Trapped in his own nightmare, Red Hood battles against the Bat-Family and his former selves. Can he find a way to make his terrors work for him or will be trapped in his fears forever?
While Jason Todd continues to be one of my least favorite characters in general, he's one that I can respect the journey of because he has gone through changes and various writers have let him grow pretty well over the years. This incarnation of him, designed to be free of continuity in a sense and just a look at the character as a whole, works well as Trammell's script lets it work a good bit of dialogue and exploration of the character while Guillory's artwork is able to showcase a lot of good versions of him, even if slightly twisted at times to some really twisted versions. I'm definitely curious to see how it all wraps up. Read Full Review
A Jason Todd therapy sesh mixed with an abridged telling of the basis of Todd's arc in 3 Jokers - if only the art didn't look like it came out of Mad magazine.
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