The Hellions get more than they bargained for in Arrako.
All tagged Carmen Carnero
The Hellions get more than they bargained for in Arrako.
The Hellions go on a knightly quest.
The situation with Nuclear Man (issues 1-5) left Ripley with unresolved trauma, giving her nightmares for weeks. So she’s attempting to cope with this by becoming as powerful as possible to never need saving again. No matter what it takes, she won’t be put in that situation again.
Kelly Thompson blurs the line between friends and enemies, heroes and villains as Captain Marvel falls deeper into the mystery surrounding her recent power malfunction.
Things haven't been great for Carol since her return to the superhero scene, and it looks like her life's going to get worse before it gets better. She's still falling from grace in the public eye and falling from such great height is dangerous, especially when you can no longer fly
A new all-woman anthology series. It’s written by women. It’s drawn by women. It’s about characters who are women. Cool.
It turns out that no matter how many times you’ve saved the entire planet, once people find out you’re part Kree, you’re automatically a spy
Carol has been reluctant to trust Som and Rogue but her options are limited, and she's rapidly running out of time.
Rogue and Captain Marvel are hardly friends. Frenemies may still be too generous of a term, but they can usually tolerate the other's existence. But Nuclear Man’s interference is going to test even that tolerance.
It’s common knowledge that you don’t want to make a Hulk angry, but you should never make Captain Marvel angry either. An angry Captain Marvel will do whatever it takes to make sure her friends are safe and justice is served.
It’s the end of the world as Carol knows it. Or is it? In Captain Marvel #2, written by Kelly Thompson with art by Carmen Carnero, Tamra Bonvillain, and letters by VC’s Clayton Cowles, Carol is faced with an “alternate reality” and the chance to lead a revolution.
Carol has been dealt a lot of blows by life in the past few months. She lost her mother, and almost lost her brother. Life knocked her down, but she got back up, suiting up again.