This is one of Marvel’s best books out right now, and if you’ve been sleeping on it, you should take some time to catch up.
This is one of Marvel’s best books out right now, and if you’ve been sleeping on it, you should take some time to catch up.
The writing feels a bit weaker than the regular series on more than one level.
A graceful intro in a stylishly moody opening chapter.
Sea of Stars amps-up its exuberant playfulness.
A very appealing issue that challenges Quinn's sanity at a moment of great triumph in the shadow of significant loss.
A sense of wonder is maintained in an enjoyably pulpy adventure.
The X-Men have attacked the Mother Mold… but the Orchis Initiative is ready for them.
The former Gods say good-bye.
Lois Lane #3 makes the superhero comics’ first couple feel somehow both iconic and real.
Something is Killing the Children is bleak, horrific, and immediately compelling.
Fantastic art by four different superstar teams don’t help make Legion of Superheroes: Millennium #1 anything other than unnecessary.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer #8 is a promising, if slight, beginning for the first Buffy/Angel crossover.
Celebrate the 26th Anniversary of the Power Rangers’ franchise, with YDRC’s review of Go Go Power Rangers #22.
Exactly what this title has been missing
Petri and MacDonald deliver a story echoing some of the qualities of comic book great John Byrne’s pioneering work with the character.
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.
Orlando and Rossmo hit a surprisingly deep issue.
The entire creative team does a good enough job of distracting from the tired, old central themes of the story to make it FEEL fresh,