Inkblot the cat retains his characteristic appeal.
All in Fantasy
Inkblot the cat retains his characteristic appeal.
Mary and Rose have a chat as Gran and Duncan make a discovery.
Bucci manages to keep everything dazzlingly in perspective.
Yet another adorably strange issue.
The Green Knight comes a-calling.
Inkblot rests wide-eyed at the center of it all in another enjoyable journey into fantasy.
Duncan, Rose, and Gran get a lead on Elaine and more than they bargained for.
It lacks a bit of a sense of wonder.
Kubert’s playful sense of amplification makes Inkblot unmistakably feline.
Old friends return and surprises abound.
The pacing of the story gets a bit lost in the poetry early on.
Things come to a head.
A weird action story that lurches around the page appealingly.
The second issue draws further appeal from Kubert's adorably oblivious hero.
The overall sense of immensity and impending doom seems missing in an otherwise enjoyable finale.
The murky poetic mess of the narrative is great fun.
All across the galaxy, things come together, both for good and for ill.
Cates takes the time this issue to provide a much needed downbeat after an intense first six issues.
Duncan and Gran tackle the Grendel.
In the year 2367, the human race has taken to scouring the “Big Dark,” aka space, for resources. The most valuable resource in space? Dead gods.