A glorious return to the style and form for Joelle Jones.
All in Drama
A glorious return to the style and form for Joelle Jones.
A brilliant approach to an Indiana Jones/Tomb Raider-style adventureβ¦with a bit of Oceanβs Eleven thrown-in.
Stephen Green's sense of perspective draws the first arc of the series to a close with style.
Lois Lane #5 is the comics equivalent of a prestige cable drama.
Dialogue between Black Cat and her date is contrasted against the desperate entanglement of her former mentor.
Art and story mix in a pleasant duet
In a special Thanksgiving issue, Booster Gold teaches Harley the true meaning of Crossover.
Harleen #2 is a solid book, depicting the title characterβs descent into bad deeds, with a disturbing flash forward reminding us of whatβs to come.
A fun exploration into the nature of control and subversion in modern society.
Skottie Youngβs deeply engrossing serial continues with gorgeous atmospheric art by Jorge Corona.
Lois Lane #4 is a great example of why Lois is a linchpin of the DC Universe.
The creative team brings together a fun father/son adventure into its fourth chapter.
A strange, little diversion into another place and a distant conflict serves as the end of a series.
Itβs a weirdly satisfying end to a pleasantly odd satire.
A fully-engaging conflict in another cleverly-balanced issue by the new creative team.
Jeff Lemireβs elegiac new graphic novel Frogcatchers is highly recommended for a reader willing to engage.
Lei is given just enough personality in and around the action to command a very unique presence.
A relatively substantial issue in spite of the uneven narrative mix.
Skottie Young gives the witty Fox his close-up.
There's a sharp mix of heroism and villainy in the wrap-up.