
Review: Bone Orchard: The Passageway
“If you’re coming to The Passageway without having read Lemire and Sorrentino’s previous books together you might enjoy this more than I have.”
“If you’re coming to The Passageway without having read Lemire and Sorrentino’s previous books together you might enjoy this more than I have.”
“It’s not really been about the space race, it’s been about connection, about love and home and hope. In that regards this finale pulls those themes off better than ever before.”
“It’s just an absolutely beautiful and heart wrenching book. It packs an emotional punch and has panels and images that stick with you.”
“It’s a visual feast with wonderfully written characters and the emotion just bleeds through.”
“I love that there are so many layers to this in both the writing and the art.”
“It’s hard sometimes to review a really good comic that just blows you away.”
“Vinyl once again delivers on plot and art. I have high hopes for the final issue, but I’ll be sad to see it finish”
“Vinyl continues to be essential reading for fans of death cults, serial killers and people who enjoy comic gore.”
“I love a good sci-fi mystery and this is a really good sci-fi mystery.”
Writer: Doug WagnerArtist: Daniel HillyardColourist: Dave StewartLetterer: Ed DukeshireEditor: Keven GardnerDesigner: Sasha E HeadPublisher: Image I had hoped we’d get some answers to some of the many questions raised so far, and we do get at least one by the end of Vinyl #3. First off we get to see what Rennie is about. As shown on the cover Rennie […]
“Great art and a promising plot, plus occasional exploding heads. What’s not to love?”
“Vinyl continues to provide a mix of intrigue, gore and a little comedy. The well-paced plot and vibrant art make this one of my favourite books of the summer so far.”
“Both the cover and the first page of Vinyl let you know that the kids will probably be having nightmares if you give them this, and some of the adults might join them.”
“Ultramega offers something often lacking from mainstream tokusatsu media, body horror and gore. Harren takes the core concept of giant creatures battling to its logical outcome, when kaiju bleed, they bleed on a kaiju scale.”
“A modern horror comic which, by the end of the first volume, felt like a classic”