I read a couple more comics and realized I didn’t have 300 words in me about each of them, but together, I do have 300 words total. Vita Ayala wrote two
Review Archives
There’s a mystery surrounding Eve Stranger and not even she knows why. Suffering from damage to her short term memory, the spunky lavender-haired outcast
Marvel Comics brings the world of League of Legends to life with 'Lux' #1, which finds our young protagonist searching for a cure for her magical talents.
'Wyrd' continues to dole out a narrative train-wreck of a story, which is not helped in the slightest with lifeless, uninspired art.
'Atomic Robo and the Dawn of a New Era' wraps its five issue run with an exploration of burning pants and how to expose a robot's butt.
'Aliens: Resistance' #4 finds Zula Hendricks and Amanda Ripley fighting for their lives as they try to extract a witness from a jungle planet.
'Deadly Class' #38 brings Marcus and Maria back to Kings Dominion after surviving the Freshman Great Exam. Not everyone is happy to see them.
The world of magic has four rules; protection and defense of the undeserving is not allowed, the creation of a magician’s wand without permission is not
Titan Comics just released a graphic novel collection of the first four issues of 'Newbury & Hobbes: The Undying'. It's pretty great.
Smashed is the latest collection of translated stories Junji Ito from Viz Media and that’s always an event especially if you love horror. Ito is arguably
Titan Comics continues it's really fun take on the Thirteenth incarnation of Doctor Who, with a smart script and art that captures the essence of the show.
'Star Wars Adventures: Flight of the Falcon' brings us the story of how one notorious space pirate ended up operating the fastest ship in the galaxy.
Issue 20 of Titan Comics' excellent 'Robotech' series brings the crew of the SDF-1 hurtling back to earth to combate Dolza's invasion fleet.
IDW's 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' kicks off a "City at War" with issue #93, as Karai and her mutants start gunning for Splinter and the boys.
Dorothy Culpepper and Asif show up just in time to stop a vicious killer from adding Fergie's mom to his tally. Fergie and Sid make new friends.
Cate Harrow was a talented little girl who displayed genius-level mastery of the piano and experienced a happy childhood. It wasn’t until her father left
'Star Trek: Year Five' somehow manages to capture the essence and atmosphere of the original series without stooping to parody.
'Star Trek: Waypoint' is a largely forgetable collection of one shot stories, each focusing on a different era of the Star Trek epoch.
A six-year long mystery gets a brutal, blood soaked answer in East of West #42, where we learn once and for all how the Horsemen died.
Star Trek: The Q Conflict got off to a great start, but issue 3 slows down a bit... but in an oddly Star Trek kind of way, which is perfect.
15 years and 162 issues later, the story of the B.P.R.D. (and Hellboy) comes to an appropriately apocalyptic conclusion. Plus, there's frogs.
I knew I knew writer Brian Schirmer’s name from somewhere and that somewhere was Whitechapel, from years and years ago. Between now and then, he wrote
Low is only five issues away from its conclusion with Image comics, but don't let that stop you from checking out this amazing science fiction series.
It’s tough to feel horror and suspense while drinking my first coffee of the day, but Emily Carroll’s (Speak, Through The Woods) When I Arrived At The
Faithless is set to be a 5 issue mini-series coming out of Boom! Studios, promising an “erotic depiction of faith, sex, and the devil in the tradition of
Poor Atomic Robo. All he wants to do is train the next generation of Action Scientists, punch dinosaurs, and talk to his secret robot son, Alan.
'The Witcher: of Flesh and Flame" wraps its four issue run, largely missing the magic and grandeur that makes the property fun to begin with.
Robotech #19 starts off with a literal bang- the entire city of Los Angeles is wiped off the map, and that's just the first page!
Captain Rook and Olwyn find themselves entwined in a mystery when a detour finds them unexpected guests of a suspicious tribe.
IDW's graphic novel adaptation of Solo: a Star Wars story is bright, punchy fun with art Star Wars fans, especially kids, will adore.