One of the more satisfying issues in the series thus far.
All in Fantasy
One of the more satisfying issues in the series thus far.
A clear and articulate adventure
The Grendel strikes!
Erickson is trying to navigate Diana through a bit too much for a single, 16-page issue.
Writer David Hine and artist Brian Haberlin celebrate the "silent comic" format.
Mila’s crew keeps growing.
Camagni's stylish approach to fantasy continues to impress.
A satisfying ending to the 18-part series.
Lupacchino keeps the physical end of the action moving across the page.
Duncan and Gran take on Beowulf.
The thick, ponderousness of the backstory finally breaks a bit in a drama between man, woman and god.
Pure adventure that reaches for precisely what it achieves.
A more profound blending of art and story seems just out of reach.
There’s a hell of a lot of activity in this issue.
New threats arise.
Can Thor out-cosmic the insanely cosmic threat to the cosmic hungry man Galactus?
A heroine faces a dark adversary in a poetic confrontation
Young knows full well what his artist is capable of doing on the page.
Another satisfyingly strange issue.
A satisfyingly ominous conclusion.