A fun fantasy drama with a sharp sense of wit.
All in Fantasy
A fun fantasy drama with a sharp sense of wit.
Manga-inspired art rolls across the page.
A strangely vivacious and flirtatious necromancer? It’s such a cool idea.
Moreci wastes little time in getting right into the heart of the conflict.
Mignola handles all of this with a very steady hand.
Brusha’s plot structure moves things along swiftly.
A very earthbound sense of life-or-death survival.
Beacham could slide off into a direction of intolerable cliche.
Seems to actually kind of reach for something deeper than the silliness.
There’s a primal, sweeping sense of action.
Grønbekk opens the series with a well-woven first issue.
Brown isn't quite pacing things right.
Wilson’s dialogue is as crisp as ever.
Mignola and Roberson do a very clever job of establishing the story's place in history.
Weisman cleanly opens a primal and well-defined conflict of simple elements.
As a writer, Kubert knows her own strengths as an artist.
Weisman keeps the action moving.
A sharply clever job of articulating bewildering complexity.
Barberi has a pretty solid look going for the issue.
King dives into a particularly dark end of romance.