[REVIEW] NO LOOKING BACK FOR WALLY WEST IN ‘FLASH FORWARD #1’
With no friends, no family, and a power-dampening collar around his neck, what’s the Flash supposed to do? Flash Forward #1 aims to answer just that.
With no friends, no family, and a power-dampening collar around his neck, what’s the Flash supposed to do? Flash Forward #1 aims to answer just that.
Gotham City Monsters #1 is a strong introduction to a band of creepy characters. It’s grimy and grotesque, often reveling in its own brutality.
This graphic adaptation of a classic tale from legendary writer Clive Barker will appeal to readers who appreciate great horror, magic, or fantasy.
Francisco de Goya lived a long, colorful life full of great beauty as well as much horror. This graphic novel attempts to make sense of both.
Octavia E. Butler’s classic is a science-fiction novel about race, the notion of identity, and what it means to be African-American.
Georges Remi (1907-83) — better known as Hergé — told the world little about his most famous creation. This collection remedies that.
James Stokoe takes his keen eye for detail and brings a tired franchise to life, making Aliens: Dead Orbit possibly the nicest spinoff to date.
Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation couldn’t have been an easy task for Ari Folman or David Polonsky, but they did a fantastic job.
In My Friend Dahmer, Backderf shows us what it took to get to this point, and why so much of what we blamed Dahmer for could have been avoided.