
‘Little Bird #3:’ Advance Comic Book Review
Ya know those heroic stories in which the heroes of the story have a one-in-a-million shot at victory, and somehow they manage to succeed .
Ya know those heroic stories in which the heroes of the story have a one-in-a-million shot at victory, and somehow they manage to succeed .
Jeff Lemire continues the sort-of origin story of the Laughing Man in Gideon Falls #13, and two things are happening for me. One: More questions
Our hero, Joe Golem, was left in a pretty tight spot when we left him at the end of the previous story arc, possibly dead
Comic books are not movies, but that doesn’t mean they are not cinematic. The creative team behind Last Stop on the Red Line understands this,
Not all art is about entertainment. Sometimes, art exists to challenge, teach, or heal us. A better way to describe art is to say that
Nina Rodriguez always knew that magic was real, she just couldn’t prove it. But when her sister Marissa is kidnapped by the Great Beast, Nina
Class hierarchy, social status, racial discrimination, and sexual discrimination are all themes being handled deftly in Greg Pak and Giannis Milonogiannis’ Ronin Island.
Empty Man #7 goes above and beyond, shifting from survival horror to something more along the lines of existential and philosophical dread. Not only does
Jeff Lemire and Dean Ormston’s meta tale of superheroes without a story has sprawled every which way since its first issue about two years ago.
Reading She Could Fly is like slipping into someone else’s madness, and it fits far too comfortably.
I have reservations making the review of Humanoids’ newest Life Drawn title, States of Mind, about me, but, in many ways, the purpose of this
Is there anything more intrinsically ’90s than Todd McFarlane’s Spawn? It’s perfect. The content is edgy, the art is gritty, and the capes are long