Writer Seanan McGuire weaves a very cleverly crafted, little web-slinger story.
Writer Seanan McGuire weaves a very cleverly crafted, little web-slinger story.
The graceful integration between art and story expands to fill a full issue quite well.
Itβs appealing to see MJβs relentlessness in completing the project.
MacKayβs fusion between humor and action continues to make this series one of Marvelβs most satisfying.
Writer David Hine and artist Brian Haberlinβs story increases in complexity.
Since her first appearance in Captain Marvel #8, Star became a sensation; readers wanted to know who she was, what her intentions were, and how she would get along with Captain Marvel. And as the Falling Star arc continued, everyone wanted to know, what was to become of Ripley Ryan, aka Star? Fortunately, Star is headlining her own five-issue mini-seriesβ¦
Kamalaβs life has been quickly unraveling, and if she canβt figure something out soon, it may be the end of life as she knows itβ¦
Psylocke puts together a team as Apoth strikes.
The New Mutants get caught between two warring factions of ShiβAr.
Domino to the rescue!
The UGC Rebels strike against Mother.
Writer Cecil Castellucci delivers a new twist on an old premise.
The joke plays out pretty much as expected.
Houser would have needed a series twice the length she had to work with here to bring across the full depth of what she was attempting.
Poetic dialogue and beautiful visuals keep the series suitably dreamlike as it glides through its fourth outing.
The debut of the new series conjures-up a clever concept in an urban fantasy setting that feels fresh and distinct.
The Legion Of Doom have Superman on the ropes.
The X-Men go to an economic summit.
Overall, Lois Lane #7 is a strong entry in a strong series.
Even a lesser issue of Dial H for HERO, as #10 is, is still delightfully ridiculous.