The Question's been marked for death by the Spectre! How will Renee escape the grasp of the Spirit of Vengeance? Can either of them stop the immortal Vandal Savage once he has the Spear of Destiny? Plus, the return of Batwoman!
Like I said, a lot of readers will skip this book simply because they arent enjoying Grant Morrisons work on Final Crisis but besides appearances by Libra and mentions of the Anti-Life Equation, Revelations is just an extension of Ruckas master plan for Crispus Allen and Renee Montoya played out over the backdrop of the end of all things. Revelations even does a great job filling in readers who arent familiar with the history behind this story, giving you another reason not to avoid it. Final Crisis: Revelations #2 is easily the book of the week. Read Full Review
A great series. By all means, pick it up. Read Full Review
Final Crisis: Revelations is not only a gorgeous and moving site to behold, it's a also testament to how diverse this DC event really is. I personally commend the publisher for sidestepping the usual tie-in fodder and instead linking their top creators' most personal projects to Morrison's epic. It might not be so accessible to new readers, but I'm loving it. Read Full Review
The art is the big stumbling block of this issue. DC Comics should let its new artists study the works of Bernie Wrightson, Mike Kaluta, Matt Wagner, Frank Brunner, Rudy Nebres and the Redondo brothers to show them that they can do mood, mystery and menace without turning the comic into a murky, mixed-up mess. Read Full Review
I'm tempted to say Check It, as this might make some sense to people that have read several obscure miniseries, but as one of the few tieins to a major event at DC and at a higher cover price than normal, this issue just does not cut it for me. There is some promise here, but I'm not sure if I want to stick it out to see it through to the end. The art, however, was excellent. Best part of the issue, by far. Read Full Review