Petri and MacDonald deliver a story echoing some of the qualities of comic book great John Byrneβs pioneering work with the character.
All in Female Lead
Petri and MacDonald deliver a story echoing some of the qualities of comic book great John Byrneβs pioneering work with the character.
Castellucci is putting together smart, interesting stuff that details Batgirlβs distinctive style of selflessness.
A supernatural adventure which tilts the traditional ghost story on its head somewhere between Hell and everything else.
This is where Vampirella's story starts to get wild. Writer Christopher Priest, artist and colorist ErgΓΌn GΓΌndΓΌz, and letterer Willie Schubert take Vampirella on an adventure that can only be described as bizarre and bloody. Very bloody. What more would you expect from an alien vampire?
This may be 20 pages of very kinetic action, but thereβs very, very deep drama driving it throughout.
McGuire's writing is particularly sharp in this debut issue of the new series.
The final panels are very heavy-handed in their delivery, but they strike a powerful endnote.
A very engrossing story with a layout that is at times breathtaking.
The title is only half right.
Kamala's up against a threat she can't fight as Ms. Marvel leaving her feeling powerless. Luckily she's got Tony Stark on speed dial. But she's about to learn even Tony's super genius can't solve everything.
Things haven't been great for Carol since her return to the superhero scene, and it looks like her life's going to get worse before it gets better. She's still falling from grace in the public eye and falling from such great height is dangerous, especially when you can no longer fly
After all of her adventures, it's great to see Gwenpool in her own solo series, even if it's only five issues. This is a great place for new fans to get started with Gwenpool and for existing fans to get more Gwen content.
A clean and simple motion and emotion explore some of Catwomanβs deeper emotions.
Hine, Haberlin and Van Dyke continue to put together a fun fantasy adventure.
Writer Jed MacKay delivers another story of weirdly stylish larceny.
Mark Waid gets quite a bit of unique mileage out of the superhero as a super-spy concept.
Writer Zhou Liefen gives artist Keng enough room to deliver a story the size of the Shanghai skyline.
Hazy wasteland poetics rumble through the opening chapter.
Fuses interpersonal drama with lighthearted fourth wall shattering multi-genre spoofery.
It seems difficult to believe that Rucka, Perkins, et al can continue this momentum for ten more issues, but the first two indicate that Lois Lane will be an instant classic.