She's Marjorie Finnegan. She's a temporal criminal. What more do you need to know?
Oh, all right then: all Marj wants to do is race up and down the time-lanes, stealing every shiny-gleamy-pretty-sparkly she
can lay her hands on. But her larcenous trail from the Big Bang to the Ninety-fifth Reich has drawn the beady eye of the
Temporal PD, whose number one Deputy Marshall is now hard on our heroine's tail-- and taking things extremely
personally. Worse still, Marj's worthless creep of an ex and his even scummier partner have seen an angle of their own in
all this, and now intend to use her time-tech to change history for th more
In case the first issue wasn't enough to turn off anyone uninterested with his trademark humor, Garth Ennis ramps it up to 11 in the second issue of the series which also manages to expand on its still-in-progress lore in a unique way. Read Full Review
It's a shame this comic came out the same day that the first episode of Loki dropped on Disney+, as it has a similar premise of a "time cop" attempting to bring in someone whose actions are causing temporal chaos. I don't want to compare the two, especially because they inhabit different mediums, but I kinda need to. I had a hard time keeping focused while reading this - and we're now two issues in and I don't have a sense of what this series is going to be about. Garth Ennis is one of my favorite comic writers, but this kind of sci-fi story is not a great fit for his talents.