On the run after a frenzied heist, Silvano's plans have gone out the window. Battered and bruised, he's got a raging dust storm and an angry brotherhood on his tail, and both will stop at nothing to kill him. Meanwhile, Solomon Eaton finds himself pinned down by a
legendary gunslinger and with his own heist gone awry. Cornered and desperate, Sol must form a plan with men he can't trust to get across the border and back home to America.
The 'story within a story' approach in Undone By Blood Or The Other Side of Eden #3 continues to place this neo-western noir thriller as simply one of the best plots that exist in comic books right now. And while it helps to have an appreciation for Western tales, the team behindUndone By Blood Or The Other Side of Edenproves that you can come into a tale like this completely foreign to Western tropes and still come out of it jaw to the floor in ecstatic glee. Read Full Review
This month's Undone by Blood is a brutal comic. There are no heroes here - just characters in bad situations trying to survive however they can. Read Full Review
This installment is a pretty good "on the run" piece that follows up what happened well previously. I like seeing the dynamic between Silvano and Bud here as they get underway and just how crazy Bud will get to get away from the dire situation. But Bud's life takes a darker turn toward the end that just makes things worse, though he's clearly emotional about it in a really big way. Silvano's a little calmer and cooler here and knows what he needs to do to try and survive this but there are challenges to it as well. This story continues to work well for me though, sadly, I continue to struggle hard with the 1800s storyline. Read Full Review
There's a lot going on in this book and that's without talking about the train heist that's going wrong as well. The main story that I'm interested in and clicks for me with Bud and Silvano has all the right hallmarks of the twist that'll change the nature of things and could lead to some really serious violence as it progresses. It's a fun twist even if it's one we've seen before a number of times in other works but it works here well for this time and place. Nadler and Thompson's script works well and some of the little nuance stories are a delight. But it's Sami Kivela that's killing it here in capturing these distinctive times and people with their outfits and locations in a big way. Worth it just for the art alone but we do get a solid story here as well. Read Full Review