The reason for Bravo’s missing decades is far more in keeping with the mainstream of Marvel than Brubaker’s stories have been to date, and once explained the protracted sequences leading to the conclusion are dragged out. His attacker is narrowed down to a former wartime comrade, Codename: Bravo, absent for many decades after a mission fouled up, and someone who holds a grudge against Captain America.Ĭhapters collected here began a new Captain America series when individually published, and Brubaker took the opportunity to move his stories a little from the murky world of cloak and dagger and politics to superheroics. The five chapter story in this volume begins with the funeral of Peggy Carter, Captain America’s World War II girlfriend, at which he’s attacked. Returning from apparent death to find Bucky Barnes wearing the star-spangled costume suited him fine. In Prisoner of War Ed Brubaker depicted a questioning and compromised Rogers, admitting that he’d always done his duty by his country, but it wasn’t always the path he’d have followed if given a choice. There was much soul-searching before Steve Rogers decided to resume the Captain America identity.
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