It’s all very familiar.
All tagged Alitha E. Martinez
It’s all very familiar.
Conrad and Cloonan set up the action with clever precision.
The story moves briskly.
Nubia feels relatively well-paced and well-executed.
The three stories have enough variation between them to make for a satisfying anthology.
The issue carries itself quite well.
Ayala and Williams do an outstanding job.
It's a tight path to walk in only 20+ pages.
If there is a serious flaw in the first couple of chapters of the series, it may be overall pacing.
A compelling look at the home of the Amazons.
Miles Morales: Spider-Man #13 is a case of wasted potential.
The final panels are very heavy-handed in their delivery, but they strike a powerful endnote.
Miles Morales: Spider-Man continues to be one of Marvel’s best titles right now, and issue #7 is a solid entry that ends with a great cliffhanger.
Heloise, a woman trapped in an abusive relationship, is at a crossroads: she can take the power Mahalia, a voodoo priestess, offers and make a better life for her and her child, or she can take her chances staying with her husband, Jean-Pierre, and hope Mahalia’s dark visions do not come true.
Jook Joint is a dark and macabre story following Mahalia, the proprietor of a jazz club who, much like the rest of the women in this world, is not what she seems. Mahalia is also a powerful voodoo priestess with a score to settle with abusive men.
When a Secret Invasion of Skrulls turns Manhattan upside down, Miles must choose: do his great powers come with great responsibility?