Johns delivers a very believable alternative history.
All in Image Comics
Johns delivers a very believable alternative history.
Poke comes across as a deeply relatable character.
Beanβs basic premise for the series is actually very clever.
The latest developments at the end of the 35th issue seem quite promising.
Fleecs takes the rulership of Lucky in to Macbeth Act 3 territory as things REALLY begin to unravel.
And then Casey gets lost in a whole bunch of stuff that isn't really terribly interesting.
It's a nice pacing and overall composition for a single issue.
Jordan outlines a particularly clever idea.
Bram and Jones drag their horror drama further into the dry and dusty light of day.
Itβs a powerful chapter in the saga that moves conflicts forward with some pretty dynamic narrative momentum.
Camp finds a clever way of working with the existential first principles of a life on the comics page.
Youngβs dark, little tail of whimsy is entertaining enough to keep the pages turning.
The Power Fantasy is incredibly dense stuff. I
Bellaire does a remarkable job of granting exactly the kind of mood.
Thereβs real insight in what Brombal is writing.
The Laphams weave a very tight suspense thriller.
Silvestri is laying in a tremendous amount story around the edges of everything.
Kennedy constructs an intriguing mood.
Kirkman gives the old property a little bit more darkness.