It explains a lot: why he wanted to take over Latveria, how he got involved with the magic arts, and a lot of why he acts as he does. It is not however a flawless telling of his past: it's a little bloated, and while you don't really need six issues to tell this story, it's also not such a proble...
After she and her gay BFF Go Go Fiasco are attacked by ninjas, Angela St. James discovers that her mother, the head of super secret spy agency G.O.O.D (Global Organization for the Obliteration of Dastardliness) has been keeping secret from her. Her father, who she believed was killed when she was li...
A fun read: What if Superman's pod crashed in the UK instead of the US? Apparently his name would be Colin Clark, and being a superhero would be bothersome and embarrassing for his proper British family.
I liked this one, but it felt a bit rushed. I was worried that readers who had not read Identity Crisis might miss out on quite a bit, but the volume gives you enough background and summary to catch up. This was good because I have read Identity Crisis, but it has been a while. In the aftermath of t...
If there's one thing, one plot element, that Morrison is famous for, it's here, in the on-the-page meeting of Animal Man and Grant Morrison. Everything, it seems, was working towards that moment, when the fourth wall abruptly ceased to exist entirely. It could have been gimmicky, but Morrison manage...