A solidly entertaining fusion of medical drama and magical fantasy.
All in Marvel Comics
A solidly entertaining fusion of medical drama and magical fantasy.
There’s a refreshing newness about Aero that Liefen is casting in clean simplicity
The X-Men and the Fantastic Four clash over Franklin Richards.
The X-Men go into the Vault.
Beast gives readers an anatomy lesson.
Sometimes being a hero means you have to make impossible decisions; a lesson Kamala learns in The Magnificent Ms. Marvel #12.
Madripoor feels very much like a natural habitat for Black Cat.
One of the more memorable iterations of Thor in the long, hallowed history of Marvel Comics.
The story as a whole misses some of the charm of the debut issue.
A reasonably enjoyable story of Strange in the far future, as seen in shades of cyberpunk in a weird, little one-shot.
Dr. Strange’s life continues to show clever novelty in another fun issue.
It’s Boom Boom to the rescue… maybe.
It’s the final battle against Apoth.
Ewing and Aaron give the cosmic end of the Marvel Universe a strikingly emotional core.
Writer Seanan McGuire weaves a very cleverly crafted, little web-slinger story.
The graceful integration between art and story expands to fill a full issue quite well.
It’s appealing to see MJ’s relentlessness in completing the project.
MacKay’s fusion between humor and action continues to make this series one of Marvel’s most satisfying.
Since her first appearance in Captain Marvel #8, Star became a sensation; readers wanted to know who she was, what her intentions were, and how she would get along with Captain Marvel. And as the Falling Star arc continued, everyone wanted to know, what was to become of Ripley Ryan, aka Star? Fortunately, Star is headlining her own five-issue mini-series…