Suicide Risk #1 Powers Can Be Yours.. For A Price
Suicide Risk #1
Suicide Risk #1 (Carey, Casagrande, Elder, Dukeshire) A fresh look on if every day humans had access to superpowers like a common street drug.
DetailsSuicide Risk #1
Suicide Risk #1 (Carey, Casagrande, Elder, Dukeshire) A fresh look on if every day humans had access to superpowers like a common street drug.
DetailsBroken World #2
Broken World #2 (Barbiere, Peterson, Louise, Dukeshire) is an awesome continuation on a series that captures a fundamental sense of heart not often found in stories of this nature. From the drama to the shocking twists and turns, this is just good entertainment plain and simple.
DetailsBroken World #1
For those looking for a heartfelt take on apocalyptic comics, Broken World #1 (Barbiere, Peterson, Louise, Dukeshire) brings all the emotion you could want with powerful character-driven drama. It’s dynamic, packs plenty of twists and turns, and leaves with a cliffhanger that will force you right into the next issue no questions asked.
DetailsHeavy Vinyl: Y2K-O! TPB
Heavy Vinyl: Y2K-O! (Usdin, Vakueva, Nesterenko): An uplifting and engaging story, filled with LGBT+ teen positivity and romance and a vibrant style you won’t want to miss. The first volume is not necessary to enjoy this engaging story set in the birth of digital music sharing.
DetailsONCE & FUTURE #7
Once & Future #7 (Gillen, Mora, Bonvillain, Dukeshire) King Arthur’s great knight makes a forever changing decision. While Duncan and Gran are preoccupied, an ancient book has been stolen. Old English has risen!
DetailsAlienated #2
Alienated #2 (Spurrier, Wildgoose, May) continues to weave an intriguing story framed in beautiful art that further piques interest for future issues.
DetailsThe Red Mother #4
The Red Mother #4 (Haun, Luckert, Dukeshire) remains haunting and, at moments, striking, but its predictable narrative structure and artistic shortcomings can get in the way of an otherwise creepy and compelling story.
Detailsb.b. free #3
b.b. free #3 (Rivera, Dunlap, Quigley, Campbell) handles every issue more like a love & care letter to oppressed kids, like a story of finding your own strength and owning it. It gives us some of the most important moments in representation, and the art moves emotionally with the story. It’s a captivating, fun and fantastical read that I feel is important we look up to, both readers and creators.
DetailsBuffy the Vampire Slayer #13 (Bellaire, Valero-O’Connell) continues to be distinctly out of focus and a meandering mess, leaving its lead character out of its pages for the sixth issue in a row. Instead of introducing the new post-Hellmouth status quo, it instead chooses to focus on Kendra to no appreciable gain. Fans would not be wrong for dropping this book from their pull sheet at this point.
DetailsGhosted in L.A. #9
Ghosted in L.A. #9 (Grace, Keeny, Le) rounds up a dark and plot-centered issue. The melodrama and emotional dialogues are still here, but they give more space to some final revelations that leave us expecting the next issue.
DetailsIn its ninth issue, Angel is given a shiny new coat of paint as it morphs into Angel & Spike (Hill, Melnikov, Titov), but there are still so many underdeveloped characters and narratives here that it’s going to take a lot more than a couple of new characters to save this sinking ship.
DetailsKing of Nowhere #1
King of Nowhere #1 (Prince, Jenkins, Jenkins, AndWorld Design) is a promising beginning to a darkly funny, mysterious, and pleasantly off-kilter miniseries.
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