Tini Howard’s hand-to-mouth fringe poverty milieu is rarely-tread territory for the vampire genre.
All in Female Lead
Tini Howard’s hand-to-mouth fringe poverty milieu is rarely-tread territory for the vampire genre.
MacKay keeps the action rolling.
A somewhat enjoyable issue.
A bold approach to the series' next major plot arc.
Veteran writer Marv Wolfman pits Dr. Psycho against Wonder Woman.
There's a charming familiarity between writer and character.
Boothby's wit is particularly sharp in a story of a father and his daughters.
The Empyre event comes to Captain Marvel with the release of Captain Marvel #18, an action-packed but emotional installment…
Camagni's stylish approach to fantasy continues to impress.
Far deeper and more satisfying than anything else in the Joker War crossover thus far.
Pérez's work shoots off the page with bewildering energy.
Ultimately Captain Marvel #17 feels like unnecessary filler. It isn’t interesting enough to stand on its own as fluff, and it’s too self-contained to be a bridge between arcs.
A charming opening chapter that pulls together enough intrigue to draw the reader to the page.
This issue manages to navigate Quinn's significant psychological territory in a reasonably satisfying way.
The thick, ponderousness of the backstory finally breaks a bit in a drama between man, woman and god.
Palmiotti and Conner cleverly construct an emotionally stirring action drama.
Star’s solo series reaches its explosive end in Star #5…
Pure adventure that reaches for precisely what it achieves.
The final issue ends without any clear sense of conclusion.
A heroine faces a dark adversary in a poetic confrontation