Red Hood battles against his worst fear…himself! Can he accept his place in life or will he become what he truly fears?!
I expect uneven quality with an anthology series like this so I'm pretty delighted by what this team put together. Jason Todd is not one of my favorite characters and often falls into the “I'll tolerate stuff with him” category at best. But the three issues delve nicely into part of his past, his motivation with the story, and the internal struggles without becoming overly drenched in drama and the like. It read smooth, looked good, had some neat little visual twists, and played up a Joker connection that may be an easy thing to hang your hat on but at the same time could be a fun storyline to run with in a lengthy and deep way. Read Full Review
Trammell won't have great writing, but he's good at finding points for a good story. He was fine from the point of view that it is a focused book for minors.
Art is horrible and destroys these 3 numbers so much that it could be nice.
I liked the ending, Jason defeating his own demons, taking down all the shit that the bats have put into him to break his self-esteem and in the end he comes out victorious.
The ending was great. This was all a plan from Talia because she wants Jason to be next ... you'll have to read it.
The price is very fair for the quality of the book. I will give the grade based on that it is a children's book.