DC ADVANCE ROUND-UP: Taylor & Redondo’s NIGHTWING #78 breathes new life into the series
The first issue from the new creative team is a much-needed palate cleanser that also sets the stage for what's to come.
RECAP: FOR ALL MANKIND S2E4 — “Pathfinder”
FOR ALL MANKIND lets Ed decide to go back to space.
ADVANCE REVIEW: A lost dog makes an incredible journey home in LOVE: THE MASTIFF
Frederic Brremaud and Federico Bertolucci's latest graphic novel is stunning, powerful, and suspenseful.
Review: LET’S TALK ABOUT IT is sex ed done right!
This friendly nonfiction graphic novel proves you can discuss the topic using inclusive, effective language and imagery.
REVIEW: PROCTOR VALLEY ROAD #1 explores dark imaginations and ‘real’ monsters
It’s all Janis Joplin’s fault.
The Marvel Rundown: The X-kids are alright in CHILDREN OF THE ATOM
Welcome to another edition of the Marvel Rundown! After one industry shutdown and a year of delays, Vita Ayala and Bernard Chang's much-anticipated Children of the...
DC ROUND-UP: SUPERMAN #29 is a story about growing up.
Reviews of this week's new DC Comics releases, including Joker #1, Wonder Woman #770, and much more.
REVIEW: Black Girl Magic shines in Lupano & Fert’s WHITE ALL AROUND
Wilfrid Lupano and Stéphane Fert's WHITE ALL AROUND tells the real-life story of the Canterbury Female Boarding School, one of the first schools to educate Black girls in the United States.
REVIEW: PACIFIC RIM: THE BLACK starts off slow but shows great potential
Set in the time after the Raleigh Beckett and Mako Moris of the world, Pacific Rim: The Black tells a bleaker tale about a...
REVIEW: CHAOS WALKING had the potential to be great
Based on the sci-fi trilogy by Patrick Ness, Chaos Walking tells the story of a girl named Viola (Daisy Ridley) who has crash-landed on...
REVIEW: Chris & Laura Samnee’s JONNA AND THE UNPOSSIBLE MONSTERS #1 is unpossibly fun
The first creator-owned series from superstar Chris Samnee gets off to a rambunctious start.
REVIEW: WANDAVISION finale finishes with hope and rebirth
After taking us through six decades of television aesthetic and nine episodes of fantastic television, WandaVision ends the series with a finale about deaths...




















