Guy Gardner, Kilowog, Arisia and the Red Lantern Bleez head to Odym, home of the Blue Lanterns, after discovering the red light still holds sway over the hot-headed Emerald Warrior. "Last Will" Part 3!
Hands down, this was the issue I was looking forward to the most this week. I loved Tomasi's work on GL Corps so much that this was, through very strong intention, the first book I reached for in the stack. Read Full Review
This was a good comic all the way through, but the last page revelation that Guy intends on killing Sodam definitely added to its final score for me. That was a very interesting little touch, which should make next issue's events on Daxam VERY interesting. Besides that, no real complaints here. Although things are a bit slow right now I'm expecting the story to really pick up first on Daxam, and especially in the Unknown Sectors. Read Full Review
One of my biggest complaints about the last issue was that it introduced a new villain, but he was merely teased and not given enough time to establish a role in the series. In this issue Zardor's plan is expanded upon, and even though we are still without motive or backstory, the plan that he detailed was of such a nature that it set him up to be a much larger threat than originally anticipated. When you combine the subversive danger within the Green Lantern Corp that Zardor has planned along with Sodam Yat's new messiah-like status, and Guy Gardner's continued dedication to working off the grid in order to help out the Corp, this issue displayed the beginnings of yet another excellent story by Tomasi. Now, if only the book would kick into second gear already. Read Full Review
Much like Thor #616, Read Full Review
Still, there is some small hope. Sodam Yat was a character that Tomasi had done a good job with in "Green Lantern Corps," and his return will hopefully give "Green Lantern: Emerald Warriors" a bit more of the boost it needs into something interesting. (Then again, I'd have thought the addition of a Red Lantern to the cast would have already done so.) Right now, though, it's not quite there. Read Full Review
Nothing extraordinary but solid art and good story