In 1943, Miss Fury is drunk and suicidal, dangling off the edge of Manhattan's highest skyscraper. In 2013, she's racing in a high-speed bike chase through Washington, DC, in pursuit of time-traveling Nazi agents. Which reality is true? Meanwhile, CIA Agent Harmon uncovers the true identity of those who unhinged her from time...
Miss Fury has steadily improved over the past few issues and it seems like Dynamite Comics is finally realizing that while it's perfectly fine to draw an incredibly hot Marla Drake/Miss Fury character, she doesn't have to run around naked all the time for Miss Fury to be a comic book worth reading. Great job guys. Keep it up. Read Full Review
Overall, this is another solid installment from the creative team. The story is really shaping up, and we are starting to understand some of what is really going on. The longer "stays" in each time period definitely helped the narrative. And Miss Fury is quickly becoming one of my favorite characters. She has a good heart, but there are enough flaws to make her interesting and human. I'm not sure yet that this series will go on my pull list permanently, but I will be sticking around for at least the next couple of issues. Read Full Review
Miss Fury proves yet again it is a crazy and wild comic that pulls off the unexpected. The Miss Fury flavor is there, but this is a big sci-fi, time traveling story that uses the pulp setting of the character's origins. Williams has laid out some really wild things, and he's starting to polish them up now. Read Full Review
Miss Fury #3 is worth checking out, but if Dynamite wants readers to stick around, they're going to have to start offering something other than a cool premise. Read Full Review
This book is fairly dense in the time travel department. It's also too quick to make Marla Drake trust people she barely knows. Plus, Nazis are an overused motif and, here, they're found everywhere. Despite all this, this book is still a lot of fun and is an entertaining read. Not to mention, Herbert and Nunes make a great artistic team when they're not drawing female faces. It's what I wish Catwoman would be. Read Full Review
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