Is This How You See Me?
Jaime Hernandez returns to Hoppers with Maggie and Hopey for a punk reunion with a lot of familiar (but older) faces
Graphic novel reviews
Jaime Hernandez returns to Hoppers with Maggie and Hopey for a punk reunion with a lot of familiar (but older) faces
The third book in Vehlman and Meyer’s IAN cranks up the tension, as the titular android takes his programming a little too literally
Dan Abnett and I.N.J. Culbard use the third book in the Brink series to bring the first story arc to its unnatural conclusion.
James Albon follows up his brilliant Her Bark and Her Bite with a very different story depicting a bleak, dystopian post-Brexit Britain on the verge of a civil war. The story centres around an artist, who finds herself stuck in the gap between the government and the revolution.
The second book in Fabien Nury and BrĂ¼no’s dark tales of crime and punishment sees Tyler Cross doomed to spend 10 years in a dangerous hard-labour prison
An ambitious fictional biography of a comics artist from Singapore, which tracks the history of comics alongside the political history of the county
The second book in the five-part Distant Worlds series sees Paul continuing to search for his father, though the journey becomes more difficult as he’s forced to separate from the safety of his scientific expedition
Charles Forsman relinquishes control of illustration in this charming but heart-breaking story about an unconventionally fractured family
A post-apocalyptic wasteland separates families holed-up in nuclear bunkers, but luckily, the postal service remains, to read letters into the survivors’ ventilation shafts. A surreal, sci-fi satire from 1981, translated from its native French
Judge Dredd returns to the Sov Bloc to revisit some old haunting grounds, as Dredd classic The Apocalypse War echoes from the past