Wherein we sit down, grab a joint, take a few drags, kick our feet up and crack open a comic book.
Burnouts #1 is the new book by Dennis Culver and Geoffo. If you don’t know these two names, you should. Dennis...
I was not overly enamored with Unnatural #1. I found its themes to be overly cliched as well as aggressively overt. I also had a hard time connecting with the characters as I found myself disliking pretty much ...
Back in the late 80s and early 90s, if Alan Moore or Neil Gaiman wrote something, I bought it no matter what. Most people did, and then around 1996, it felt like we didn’t have go to writers that were sold on n...
Let me start by laying my cards on the table here: if you’re not reading Farmhand, you really need to reassess what you’re doing with your pull list. Seriously, this book is fantastic and if you liked Chew back...
The Stellar series from Image Comics and Skybound Entertainment takes a dramatic, and jarring, left turn in issue #3. The happenings from the first two issues take their toll on Stellar and those around her and...
Yes, this really is a review of Mage: The Hero Denied #11. Just go with it.
I first ran into Matt Wagner’s work in 1984 a few months before he published the first issue of Mage: The Hero Defined. My gaming g...
Issue #2 of Image Comics' The Weather Man gave us plenty of insight into the backstory of the universe and specifically, Nathan's supposed involvement in it. While I appreciated the world building taking place,...
Image Comics' Coyotes #5, from writer/artist team Sean Lewis and Caitlin Yarsky, does a number of important things. It wraps up some lingering questions from the first story arc and takes several steps towards ...
I don't believe in ghosts or anything like that. I do believe in the afterlife; Heaven and Hell and so forth, but I don't think we hang around earth bothering people after we die. However, for some reason I qui...
Crowded, the new comic series from Image Comics and writer Christopher Sebela, gives us a look at a potential near-future society that has lost itself in the convenience of technology and the ability to get nea...