‘Doctor Star and the Kingdom of Lost Tomorrows #4:’ Advance Comic Book Review
Maybe I’m starting to feel the passage of time more than I used to, that I’m sensitive to how much time I actually have left
Maybe I’m starting to feel the passage of time more than I used to, that I’m sensitive to how much time I actually have left
What happens if you’re a soldier who has fought a war millions of light years from Earth and you want to go home? You find
I recently reviewed the first collection of Hellboy comics from legends Mike Mignola and John Byrne. Walking down that memory lane was highly enjoyable. Each
Issue three of Frank Miller’s Xerxes takes on both an experimental and an artistic turn when compared to the first two issues of the series.
If you’re unfamiliar with the Transformers, they’re just about the coolest robots to ever grace toy shelves across America. What started as a relatively simple
All factions converge in Sword of Ages #4 (the second to last), as full-on war erupts outside the citadel’s walls with Avalon and her party,
As if listening to the introduction of the hit series, Lost, imagine that voice as the intrigue continues: Previously on Myopia.
In its final issue, I finally found my way, wholly and completely, into Grass Kings. Matt Kindt and Tyler Jenkins avoid every possible cliché ending
A couple of issues ago, Emmy (the hero of this horror series that has become greater than its genre in every way), made the mistake
Blackwood by Evan Dorkin (writer) and Veronica Fish (artist) is like H.P. Lovecraft as written by J.K. Rowling or Harry Potter as written by H.P.
Son of an American diplomat, Ronald “Rocket” Robinson had more luggage stickers from around the world on his worn suitcase then his 12 years alive.
At its core, Snotgirl is still a book that heavily reads as being about imposter syndrome; while it’s practically the context the whole book makes