REVIEW: Funny Creek #4 is the second-to-last installment of Rafael Scavone's emotional story, which thrills with beautiful art & colors.
Review Archives
REVIEW: Bliss #2 sees Caitlin Yarsky deliver Eisner-worthy art in this story about a man's descent into evil in attempt to save his son.
REVIEW: Angel & Spike #13 is a one-off detective story set between Hill's run and Thompson's takeover, but does it really feel like Angel?
REVIEW: 40 Seconds #1 from Jeremy Haun, Christopher Mitten, and Brett Weldele is a sci-fi rescue mission in gorgeous pastel watercolors.
The Mexican border is a hot-button issue, and ripe for a thriller. That’s what Jason Starr and Will Conrad dived into with their miniseries, Red Border.
REVIEW: Hickman's Empyre: X-Men #4 is surprisingly tender and funny for an event comic that includes a mutant zombie throwing up vegetables
REVIEW: Lords of Empyre: Swordsman #1 brings the horror with this one-shot that sets up Swordsman and Quoi for their roles in Empyre.
REVIEW: Maestro #1 sees Peter David return to his legendary run on Hulk to paint a grim vision of the Marvel Universe's future.
REVIEW: A Man Among Ye #1 & 2 bring Anne Bonny's exploits as a female pirate to comic book life with Stephanie Phillips' thrilling script.
Despite the single thematic concern, Chu #2 is a very strong comic book with some great choices in storytelling from the words to the images.
REVIEW: Funny Creek #3 sees writer Rafael Scavone take Lilly through a journey of escapism in one of 2020's best all-ages comics.
Suicide Squad #8 is a fascinating character piece showcases a powerful new love story while revealing the plot behind the narrative.
REVIEW: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Too Long a Sacrifice #2 feels, thanks to writers David and Scott Tipton, like an episode of the show.
REVIEW: Empyre: Avengers #2 from Jim Zub & Carlos Magno takes the battle against the invading Cotati forces to the Savage Land.
REVIEW: Funny Creek #2 from Stout Club and ComiXology Originals is an original, emotionally gripping comic about trauma and hero worship.
Marvel's future history clearly explains that at some point, the powers of the world manage to blow themselves up without any supervillains or ridiculous
All around the (Marvel) world, the vegetable forces of the Cotati seek to exterminate all meat-based life, and seriously, that does not even remotely
REVIEW: Tom Taylor's Seven Secrets #1 may feel narratively like Diet Saga, but the art by Daniele Di Nicuolo makes this comic a must read.
REVIEW: Ask for Mercy Season Three #1 introduces a world, imagined by Richard Starkings & Abigail Jill Harding, of tentacles and terror.
If you remember the 1980s comic book Nightmask, this spiritually tinged approach to that melds some of the flavors of traditional African beliefs with the
REVIEW: Shadow Service #1 from Cavan Scott & Corin Howell, another win from Vault Comics, is a witchy take on the private investigator genre.
This very clever indie comic may have some mild technical and pacing issues but Nightfall: Michael’s Awakening #1 shows a truly talented voice developing
REVIEW: Empyre: X-Men #3 passes the mic to Vita Ayala, Zeb Wells, and Ed Brisson as the mutants, zombies, and old ladies continue to war.
Of all the AWA books, Hotell was one of the most unexpected. A horror anthology centered around one location, a motel off the beaten track of the highway
REVIEW: Big Girls #1 is a killer debut from Jason Howard that feels like a pandemic era take on Y: The Last Man-style gender exploration.
Ludocrats #4 is fun, from top to bottom, even as it has a throwaway phrase that will send you running to previous issues.
REVIEW: Willow #1 and #2 might exist in BOOM!'s rebooted Buffy continuity, but fans of the original show finally have something to love here.
REVIEW: Empyre #5 follows on the heels of major reveals in the event's last issue and delivers a character-defining moment for the Thing.
REVIEW: Empyre: Captain America #2 is a perfect embodiment of who Steve Rogers is. Phillip Kennedy Johnson could write the main Cap title.
Big Girls #1 is an all-new science fiction idea from a singular voice that has something smart to say about the future and the present.