I never doubted R.A. Salvatore talent; despite my love of Drizzt, I’d not have made it through twenty-four books (so far!) chronicling his legend if Salvatore had no skill with words. If he could not tell a story, the story, in the way it needed to be told, deftly and surely, his words always underlying andContinueContinue reading “Review: DemonWars: First Heroes (Saga of the First King)”
Category Archives: Reviews
Review: Mass Effect Foundation (#8)
The beginning of the eighth issue of Mass Effect: Foundation deals with the aftermath of Kai Leng and Agent Rasa’s failure to capture Jack in the previous issue. The tension between them seems worse than the repercussions of their failure. Kai Leng’s facial expressions here are so well drawn! Between that and his posture, his furyContinueContinue reading “Review: Mass Effect Foundation (#8)”
Review: Serenity: Leaves on the Wind #2 by Zach Whedon and Georges Jeanty
It took me so long to get to the first issue of ‘Serenity: Leaves On The Wind’ that the second issue showed up in my inbox only a week later. Procrastination rewarded! There were no preview pages for this comic on the Dark Horse website before publication and when the first issue came out, reviewersContinueContinue reading “Review: Serenity: Leaves on the Wind #2 by Zach Whedon and Georges Jeanty”
Review: Nightcrawler by John Reinhard Dizon
Sabrina Brooks has the key components for a secret life as a vigilante at her disposal: a fortune inherited upon her father’s death, stewardship of his chemical company and a desire to serve and protect. In fact, had her father not passed away, she might have pursued a career in law enforcement. As matters stand,ContinueContinue reading “Review: Nightcrawler by John Reinhard Dizon”
Review: Pariah #1 by Philip Gelatt and Brett Weldele
Pariah #1 is the first comic in a new series following the release of Aron Warner’s Pariah Volume 1, where we learned about the Vitros, children born of an experiment designed to cure rare and fatal diseases in-vitro. They’re still human, just very intelligent, and like all sub-sets of the population, they’re regarded with distrust. After anContinueContinue reading “Review: Pariah #1 by Philip Gelatt and Brett Weldele”