Young and Corona dive a bit further into the shadowy horror fantasy of a very distinctive small-town American fantasy world.
All in Drama
Young and Corona dive a bit further into the shadowy horror fantasy of a very distinctive small-town American fantasy world.
A quick-paced mystery with clever plot twists.
A dense, little cyberpunk fantasy that closes itself off for good just as it was beginning to get interesting again.
The art’s good. The story isn’t.
The overall composition of the issue is enjoyable.
A really fun, well-paced script that is brought to the page by artist Marco Castiello.
Writer and artists occasionally bump into each other in an otherwise satisfying issue.
Black Cat is given her big series intro in a fun story that firmly establishes a classy mood.
Writer Seanan McGuire stylishly reaches the end of a multi-part story with “Hammer to the Heat.”
The combustion at issue’s end more than justifies slow and restless rising tension that’s been going on all year.
A story of rising tension of political drama peppered by strikingly hilarious bits of humor.
Haberlin’s art is atmospheric enough to make Sonata stand out on the rack.
A satisfying end for a refreshing indie story with a promising potential for future issues.
A promising, new story with twinges of political commentary scratching out around the edges of current events.
Joëlle Jones uses the extended space of a special 37-page format to tell one of the single best stories of her run on Catwoman.
An indie-style drama reaches the heaviest point in an issue that gradually builds into promising combustion.
The Amazing Nightcrawler really feels like it’s becoming interesting one month before it ends.
Artist Jorge Corona contrasts powerful destructive forces against subtle human emotion.
Plascencia’s artwork hold the emotionality of the story at a contorted distance.