Howard’s carefully-crafted political power drama continues to hold compelling gravity.
All in DC Comics
Howard’s carefully-crafted political power drama continues to hold compelling gravity.
Superman and Nightwing team up to fight The Rising.
The issue carries itself quite well.
Everything is staggeringly well-balanced.
There isn’t a great deal of forward momentum in the plot.
Clever, little bits of wit that cling around the corners of the imagination.
The Justice League and Justice League Dark put their all into defeating Xanadoth. Still, it may not be enough.
Phillips finds a unique entry into a weird sub-sub-genre of science fiction.
Bellaire does some AMAZING work with color.
Superman’s rebellion on Warworld is bearing fruit. Still, not everything is going well and in the back-up, Martian Manhunter falls into a trap,
This issue is a stellar entry in a run that keeps getting better.
Ayala and Williams do an outstanding job.
Takara continues remarkably graceful visuals for Diana.
There is thoughtful murkiness in the course of the final moments of the series.
The Justice League and the Justice League Dark team-up to face an ancient threat.
Superman and Aquaman get help from a very unlikely source.
Action hero clichés take on a fun playfulness between siblings.
A story that explores some surprisingly deep emotional territory.
The League confronts the Royal Gang and in the back-up, Doctor Fate writes a letter to Kent Nelson about his visions.
Superman and the Authority learn more about the realities of Warworld and in the back-up, Martian Manhunter learns who’s behind the disappearances in Metropolis.