Marked shows a sly depth that fuses art, magic, fantasy, and reality.
All in Magic
Marked shows a sly depth that fuses art, magic, fantasy, and reality.
Boy, does this young Wizard rumble and have some fire in the future for the Aegis!
A strange, little diversion into another place and a distant conflict serves as the end of a series.
Frank Castle’s rampage of revenge draws in the unstoppable Juggernaut!
A story that is well-written with poorly-paired art styles.
The introduction of a powerful new Sorcerer
Thor’s all-time greatest enemy – his brother, Loki – for one final, cataclysmic showdown.
Kibblesmith makes expanding the Marvel Universe look really, really easy.
The ingenious blend of magic and medicine challenges Strange in another bright standalone story.
It’s a fun contrast to Strange’s recent cosmic adventures.
As weird as things get in the course of the chapter, Aaron manages to keep it from ever overpowering the heroism of the team.
The cherry on top
A supernatural adventure which tilts the traditional ghost story on its head somewhere between Hell and everything else.
A promising series with LGBTQIA characters of color at the center of their own story.
This may be 20 pages of very kinetic action, but there’s very, very deep drama driving it throughout.
The epic scope of Middlewest continues to impress.
Mark Waid continues to wind down the final issues of the current Doctor Strange series with an absurdly cosmic story drawn by Barry Kitson.
Kibblesmith cleverly sets the mood of a bored god in Marvel Manhattan who is simply trying to find himself.
Writer Jed MacKay delivers another story of weirdly stylish larceny.
Jason Aaron crafts an enjoyable pop fusion of demonic horror and superhero team action.