Enchantingly horrifying on so many levels.
All in Female Lead
Enchantingly horrifying on so many levels.
The story moves briskly.
MacKay finds the perfect balance.
The opening 13 pages shoot by very quickly.
The overall premise for the series is interesting.
A story that casts the title character in a fresh perspective
A breezy adventure comedy
A thoroughly engaging transitional issue.
A sparklingly fun dive into darkness and heroism.
Kim is telling a pleasantly off-center story.
Muscle versus metal. Wetware versus hardware. Human versus machine.
Nubia feels relatively well-paced and well-executed.
A conclusion that feels remarkably fluid from beginning to end.
A charmingly scattered mess.
Harley Quinn #14 is a mixed bag; the story is solid… However, the disconnect between the art and story, and the stop-and-start pacing drag down what could've been a standout issue.
Jones' layouts are gorgeous.
It almost approaches a kind of genius in moments
Howard has firmly established a rapport with Catwoman.
An intriguing idea that casts a sharp arc through its first issue.
MacKay knows exactly how to frame a magical combat scene.