"THE TRUTH" part one! Diana has finally seen the full scope of how her life and history have been transformed...unfortunately, the knowledge has driven her completely insane!
RATED T
Liam Sharpe and Laura Martin do an excellent job of portraying everyone'sincreasing frustration and paranoia due to the situation, while at the same time throwing little visual easter eggs in that I had to read the book twice to catch (and Im still not sure I caught everything). Everyone is at their wits end and it shows, but these people are family, come hell or high water, and that very clearly shows too. Read Full Review
The visual complexity of Wonder Woman #15 is a sight to behold, and like the Rebirth special that launched the previous two storylines, this issue asks far many more questions than it answers. What Rucka, Sharp, and Martin do accomplish so brilliantly, however, is letting the reader know that everything matters everything ties together. The braiding and inevitable unbraiding of all of these factors is what makes this series such an intellectual and visual delight month after month, week after week. Read Full Review
I like the tile motif that Liam Sharp used for this issue. It allows the various vignettes that make Wonder Womans life come around while symbolizing her current detention in a psychiatric hospital under a cover name. Sharp mixes a lot of elements, including shots taken from Nicola Scott. In scenes where the art needed to be clean like with Diana Prince, Sharp did that. But with other scenes like the runaways Steve Trevor and Etta Candy, the mood was just right. Dark, and gloomy. Read Full Review
This team continues to knock it out of the park with Wonder Woman #15 with Sharp's artwork being the best aspect of it. Combined with Martin's colours, its just too beautiful of a book to pass up. Rucka's character work and careful story structure really add to this being more than just a simple superhero adventure tale, making this one of the best titles currently on the shelves. Read Full Review
The stories in the past and in the present don't seem as disparate as they once did, and it's getting easier to flow from one timeline to the next. Stil, the present storyline is by far the most compelling, and this is yet another great addition to the Wonder Woman canon. Read Full Review
"The Truth" begins with a multi-pronged effort that reads as disjointed, but still points the series in interesting directions. The artwork is strong but suffers from over-crowded panels. Read Full Review
This is a fairly solid issue. The artwork is really strong and creative which is nice. I like the story that's happening with Diana but the story with the supporting cast is not working for me. It's a little boring. I think people will enjoy this issue but it might work better in the trade. Read Full Review
This issue of Wonder Woman was a bit underwhelming as all the characters involved seemed to take this issue as a breather before whatever it is that we're getting after this. Yeah, we get some cool reveals about who our villain of this story actually is, but all in all it felt like a bit of a stall, where even the art seemed to drop in quality halfway through. Read Full Review
Crazy Diana is one of the more interesting storylines that I have seen with Wonder Woman in a while. I am excited to see who the main villain is and I am hoping that it is not the most obvious answer.
The art in this issue is mostly great. I love how well Liam Sharp's and Laura Martin's work gelled together here. On the first few pages where Wonder Woman's in her room, even though there's little dialogue, the art is really able to tell the story.