On the run, in love-all Amalia and Randy need is each other...until Los Queridos begin experimenting with new ways to murder their rivals. Now, a new path must be forged.
Sean Mackiewicz and Niko Walter are killing it with this title. This book was jaw dropping the art style fits perfectly dark edgy and creepy. I think I'm actually shaking after reading this issue, just couldn't believe what happened this issue. Read Full Review
Mackiewicz and Walter expand the scope of the story as Los Queridos come between Mal and Randy while harboring slaves and weird beetles you have to see to believe. 'Gasolina' has picked up the pace into one thrilling crime drama. It's time to get on board this series just as things are heating up. Read Full Review
Mankiewicz really brings the first two issues together with #3! His writing had established the primary characters, but it wasn't until Gasolina #3 that the story really begins to unfold! So many questions are raised, but after seeing Mal in action and El Dorado dispatch of the abomination sent to kill him, I presume, I now hunger to know more about the Los Quiredos Cartel, what there motivations and origins are, and I'm bursting to see what's next for Randy and Mal. Plus, I hope El Dorado seeks retribution for the foiled assassination. While the questions just continue to build, the creative team of Mankiewicz and Walter deliver with one explosive panel after another! This is exactly what I've been waiting for! Read Full Review
This series keeps turning up the heat slowly but surely. It keeps us on tenterhooks and the revelations are meted out carefully in the right proportion to ensure the tension is retained. We are gradually getting more and more of the monsters in this book, and their presence is always a timely reminder that this is a book about the Cartels, but not as we know them. Another top installment in this series which manages to deliver that tricky third issue in style. Read Full Review
So, if that is what you are looking for, read this. I’m going to keep picking it up just to figure out what is going on. Or, maybe not. Read Full Review
All of the elements of this world are heightened in Issue #3, the pace is quicker than its ever been, the writing sparse, and the atmosphere growing darker still. Gasolina is looking like a Robert Rodriguez film put to panels. This book gives me hope that there is still room for great stories in a culture suffering from overused clichs. Read Full Review