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Comics Picks of The Week 31.12.2013
Posted by AJ
Welcome to the first CPoTW post of the year. Technically this should be the last of the previous year, but publishers did this funny thing where the new comics came out on 31st December, so, you get the picture.
This was an extremely thin week of comics reading for me, and I’m not quite sure what more to say more than that. I read just six comics in total and as it turns out, they all happened to be good. I suppose that even a reading machine like me needs a break now and then. And I could probably have used it, in hindsight, since I moved through through three graphic novels in the previous week. And that’s a lot. At least, all six of these new comics were good!
Anyway, here’s another edition of this new feature. Full reading list, as always, is available here and all my comics reviews are available here.
Posted in Comics Picks of the Week
Tags: Aliens, Amy Reeder, Aquaman, Aquaman #26, Atlantis, Barry Allen, Batman, Batwoman, Batwoman #26, Blight, Brandon Montclare, Christos Gage, Comics, Comics Picks of the Week, Constantine, Crime, Crime Syndicate, DC Comics, Earth 3, Evil, Flash, Forever Evil, Forever Evil: Blight, Gotham, Horror, Image Comics, J.M. DeMatteis, Jeff Parker, Jeremy Haun, Jim Lee, Justice League, Justice League Dark, Justice League Dark #26, Kate Kane, Krypton, Marc Andreyko, Mikel Janin, Near Future, Neil Googe, New 52, Nightmare Nurse, Pandora, Paul Pelltier, Phantom Stranger, Politics, Rocket Girl, Rocket Girl #3, Science Fiction, Scott Snyder, Sea-King, Speed Force, Spitfire, Superheroes, Superman, Superman Unchained, Superman Unchained #5, Supernatural, Supervillains, Swamp Thing, Teen Cops, The Flash, The Flash #26, Time Travel, Urban Fantasy
The Flash #26 (Comics Review)
Posted by AJ
As with December’s Aquaman #26, The Flash also sees a switch-up in its creative team. The team of Francis Manapul and Brian Buccellato had an incredible run, especially this year with their recent arc involving the Reverse-Flash, one of the classic Flash villains in the character’s lore. The recent issues really got me reading the series and I’m going to be going through all the back issues very soon to catch up with everything that Francis and Brian have done with Barry Allen.
With the latest issue, writer Christos Gage and artist Neil Googe step up to the plate to guide this particular adventure of the scarlet speedster. It is a fully stand-alone issue that does not require any knowledge of what’s gone on in the series prior to this, and its a great approach to bring in new readers and to offer the older readers something new to break up the run of long arcs that the title has seen. Neil Googe’s artwork isn’t as impressive or crisp as that from Manapul-Buccellato duo, but it gets the job done quite well.
Posted in Comics Reviews, Review Central
Tags: Barry Allen, Christos Gage, Comics, Comics Review, DC Comics, Flash, Neil Googe, New 52, Review, Review Central, Spitfire, Superheroes, The Flash, Wil Quintana