Justice Society of America (2023) #6 review
Oh my god, it actually came out on schedule. This week on: Geoff Johns just kinda does whatever… You guessed it! Geoff Johns just …
Oh my god, it actually came out on schedule. This week on: Geoff Johns just kinda does whatever… You guessed it! Geoff Johns just …
Oh, hey there, Bat-fans! Nice to see you! I’ve been on a sort of mini vacation. You see, I figured out a sweet way …
It’s the third issue of Geoff Johns’ return to the golden age, and things are… boy are they! I’ve already spoken a bit about …
I’ll be honest. I used to be a MASSIVE fan of Geoff Johns’ work. When I was a kid reading his comics, something about …
Questions are answered in Tom King and Clay Mann’s Batman/Catwoman #11, though many readers will find the resolutions to be lacking. King’s scripts have …
Batman/Catwoman #10 puts its chips on the table as the story pivots from simmering tension to an all out brawl across all three of …
Batman/Catwoman #9 is an intense read as Tom King’s script expertly bounces across three time periods, greatly aided by Liam Sharp’s increasingly surreal art. …
Batman/Catwoman #6 is one of the better entries of the series so far. While the narrative momentum still has its issues between the delayed …
Batman/Catwoman #5 marks a moment in the series where a lack of coherent narrative thrust hinders otherwise solid sequences. Clay Mann’s art remains solid …
Batman/Catwoman #3 refines some themes Tom King set up in previous issues while slightly advancing the core narrative across the three time periods established …