Sparrow and Cracker’s work is gorgeous.
All in Action
Sparrow and Cracker’s work is gorgeous.
Northcott is exploring things that move in strange directions.
Busiek and Nicieza are definitely making progress.
McFarlane has a couple of fun ideas in the issue.
Lieberman centers the overall plot pretty closely on Sonja herself.
McConville populates the issue largely with dramatic scenes.
Larsen is clearly just having fun here.
There’s a lot of exposition delivered in the text.
The world-building happens around the edges of the action.
Finley’s art has a stark brutality about it.
Everything is seen through the ailing cat’s eyes.
Grønbekk plays with the strange and unsettling.
The serious edge to some of the humor really sharpens the focus
Robinson has a very clean sense of execution.
It’s fun without totally pursuing its full potential.
Lee deftly handles the rather subtle intricacies of uncertainty and ennui.
A bit weaker than previous issues.
It’s sharp stuff that feels relatively well-balanced.
Hama continues to grind through a battle on U.S. soil.
Schultz clearly has a long-range plan for the pacing of the series.