Writer Jed MacKay delivers another story of weirdly stylish larceny.
Writer Jed MacKay delivers another story of weirdly stylish larceny.
Mark Waid gets quite a bit of unique mileage out of the superhero as a super-spy concept.
Writer Zhou Liefen gives artist Keng enough room to deliver a story the size of the Shanghai skyline.
Hazy wasteland poetics rumble through the opening chapter.
The action might feel stiff, but the horror of the drama is given vivid life.
Aaron and Hallum’s story continues to tumble through a pulpy, fun space adventure.
Thumbs is at its best when drama mixes with action in a dizzyingly tumultuous world of exploitation and revolution.
Fuses interpersonal drama with lighthearted fourth wall shattering multi-genre spoofery.
Genuinely groundbreaking storytelling
Jonathan Hickman changes everything about a longtime X-Men character.
Sabretooth’s plan is revealed!
It seems difficult to believe that Rucka, Perkins, et al can continue this momentum for ten more issues, but the first two indicate that Lois Lane will be an instant classic.
Nobody draws a symbiote better than Ryan Stegman in Absolute Carnage #1.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #7 from Boom! Studios takes a break from the ensemble-based format of the first six issues to focus entirely on Willow.
Just when you think you’re out, something shows up to drag you back in.
Rob Liefeld returns to tell more about the world Major X comes from.
Seven issues complete, and yet nothing has been accomplished.
Grant Morrison and Giuseppe Camuncoli work together and deliver an excellent detour
Hickman’s mutant revolution continues.
New Turtle on the block, and it ain’t easy being Green