‘Stephen McCranie’s Space Boy Volume 1:’ Trade Paperback Review
This simple, rather unassuming comic explores a lot of fascinating sci-fi concepts that tend not to get a lot of attention in mainstream pop culture.
This simple, rather unassuming comic explores a lot of fascinating sci-fi concepts that tend not to get a lot of attention in mainstream pop culture.
Despite some of the more divisive parts of the Rick and Morty franchise, their comic book offerings have always been a steady stream of laughs
We’re currently living in a time when new ideas and beliefs are finally being discussed, challenging the preconceived notions that many have. One of the
Comparing a certain Netflix show about a female prison to Kaijumax is probably inevitable and understandable; the similarities do exist, and yet the differences are
Right off the bat, Shanghai Red #1 is not a pirate story, despite what the first few panels might have you believe. It’s something better.
I started Gideon Falls #4 worried that it would be all exposition, but about a third of the way in, it breaks your mind and
Issue #3 of Steve Orlando and Garry Brown’s Crude starts to find its way again after a second issue that I felt pulled us too
It’s no secret that I love Matt Kindt’s work. You can look through my reviews of his comics over the last three years. There’s very
I have absolutely no idea what’s going on in Black Hammer right now, but it looks like we’re about to find out! The beginning of
I have no idea what the hell I just read, only that it was insane…ly good and completely, utterly insane. Mars. 2770. A technologically advanced
Simon Spurrier and Matías Bergara create for us the apocalyptic aftermath of a Dungeons & Dragons-style world with their comic, Coda, in which magic no
“To infinity and beyond!” The joyous exclamation is the same experience readers will have when they jump into Jupiter Jet. The trade paperback collects Issues