Thompson has taken the basic legend of Wonder Woman and moved it into a spectacularly mystic darkness.
Thompson has taken the basic legend of Wonder Woman and moved it into a spectacularly mystic darkness.
Walsh cleverly constructs the concerns of the heart.
Seeley balances the story pretty tightly between action and investigation.
Cox has been slowly making a statement about humanity.
Vargas hits the page with a dreamy sketchiness
Loughridge is delivering a cleverly complicated exploration.
It all fuses together on the page.
Johnson completes an outline of the basic premise of the series with some degree of grace and precision.
Gillen is jumping around in history quite a bit over the course of the issue.
Pirzada’s script juggles quite a few characters.
Might be the single best-framed death of Steve Trevor ever.
There’s an encrypted otherworldliness about the experience.
Tynion cleverly plays with some of the more prominent bits of legend .
Watters finds a way around the cliches.
Schultz is working with various cyberpunk tropes.
Posehn and Thompson have some degree of narrative momentum going into this issue.
McFarlane almost has the heart of a really good story.
Zdarsky frames the action quite well.
Priest is managing, very tricky balance.
Andreyko certainly makes the title character an appealing monster.