Traces will return 9 Collected editions edit Dark Horse edit H G Wells s War of the Worlds Dark Horse 2006 ISBN 1 59307 474 3 Scarlet Traces Dark Horse 2003 ISBN 1 56971 940 3 10 The Great Game Dark Horse 104 pages May 2007 ISBN 1 59307 717 3 11 Rebellion edit Scarlet Traces Volume One 140 pages Rebellion Publishing 2017 ISBN 9781781085028 12 Includes War of the Worlds and Scarlet TracesThis also came as an exclusive to webstore limited edition which included a numbered bookplate signed by both the artist and writer and an exclusive B amp W original print by D Israeli 13 dd Scarlet Traces Volume Two Rebellion Publishing 2017 ISBN 9781781085615 14 Includes The Great Game Cold War and Cold War Book 2Scarlet Traces Volume Three 128 pages Rebellion Publishing 2022 ISBN 9781781089439 15 Includes Home Front and Storm FrontAwards edit2007 nominated for the Eisner Awards 16 for Best Limited Series The Great Game Best Writer Ian Edginton for his work on The Great GameSee also editEdison s Conquest of Mars one of the earliest sequels to War of the Worlds Sherlock Holmes s War of the Worlds another unofficial sequel The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Volume II also featuring the Martian invasion War of the Worlds Second Wave a comic book by Michael Alan Nelson and Chee for Boom Studios in which bacteria resistant Martians return The Queen of Night s Aria a short story sequel to The War of the Worlds by Ian McDonald published in the 2013 George R R Martin and Gardner Dozois anthology Old Mars depicts a setting very similar to Scarlet Traces The Great Game The Massacre of Mankind 2017 novel by Stephen Baxter that is a sequel to The War of the Worlds List of steampunk worksNotes edit a b Identification of the aliens from The Great Game 3 by Chris Roberson War Of The Worlds eComic Week 2 Page 13 Darkhorse com 2006 01 13 Retrieved 2010 10 05 War Of The Worlds eComic Week 8 Page 55 Darkhorse com 2006 01 13 Retrieved 2010 10 05 War Of The Worlds eComic Week 22 Page 103 Darkhorse com 2006 01 13 Retrieved 2010 10 05 War Of The Worlds eComic Week 26 Page 121 Darkhorse com 2006 01 13 Retrieved 2010 10 05 War Of The Worlds eComic Week 26 Page 125 Darkhorse com 2006 01 13 Retrieved 2010 10 05 Hanly Gavin 2000AD Review interview with Ian Edginton Archived from the original on 2006 10 12 Retrieved 2007 03 15 a b Brooker Matt D Israeli 28 August 2006 D Blog of Israeli I Have Often Walked Down This Street Before Retrieved 2007 03 15 Ian Edginton w D Israeli a Simon Bowland let Scarlet Traces 2000 AD no 2261 08 Dec 2021 Oxford Rebellion Publishing Dark Horse page for the Scarlet Traces book Darkhorse com 2003 08 27 Retrieved 2010 10 05 Dark Horse page for the Great Game book Darkhorse com 2007 05 16 Retrieved 2010 10 05 2000AD Shop Scarlet Traces Volume 1 Rebellion Publishing 2017 01 11 Retrieved 2022 04 22 2000AD Shop Scarlet Traces Volume 01 BOOKPLATE Rebellion Publishing 2017 01 11 Archived from the original on 2022 04 22 Retrieved 2022 04 22 2000AD Shop Scarlet Traces Volume 2 Rebellion Publishing 2017 10 04 Retrieved 2022 04 22 2000AD Shop Scarlet Traces Volume 3 Rebellion Publishing 2022 03 16 Retrieved 2022 04 22 The 2007 Eisner Awards 2007 Master Nominations List Comic con org 2010 07 21 Archived from the original on 2007 08 08 Retrieved 2010 10 05 References editScarlet Traces at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Scarlet Traces at Barney The Great Game at the Grand Comics DatabaseExternal links editScarlet Traces annotations Scarlet Traces and The Great Game at War of the Worlds co uk The Great Game at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Reviews edit Review of the first Scarlet Traces trade Comics Bulletin Review of The Great Game Comics Bulletin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scarlet Traces amp oldid 1174424867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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