Aragonés' delightfully silly comedy continues.
All in Darkhorse Comics
Aragonés' delightfully silly comedy continues.
Lonergan's visual style steers clear of heavy detail AND clean lines.
The story of one girl’s life plays across the page with clever execution.
Mignola handles all of this with a very steady hand.
Mignola and Roberson do a very clever job of establishing the story's place in history.
Venditti and McKinney pound the story into the page with a clever poetry.
A final dramatic push into the climax.
Older closes out the adventure predictably.
Older seems to be dragging things out.
Christopher Chaos makes a firm impact in his first appearance.
There’s a serene silence about the art.
Mignola and Roberson handle the story in a straight-ahead fashion.
Tynion falls into the traditional pitfalls of presenting a story of alien abduction.
Foxe plays the horror pretty close to humor.
There’s a deep respect for the common house cat that seems to resonate off the page.
Todd and Maggie hatch a new plan, but it’s out of the frying pan and into the fire.
Todd meets a familiar face in ancient Japan and hilarity ensues.
Tynion is simply presenting the story of Betty and Barney Hill.
Todd Parker finds himself getting a front-row seat for Japanese history.