Stranded in a Vulpecula-controlled Nth World, Hawkgirl is on a desperate hunt for Galaxy and a way home. But the Galaxy she finds is not at all the one she expected! Forced to fight her best friend for the fate of two dimensions, Hawkgirl must make an impossible choice--one that will define her future forever!
This is a fitting closing to both the story and the tortured existence of Kendra Saunders, a character I hope to see more of in the future. Read Full Review
This was such a unique series and I'm hoping it's just the start for Aexlrod and the DCU. Read Full Review
Much of the action sequences take place on the Nth World against Vulpecula, so it's cool to see some of those characters interact with our Hawkgirl. Read Full Review
About The Reviewer: Gabriel Hernandez is the Publisher & EIC of ComicalOpinions.com, a comics review site dedicated to indie, small, and mid-sized publishers.Follow @ComicalOpinions on Facebook, Instagram, and TwitterBits and Pieces:Hawkgirl #6 is possibly the best issue in a deeply troubled, poorly-written series. Axelrod introduces interesting concepts with the unveiling of Nth World and Kendra's new status quo. As a bonus, the art team's output is fantastic. That said, there are too many big concepts and expansive plot points that don't get enough time to develop, which means the series as a whole is poorly paced and wastes too much time in the beginning issues on inconsequential ideas. Read Full Review
This series had far too much potential, but got wasted on a Galaxy-centric cast, with random cameos every issues. The fight in Nth World with Vulpecula that was built up throughout all issues? It goes by fast and quickly disposes of one of the few good elements this series had. The dialogue is unnatural, but the lettering is impeccable. The art by Nahuelphan is great. Hopefully in the near future DC gives Hawkgirl a try with a writer interested in writing her mythos, instead of continuing Galaxy: The Prettiest Star.