Family drama mixes with murder, mystery, and international intrigue in another satisfying issue.
All in Action
Family drama mixes with murder, mystery, and international intrigue in another satisfying issue.
It all feels very fluid.
Taylor’s sense of humor gets a little weird in places.
Tamaki has a lot of fun with the dichotomies of Two-Face.
Not all of the writing is brilliant, but it would be a very exhausting 100 pages if it WAS.
Scott begins the story in conflict and action.
Brusha finds perfect pacing for a simple supernatural story.
More than interesting enough.
Turner puts the reader through the wringer.
Howard is given only the smallest stretch of pages in which to envision Diana in her own kind of heaven.
A delicately-woven script.
The balance here feels almost perfect.
The heart of the story rests in the final issue.
There’s a deep, dark poetry to Simone’s work.
It’s a fun little exercise.
It’s fun action with just enough depth to keep the reader interested.
Gentle complexities play out in an alternate timeline U.S.
Harley continues to find an appealing place on the page.
The gravity of the drama moves everything to a final confrontation.