What they aren't really telling you is that this is an much of a Red Lantern book as a GREEN Lantern book. And the Red Lanterns have XPac heat. Run away.
He's got a Ke$ha thing going on with his name, and he hates humans about as much as I do. And he's trying to get Cyborg to turn his back on humanity, supposedly at the orders of a master. I want to see where this is going. There's a lot of humanity and what it means to be human versus a machin...
I'm not sure if it's a good thing or a bad thing that I picked this up relatively quickly after reading the old original run of Iron Fist. On the negative side, the character has changed a little bit... okay, a lot bit in the 30-plus years since he was created. He's less naive about some things, a...
The second volume of Batman: Black & White is much like the first. Editor Mark Chiarello gathers together some of the most acclaimed writers and artists who then produce short stories about The Dark Knight. While I didn’t find the overall experience as strong as the first collection, there were st...
It's an anthology, so of course it's a mixed bag, both from an art and story perspective. There are some really outstanding stories here. Paul Dini's "Case Study", the first story in the collection, is a nice and perceptive look at Joker's psychology, painting him as someone completely sane, possibl...