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...
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...
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.
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.
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...
Dear Mr. Wood,if you are going to have a main character who "grew up" Brooklyn as opposed to moved here from somewhere else, there is no way in hell that she would say "New York City's not so intimidating",when going to Manhattan for the first time to go to College @ NYU!.Anyone who was born here wo...
This arc is trying to do something cool (if, yes, unabashedly and ridonkulously anachronistic) with a crime scene investigator/criminal profiler in occupied medieval Ireland, but the muddled storytelling doesn't do it any favors. Also, so many unlikeable people again!
Beautifully referenced background art (NYU alums will be schoolsick) and sharp visual storytelling do not compensate for the banality of said story and the characters who people it.
The latest in the new Minx series of graphic novels targeted at teenage girls and created by (straight bio) men. The state of comix tempts me into gender essentialist critique. I guess the real question is why don't publishers like DC Comics hire more women graphic novelists? More on this later.
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