The steady drama that Hawkins’ readers have come to expect over the past few years.
The steady drama that Hawkins’ readers have come to expect over the past few years.
The hard edge of the satire suffers a bit as the series switches gears to a much more confrontational dynamic.
A large, undoubtedly strange journey begins in a story that isn’t afraid to get more than a little whimsical in its first chapter.
Heavy moments between Harley and her mother are balanced against the comedy of Harley and Death.
This timely and political first issue of Lois Lane is an instant classic, and a great start to the series.
This is another solid issue of raising stakes and adding complications in a compelling new direction for the Buffy franchise; it’ll be interesting to see how it all pays off, if at all.
By the end of the issue, you will be asking why nobody ever dug this deep into “The Turtle”
Logan, Dani, and Bruce find a safe haven, but trouble is on there trail.
Emma Frost has been manipulating the X-Men since day one, but now she needs their help.
Mutiny on Apokolips!
The action is given its place in the art while the emotion is given its place in the dialogue.
Seemingly sent from the gods to fulfill their destiny on this book, the art team is Perfection
A solid story that almost has an ending.
Zhou Liefen brings a city defender to life with sparklingly novel framing in a debut issue.
McGuire wisely chooses to focus on the fun social angle of a couple of web-slingers hanging out together.
Joe Quinones’ art is a tour-de-force in Dial H for HERO #4.
The creative team is doing compelling work in Angel #2, but something is still missing.
“If we don’t remember our scars… then everything we’ve survived loses it’s meaning."
Kamala’s still reeling from the knowledge that she’s supposedly destined to save the planet Saffa from destruction when she’s hit with another bombshell; the threat to the planet may be from the inhabitants themselves.
A crucial moment in Young Thor’s life