Ghost-Spider #9: Where Does the Good Go
Ghost-Spider #9
Ghost-Spider #9 (McGuire, Guara, Herring) Gwen and the Storm twins take their relationship to the next level and we find out that Johnny and Sue aren’t too fond of doctors!
DetailsGhost-Spider #9
Ghost-Spider #9 (McGuire, Guara, Herring) Gwen and the Storm twins take their relationship to the next level and we find out that Johnny and Sue aren’t too fond of doctors!
DetailsGhosted in L.A. #10
Ghosted in L.A. #10 (Grace, Le, Nesterenko) is the best of this series exaggerated to a ten: funny, melodramatic, exploring dark and traumatic issues with innuendos, gay, hot, and a roller coaster. Get ready cause there’s no way this won’t let you with your mouth wide open!
DetailsHarley Quinn #72
Humphries has achieved an iconic status with this run on Harley Quinn, and this arc shows that there are emotional ramifications that can continue to be explored long after this series, but Harley Quinn #72 (Humphries, Abel, Hi-Fi, Sharpe) also shows that the story isn’t nearly completed yet. There might be some new developments for fans to come to terms with, but it’s an enjoyable issue and on par with the quality we’ve come to expect from this team.
DetailsWonder Woman: Agent of Peace #2
Wonder Woman: Agent of Peace #2 (Palmiotti, Connor, Sampere, Hi-Fi) Wonder Woman finds herself in parts unknown confronting an ancient evil. Together with Lois Lane, they will have to think and act quickly to claim victory.
DetailsHawkeye: Freefall #5
Hawkeye Freefall #5 (Rosenberg, Schmidt) kicks it up a notch in a series that continues to turn it up a notch. When will they stop? I have a feeling there’s no ceiling when it comes to this series!
DetailsThe Ludocrats #1
The Ludocrats (Gillen, Rossignol, Stokely, Bonvillain, Cowles) is gratuitously violent, artistically inspired, fourth-wall-obliterating, steampunk/fantasy Saturday-morning-cartoon-meets-Asterix for people who love profanity. Is it ludicrous? Most definitely. Is it funny? That’s subjective.
DetailsDCeased: Hope at World’s End #1
DCeased: Hope at World’s End #1 (Taylor, Nguyen, Lokus, Temofonte, Oliver, DC Comics) is a quick ground-level look at the opening days of the cataclysm.
DetailsYoung Avengers #3 (2005)
Young Avengers #2 (2005) (Heinberg, Cheung, Dell & Ponsor) The Young Avengers reveal their secret identities as Patriot lashes out on Captain America. And, the devil we have been waiting for arrives – Kang the Conqueror!
DetailsBatman: The Return #1 (2011)
Batman: The Return (2011) (Morrison, Finch, Steigerwald, Sharpe) is a one-shot from an absolute superstar team of creative talent set to bridge two eras as Bruce returns to the cape and cowl following Dick’s time as Batman but this particular issue finds true success in how the Batfamily has held down Gotham in his stead.
DetailsAstonishing X-Men (2004) #66
In Astonishing X-Men (2004) #66 (Liu, Pinna), the team shines a light on marginalized communities. This issue shows how our characters heal, enjoy, make community, in the face of traumatizing experiences, with a B-Side-movie-like subplot that surrounds it.
DetailsX-Force Special: Ain’t No Dog
There may not be much heart involved, but I’m guessing that’s not really what this story is getting at either, and that’s okay. Sometimes you just want to see Wolverine take out a whole group of fanatics in the most violent way possible while screaming “Jeezus I love this!”, and that’s exactly what X-Force Special: Ain’t No Dog #1 (Huston, Aaron, Palo, Dell’Edera) delivers.
DetailsAnt-Man #4
Ant-Man #4 (Wells, Burnett, Spicer, Petit) may be stuck on the web, but it’s as thoroughly vibr-ant and ant-ertaining as ever.
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