31 Days of Halloween
1990’s ‘Ghost Rider’ #7 was a subtle masterpiece of comic book horror
Ghost Rider #7 is bleak. It's horrifying. It's haunting. And it has remained with me for three decades.
Ghost Rider #7 is bleak. It's horrifying. It's haunting. And it has remained with me for three decades.
Introducing a huge spiritual struggle, Eternals: Celestial eschews the primary narrative to provide deep, rich context.
Crafting a good teen superhero is a delicate business.
Doctor Doom making some of his trademark bad decisions.
A short, sweet Onslaught story with none of the messy Big Event sloppiness.
A mini masterclass in design and cartooning, an inspiration for artistic hopefuls.
Grounded, energetic, and ambitious, Frontiersman is an easy recommendation to make.
Excalibur Vol. 3 takes the already incredibly weird Krakoan Age of the X-Men to even weirder, more abstract heights.
Duckburg for those tired of the duckblur.
While dealing with the untouchable real-life dread of sexual assault, Maw does so unflinchingly.
It’s a quiet and restrained book that allows itself large, abstract spectacle.
Presents some incredibly fun aspects of a different world, but doesn't make that world feel terribly connected.