McNicholas ratchets up the tension.
McNicholas ratchets up the tension.
Bennett’s storytelling is a bit lopsided.
There are several thematic layers to Tynion’s story.
Jordan takes a basic action sequence and makes it appealingly complex.
Such a weird superhero casserole.
The drama feels a little sluggish.
Family drama that’s been somewhat gracefully welded into an action espionage story.
Terse dialogue and tight-lipped drama.
Clearly a story of one of the most horrifying prisons imaginable.
Wagner puts the pieces together almost perfectly.
It’s one long chase scene.
Flores has a very slick composition on the issue.
It’s like something blew up on the page.
A very well-executed visual package.
A strangely vivacious and flirtatious necromancer? It’s such a cool idea.
Qualano puts just enough on the page to tell the story.
A perfectly respectable family drama.
Gailey narrowly focuses the issue on a single encounter.
Allor keeps the dialogue simple.
Cantwell, Kelly, and Lanzing contrast various characters and personalities against each other.