Review: Princeless: The Pirate Princess #1 packs a punch
This installment in the ongoing Princeless series is everything you could want from a title like Princeless: The Pirate Princess #1. A tough and self-assured lead, whose Father trained her from childhood to be a quiet, efficient warrior of the high-seas as opposed to a princess waiting in a tower for rescue. Yet in the latter situation is exactly where Raven Xingtao, the pirate princess, finds herself in the opening pages of the book.
Review: Did Spider-Verse End Amazing?
Despite its faults, the issue really drives home the nature of what it means to be Spider-Man... Woman... Gwen... Pig, etc.
Review: Divinity #1 adds meta-textual richness to the Valiant Universe
By Harper Harris
Valiant Entertainment has been gradually earning a loyal fanbase since their return in 2012, but in the last several months their line...
Review: The Best Laid Big Man Plans
Every so often comics get away from their high soaring superhero mythos to tell stories that kick you to the ground and shove your face in the mud. Big Man Plans is one of those books. It’s an unrelenting dropkick to the groin that puts a mirror to those a**hole parts of humanity we wish didn’t exist, and it does so in the best way possible.
Does Morrison Spin his Astral Projections towards Redundancy in Nameless #1? (Review)
With a conscious effort to stray away from superheroes, author Grant Morrison is taking even more chances than usual in the comics world. Even...
Review: Getting Hit By Stray Bullets Has Never Felt This Good
It’s no secret that Stray Bullets is one of the best comics being published today, possibly ever. David Lapham’s latest Sunshine and Roses remedies the missing gratuitous violence of Killers at the cost of diverting from that arc’s engaging plot. However, this is the most brutal and meaty the Stray Bullets series has been in awhile, and that speaks volumes for what you'll find in these pages.
Review: crime makes a strange exit to Eden in Postal #1
Strange small towns commanded by dogmatic despots have long been a staple of post-apocalyptic fare like The Walking Dead. So when Postal # 1 opens on a church sermon delivered by a preacher waving a gun at a man who is bound at the foot of the altar, it seems a familiar scenario. Perhaps this is what the comic wants us to think, lulling us into a false sense of narrative security to contrast with it's intriguing final pages.
Review: Kingsman: The Secret Service, your Millar is showing
How does the new Matthew Vaughn-directed Mark Millar adaptation fare?
Review: Cluster #1 War is Hell on Celebrities
Given the rash of criminal activity celebrities get away with dominating headlines today, Cluster feels like a timely commentary on current events. Ed Brisson’s story follows the semi-celebrity daughter of a politician, Samara Simmons.
Review: Once Upon A Hard Time Is A Good Time For The Goon
If there’s a textbook that exist on making comics, then Eric Powell probably wrote about half of it. The five time Eisner Award winner consistently crafts quality stories with every book he produces. His latest, The Goon: Once Upon A Hard Time is yet another example of how great a work of art comic books can be.
Review: The Sculptor is a page-turning meditation on life, art & love
A review of Scott McCloud's long awaited graphic novel
Advance Review: The Black Hood #1 – Vigilante, Not Superhero
Black Hood #1: “Bullet’s Kiss, Part One”
Writer: Duane Swierczynski
Artist: Michael Gaydos
Colorist: Kelly Fitzpatrick
If your point of reference for Dark Circle Comics is The Fox:...



















