The life and crimes of Minor Threat wrap-up their origin in an otherwise dull issue.
All in Female Lead
The life and crimes of Minor Threat wrap-up their origin in an otherwise dull issue.
Stranded on a planet without food, water, or aid, the team pulls their heads together to figure out where they might be.
A new era of Wonder Woman begins as best-selling writer G. Willow Wilson (Ms. Marvel) makes her return to DC with art star Cary Nord (Conan, THE UNEXPECTED) joining the series!
Heloise, a woman trapped in an abusive relationship, is at a crossroads: she can take the power Mahalia, a voodoo priestess, offers and make a better life for her and her child, or she can take her chances staying with her husband, Jean-Pierre, and hope Mahalia’s dark visions do not come true.
Catwoman’s adventure has developed an interesting rhythm to as it reaches its fifth chapter.
Supergirl has arrived on the edge of the galaxy in a sketchier, less emotionally adroit visual reality.
With this latest issue, the cartwheeling between depth and silliness falters.
Humphries continues to deliver a fun adventure into a mix of magic and the modern world.
Ben Blacker dives into a dark fantasy hybrid of Bewitched and The Stepford Wives.
This is magic’s darkest hour—one of the most powerful magicians of all time may not survive!
Nergal has reunited the Day brothers, and, by means of a human vessels, brings more demons from Perdition to London.
Jook Joint is a dark and macabre story following Mahalia, the proprietor of a jazz club who, much like the rest of the women in this world, is not what she seems. Mahalia is also a powerful voodoo priestess with a score to settle with abusive men.
Magical seats of power crumble before the will of Hecate as more Witch-Marked are revealed, and the Justice League Dark is forced to divide and defend multiple locations from Hecate’s attacks.
The extent of Hecate’s power and machinations is revealed in Wonder Woman and Justice League Dark: The Witching Hour #1.
A sense of Wonder is reinvigorated in the character of Diana Prince, as James Tynion IV rewrites the laws and history of magic within the DC Universe in Justice League Dark #3 .
Looking into Harley’s face is like looking into the divided American consciousness.
A tenacious heroine continues to tumble through the bewildering complexities of intergalactic justice as a Kryptonian deals with phantoms from the distant past.
Displayed here is Catwoman’s more vulnerable emotional side in moments leading up to the present.
It’s just a girl, her dog, and a semi-sentient homicidal demon axe from hell.