Johns narrowly misses a steaming pile of cliche.
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Johns narrowly misses a steaming pile of cliche.
Candonici beautifully renders the shifting emotional life of a disaffected high school girl.
So brilliantly delivered to the page with a scalpel's precision.
Lemire paces the action of the issue quite well.
Rennie remains a totally relatable character.
Fiffe’s storytelling is everything.
The central relationship between Thunder and its owner feels fresh.
Lots of weird poetry circulates around the edges of everything.
Young has fun with a few fantasy role-playing tropes.
Tariq Geiger’s story reaches a resting point.
The art team does a good job of finding the right angles.
Ba’s art is deliciously over-the-top.
Johns has begun to move the plot deeper into its own mythology.
The gentle complexities of the story are all quite clever.
So much of The Power Fantasy could be done as a stage play.
Fleecs continues to find interesting ways to put the cats in peri.
Cannon takes his time setting-up what appears to be a very deep and winding mystery.
This visual reality of the story works quite well.
Bennett gives the art team plenty of room to work.
It’s a fun opening.