Wheel of Time #26 – Review
The first book in Robert Jordan’s classic fantasy series comes to the world of comics. With so few adaptations of the of the books, does this one measure up? The wheel weaves as the wheel wills.
The first book in Robert Jordan’s classic fantasy series comes to the world of comics. With so few adaptations of the of the books, does this one measure up? The wheel weaves as the wheel wills.
In all my years of writing about comics, I don’t think I’ve ever ranted so much about an issue as I will now about Deathstroke #9. Thanks, Rob Liefeld.
This issue should be more than average since it’s a crossover of some of Dynamite Entertainment’s most prolific characters. Unfortunately, that’s exactly what it is – average.
What will happen now that Sebastian Shaw is free? Can the kid X-Men and kid Avengers find peace where the adults couldn’t?
Do you wonder what happened to Fairchild, Beast Boy, Terra, Lightning, Ridge, and Thunder after the Culling? Will they ever people to escape the grasp of NOWHERE? There are only some questions that can be asked after reading The Ravagers issue 1.
And there came a day, following Heroes Reborn, when Earth’s mightiest heroes found themselves united once again against a common threat! On THAT day, The Avengers were Heroes Return! – to fight the foes no single super hero could withstand! Through the years, their roster has prospered, changing many times, but their glory has never been denied! Heed the call, then – for now, the Avengers assemble against the forces of Morgan le Fey and Modred!
Adventure Time, come on grab your friends. This comic brings laughs to distant lands. With Ryan North, and Shelli and Braden, the fun will never end. It’s Adventure Time.
Considered a master of horror, writer Steve Niles presents an all-too-familiar story, adds great narration and Bernie Wrightson provides the haunting black-and-white artwork that makes you feel like you’re in a classic horror movie.
This review mimics the way I felt about this issue as I was reading it. I started hating it, and ended up enjoying it despite several panels that I can say did offend me. It really does feel like an acid-trippy version of Avengers with things randomly thrown in, like Mecha-Hitler.
Mike Costa and Antonio Fuso set up a status quo that kind of makes it questionable whether this book should still be called Cobra.