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Peter Gross - Community Reviews back

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theguywhoreads
theguywhoreads rated it 5 years ago
After the first omnibus of The Mask, volume 2 is more of 'fillers' with some good stories, some not. As always, the formula of the stories aren't much different than the rest. Here's the low down of what's inside of volume 2: The Hunt for Green October - Every mercenary in the world is looking for t...
XOX
XOX rated it 7 years ago
Hard to explain this. The wolf wants to end all humans by poisoning the tree of life. To stop that, Michael reluctantly work with Lucifer. Michael also has a daughter who wants to help. Interesting but a bit bloody. Unnecessary so. When supernatural beings act humans, this is the story we...
XOX
XOX rated it 7 years ago
One of the most imaginative story is for Lucifer to experiment with humans by creating another Eden and put two humans in it and asked them to worship no one. Which started out great. Two heterosexual humans found pleasure and company with each other. While the woman is fine with this, the man was...
Wyvernfriend Reads
Wyvernfriend Reads rated it 8 years ago
Mike Carey takes Lucifer as dreamt up by Neil Gaiman and runs with the idea, I picked this up because I heard about the TV series and like Mike Carey and it was interesting.
XOX
XOX rated it 8 years ago
Lucifer embrace free will. In this series, Lucifer gets out of hell and live among humans as a bar owner. He also had a son who had supernatural power, and wants to get the throne of hell. I like Lucifer in this story. More like James Bond with Supernatural power.
Fangs for the Fantasy
Fangs for the Fantasy rated it 9 years ago
Lucifer, having quit his job as hell's keeper, is happy running Lux (his piano bar). Lucifer is offered a mission to stop a creature which is providing wishes for mortals, because God does not want to get involved. As a boon, Lucifer requests a letter of indulgence from God, which gives him acces...
Ruined by Reading
Ruined by Reading rated it 10 years ago
Unwritten: Tommy Taylor and the Ship that Sank Twice was the first volume of the Unwritten series I’d encountered. The illustrations were fantastic, but the main story—that of the comic Tommy’s history—was so derivative of the Harry Potter series that it was a distraction. The frame story—that of a ...
I'm Reading Comeeks
I'm Reading Comeeks rated it 10 years ago
The Unwritten is a series I've been following for a long time. It's a complicated and complex story about a man who discovers his life is linked inextricably to a character in a book his dad wrote. And that he's also part of a plan to end stories altogether and by doing, destroy the world. This ...
Shelf Indulgence
Shelf Indulgence rated it 10 years ago
When I first heard that The Unwritten was coming to an end, I was sad because I've come to enjoy this weird blend of Harry Potter and the Thursday Next series. After that, I started to wonder exactly how Carey was going to wrap up the series, considering that it's a metafictional exercise in storyt...
Danielle's Reading Adventures
Danielle's Reading Adventures rated it 10 years ago
I think that this volume more than others in the series conveys such a powerful sense of loss and risk. In fact, it feels very melancholy. No doubt that was Willingham's intention. A character dies and it feels like an enormous hole is left in the Fable community. This volume touches on how someone ...
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