Honka honka! That nogoodnik Brother Eye has soured my reputation across the whole dang multiverse and it's gonna take me, myself, and I to put things right. Join me, Tini, Sweeney, and a panoply of clown girl artist extraordinaires as we go across the clowniverse! If you don't buy this comic then my lawyer P.P. Thompson is gonna sue you!!!! Plus: In 1999 two teenagers went into the woods with a video camera and my twin sister Erica Henderson came out of the woods with a comic book about me that's got real four-quadrant appeal (I wanted ta make a pun usin' a word for butts instead of appeal but the lady who's forcing me to write these told me more
Harley Quinn #37 definitely brings the different sides and fears of people into play. One thing I loved was getting both Harley and Joker in so many different spotlights in the same book with each of the sides being represented so well. Read Full Review
Overall, it's a dizzying blast of unique visuals, even if few of them really get the chance to breathe fully. It seems like we'll be seeing some more Earth-based Harley stories after this arc. Read Full Review
A metatextual trip through the multiverse with a very Harley hook and a very Harley ending, making for a very pretty, above-average comic book issue. Read Full Review
As a reader, I'm still not sure what this whole story was about. Read Full Review
It's not good. Read Full Review
This issue took the job of a tiresome retread of profoundly dead horse HQ material and somehow made it enjoyable to read. Bold to do this when the TV series already did it so well, but it more or less worked. It's a mixed bag of benign pseudo-therapy along with some reasonable insights about insecurity--but that this was readable and even fun is a considerable achievement. I like this book, and I think I'll like it even more with this multiverse stuff behind us.