Writer David Hine and artist Brian Haberlin celebrate the "silent comic" format.
All in Fantasy
Writer David Hine and artist Brian Haberlin celebrate the "silent comic" format.
Mila’s crew keeps growing.
Camagni's stylish approach to fantasy continues to impress.
A satisfying ending to the 18-part series.
Lupacchino keeps the physical end of the action moving across the page.
Duncan and Gran take on Beowulf.
The thick, ponderousness of the backstory finally breaks a bit in a drama between man, woman and god.
Pure adventure that reaches for precisely what it achieves.
A more profound blending of art and story seems just out of reach.
There’s a hell of a lot of activity in this issue.
New threats arise.
Can Thor out-cosmic the insanely cosmic threat to the cosmic hungry man Galactus?
A heroine faces a dark adversary in a poetic confrontation
Young knows full well what his artist is capable of doing on the page.
Another satisfyingly strange issue.
A satisfyingly ominous conclusion.
The story plods its way to the final panels.
The emotional momentum of the series is maintained.
This issue is Ewing at his best, plain and simple.
Is this real, or just a trap set by Paradox?