With a number of wonderful twists and turns to its intricate post-apocalyptic plot, this thrilling opening salvo posits a harrowing question of identity.
Review Archives
Strap in because it gets very real, very fast in Big Girls #6, closing down the initial story arc and making a big shift for the cast members here. Jason
With an irreverent approach, a team of unlikely extrahuman entities must be quickly assembled to overcome a threat that could wipe out the whole world.
REVIEW: An Unkindness of Ravens #3 is exactly the kind of rare feat of creativity to which more creators should aspire.
With the power of myth being juggled between existing continuity and new questions, one of the Marvel universe's most enigmatic properties returns to
REVIEW: I Walk With Monsters #1 spends a lot of time on the lead's trauma without developing her as a character first, leaving no way in.
Much like the worry faced by Luke Skywalker in The Last Jedi, this issue posits the idea that the legacy of the Batman is hubris and failure. Much like
With a neatly tied up done-in-one, the heroic scion of a problematic property updates the wild west aesthetic with modern sensibilities and some of the
AWA Studios’ Upshot imprint has steadily published the most solid lineup of genre comics since it started early last year, but for our money, Bad Mother
In a creative effort that is both insultingly bad and morbidly humorous, King In Black: Iron Man/Doom #1 is a crossover fueled one-shot that teams up two
Set just before the opening shots of the Cybertronian Civil War, stalwart warrior Ultra Magnus has a laser focus on rescuing his mentor Alpha Trion. Once
In the second issue of this new regulated era, the four Power siblings struggle with the law, getting so much more room to talk than Ms. Marvel,
Redemption #1 is a fun, violent start to a feminist Science Fiction Spaghetti Western starring a grizzled old lady gunslinger.
REVIEW: Frank at Home On The Farm #1 is an effective debut that delivers creeping, lasting terror with haunting, unconventional art.
REVIEW: Home Sick Pilots #1 is one of the most unique-looking books on shelves, & Wijngaard's art is top-notch. The story, however, falters.
We Only Find Them When They’re Dead #4 is still high-grade sci-fi that, collected certainly, will be remarkable.
Whenever you have a large cast and a huge fictional continuity, there are always tales between the tales we know. These small frame moments provide
In the aftermath of the Battle of Yavin, just after the events of the first Star Wars movie, Princess Leia convinces Han Solo to take on a dangerous
Literally starting off with a bang, Red Hood #52 steeps itself in a vibe that is unlike any other in Gotham and gives Jason Todd a crash course in the
There have been many books with Hyperion in them, but few make the visual spectacle of his threat so apparent, like Taskmaster #2.
REVIEW: Big Girls #5 sees Jason Howard's sci-fi battle of the genders deliver a climactic battle that culminates in the series' best moment.
Remina is one of Junji Ito’s latest horror manga stories, and it’s utterly nuts. In a good way. A horror story should be utterly insane, nightmarish, and
This has to be some kind of hat trick because this series continues to dazzle with intimate, innovative superhero storytelling by pivoting a third time.
Rorschach #3, like a post-election article in a major newspaper of record, to humanize people who are threats not only to others but to themselves as well.
Norse Mythology #3 doesn't fit in the with characters movie fans are used to seeing but is a great way to absorb Norse Mythology.
Strap in because you're in for a deep dive sci fi ride Far Sector #9 is not like anything else on the stands. Jo Muellin is a military veteran and
Literally, nothing happened in The Flash #767. Given that this is the second installment of an apparently grandiose crossover, one might expect perhaps
S.W.O.R.D. #1 is a new exercise in scene-setting that shines with character moments but falls short on clarity.
By introducing a less sturdy character for Cain Marko to feel responsible for, this series and Juggernaut #4 is trying to pull at the same heartstrings
REVIEW: A Dark Interlude #1 seeks to create a kind-of-sequel to Fearscape, but does it work for the unfamiliar reader?