Watters finds a way around the cliches.
All in Action
Watters finds a way around the cliches.
Schultz is working with various cyberpunk tropes.
Posehn and Thompson have some degree of narrative momentum going into this issue.
Zdarsky frames the action quite well.
Priest is managing, very tricky balance.
Andreyko certainly makes the title character an appealing monster.
Johns rides a very fine line between laughable silliness and poetic, legendary heroic action.
Píriz’s artwork physically move the action across the page with great force.
Benitez and Chen manage a pretty tight chapter.
Wagner moves the story along quite steadily.
Van Poelgeest frames every scene in the issue like it's an inexplicably, beautiful, little narrative poem.
Thompson’s brilliantly casual wit animates Scarlett’s narration.
A fun, little dramatic moment for the series.
Paposi has an ingenious way of simplifying complexity
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.