REVIEW: Black Hammer Reborn #1 is a new direction for Lemire's superhero homage world

Black Hammer Reborn #1 is a welcoming introduction for new fans and a fun reinvigoration of the world for long time readers. On a deeper level, it’s an exploration of the internal struggles of daily life play out with superheroes.

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REVIEW: Ascender #12 is a high fantasy space opera

By Larry Jorash — Just when we thought the world was done with new high fantasy space operas, Tim-21 returned — a brought a new genre with him. Descender — the Jeff Lemire and Dustin Nguyen hard sci-fi story — has been back for 12 issues now, taking familiar touches from the previous book and lacing them with high fantasy. All the while this extraordinary universe is still embracing and welcoming us in with wildly brilliant covers by Nguyen; and fabulous water-colored brushstrokes that trail between pages.

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REVIEW: Family Tree #8 is another solid, mysterious issue

By Jacob Cordas — Family Tree still can’t seem to figure out how to pay off its narrative mysteries. The previous issue suffered harshly from its over reliance on obfuscating the puzzles at play. Family Tree #8 does nothing to fix that problem outside of not leaning so hard on the convention as the last issue did. This issue thankfully only has one occurrence of a character claiming that everything is about to be explained (spoiler - it isn’t).

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REVIEW: Family Tree #7 deepens the mystery

By Benjamin Morin — Once again, the creative team behind Family Tree knocks it out of the park. With Family Tree #7, writer Jeff Lemire begins to tie all the various narrative threads together from previous entries. The three main threads of Grampa Judd’s escape, Meg’s concurrent transformation, and Josh’s future struggle are woven together through Josh’s unique perspective. This is an action-packed issue that grabs readers from page one and does not let go.

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REVIEW: Family Tree #6, this book is growing strong

By Jacob Cordas — If you had told me that there’d be a mini movement of amazing plant-centric comics, I’d have told you that was an incredibly specific and confusing prediction. But here we are halfway through 2020 and we have several excellent, plant-centric comics, including Farmhand, No One’s Rose, and basically the entire X-Men line. But no comic is better able to mine this imagery for horror than Family Tree.

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TRADE RATING: Black Hammer ‘45 Vol. 1

By Toren Chenault — The Black Hammer Universe is filled with superheroes. When it debuted in 2016, it was clear from solicits that writer Jeff Lemire and artist Dean Ormston wanted to change superhero comics with Black Hammer. And that’s exactly what they did. I worked at a comic book shop for most of 2018 and part of 2019. The first Black Hammer trade was one of the books I sold the most. I would pitch it to comic readers and say “Imagine if Watchmen expanded into a full-blown universe. But was a bit more modern.” And that would work most of the time. But to be honest, most of the sales came from people who had never heard of the title or read any of Lemire’s other work.

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REVIEW: Gideon Falls #21 is a paradigm shift for a mysterious series

By Zack Quaintance — Since it first launched back in 2018, Gideon Falls has presented itself as a horror comic. And it’s certainly been that for much of its run, owing to the imagery from artist Andrea Sorrentino and colorist Dave Stewart, which at times has made me feel an actual chill (no exaggeration). After reading Gideon Falls #21, however, I’ve noticed a genre shift in this comic from horror to existential mystery, more in line with Twin Peaks (an obvious inspiration for this story throughout) or perhaps Stephen King’s Dark Tower series than any narrative of the straight stab-stab or traditional monster variety.

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REVIEW: Family Tree #3 deepens the mystery of this intriguing series

By Nick Couture — Family Tree #3 — from Jeff Lemire, Phil Hester, Eric Gapstur, Ryan Cody, Steve Wands, and Will Dennis — continues the journey of a young girl who is literally turning into a tree. This issue adds new threads, villians, and mystery to a book already stacked with intrigue. The warm hug of a Jeff Lemire book feels nice (as always), and this is another solid entry to the beginning of a new book, but part of me wishes that a few more risks were being taken.

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REVIEW: Skulldigger and Skeleton Boy #1 is a worthy choice to start the next phase of Black Hammer

By Zack Quaintance — As those who follow me on Twitter have surely realized at this point, for more than a year now I’ve been slowly reading every single Hellboy and Hellboy-adjacent comic at a pace of one chapter (or issue, rather) per day in the order of original publication (catalog them all via #RaisingHellboy). Through this, I’ve also read all the Lobster Johnson volumes. Lobster Johnson is a pulp hero that has larger-than-life adventures in early part of the 20th Century.

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