ADVANCED REVIEW: The Passageway OGN launches Lemire, Sorrentino's shared horror universe, The Bone Orchard Mythos
Or, how The Passageway proves that The Bone Orchard Mythos will unravel the fabric of reality.
Read MoreOr, how The Passageway proves that The Bone Orchard Mythos will unravel the fabric of reality.
Read MoreThis new book presents 164 pages of damned fine comics journalism.
Read MoreWe Only Kill Each Other is a fun ride, with some witty dialogue and strong art.
Read MoreThe Ghost in You solidifies the Reckless series as a worthy comics equivalent to the pulp adventure novels that inspired it.
Read MoreThe book, which collects all eight issues from the Hickman and Huddleston series, is due out April 27, 2022.
Read MoreThe book follows a couple that share a shape-shifting sex robot, and how this arrangement complicates their relationships at work in the days leading up to a major election.
Read MoreThe satisfaction of Wingbearer comes from getting lost in this fantasy world where a little girl gets to live her purpose.
Read MoreAnd the story within remains relatable and gorgeous, too.
Read MoreDC Comics’ underrated digital-first series Represent! gets a new hardcover collection this month, today we look at what these comics are, why they work so well, and who should pick up the new book.
Read More‘The art will surely be the most divisive part of this book. It is disgusting and fits the story perfectly…’ read our full review of Matt Lesniewski’s Static…
Read MoreFalconspeare boldly foregoes the more fantastical to vanquish the darkness of the human heart, making this Warwick Johnson-Cadwell’s most Victorian tale yet.
Read MoreYummy!: A History of Desserts has cracked the code of an essential conversation every child must have to engage with cultural narrative in a way that protects them from the inevitable dissolution of finding out that history is not made entirely of truth…
Read MoreWhile going in with knowledge of the Lantern Corp may help the average reader pick up little easter eggs and nods to other Lanterns, no heavy study is necessary for the graphic novel Far Sector from DC Comics.
Read MoreToday Steve Baxi reviews The Good Asian, Vol. 1, writing ‘The Good Asian ought to be considered a noir not merely because it ticks all the boxes, but because its presence elevates the genre as a whole…’
Read MoreStrange Adventures is a dense comic, more so than anything else King has done up to this point. Today Steve Baxi has a full review of the Strange Adventures trade collection.
Read MoreIn Batman and Robin and Howard, Jeffrey Brown does the impossible. He cures Damian Wayne of his angst. Check out Lisa Gullickson’s new graphic novel review!
Read MoreThis week’s graphic novel review is Factory Summers by Guy Delisle, a minimalistic at the summers the cartoonist spent as a teenager working in a paper factory in his hometown of Quebec.
Read MoreThis Is How I Disappear presents an ouroboros of exhaustion in the day-to-day lives of the younger generation. How we are more down-trodden, but we hold each other up…
Read MoreParty and Prey is a big swing that lands. It is heavy; it will crack you open; it will leave you angry. As I turned the last page, churning with complex emotions, I found some answers.
Read MoreAlberto Breccia’s Dracula is a classic for good reason. The storytelling on display here is earnest, almost like laughing with a friend as you air out your troubles.
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