Comic Books
Deadly Class #42 review
Deadly Class is repetitive and doesn’t know how to juggle the cast, which leads to a glut of monologues, exposition,...
Deadly Class is repetitive and doesn’t know how to juggle the cast, which leads to a glut of monologues, exposition,...
The disparity between what this is and what it could be has only gotten wider.
After some near misses, this issue finally peels back the magical world-building for emotional connections and meaningful storytelling.
This new world serves as a vehicle to comment on real world issues.
Farraday’s back, baby, and paunchier and drunker than ever.
An intriguing, deeply jarring meditation on fathers and sons -- with monsters.
The lives of two people are changed forever with just one gentle touch.
But now that the entirety of the series, all twenty issues, is collected in one big ol’ thang…there are plenty...
Jed seeks answers for his past in order to save his future.
Magic that surrounds this story, even if it can be hard to follow at times.
A gutwrenching story that doesn't hold back at all, and is incredibly powerful because of it.
A mid-series 'flashback' provides new insights and emotions.