The Old James House might turn out to be Ami’s only hope…but it’s still missing a piece. And if anyone’s going to survive, that final ghost must be found.
A series which disappoints. Home Sick Pilots is everything I want in a comic book. A perfect combination of intense writing and eye catching illustration. This is what comics were made for. Read Full Review
In the course of its run, Home Sick Pilots has occasionally toyed with some fascinating ideas. With some appealingly weird moods that come together at odd angles and tend to fade out into a strange semi-coherent blur before shooting into striking clarity for just long enough to keep the whole thing really, really interesting. With issue eleven, Watters and Wijngaard manage to hold everything together in a strange state of grace from beginning to end. Much like the old James House itself, its difficult to predict how it will all hold together in the course of the following few issues, but itll be a lot of fun watching it attempt to do so. Read Full Review
Can the handful of ghosts in the Old James House withstand the power of the Nuclear Bastard? Read Full Review
For me Home Sick Pilots #11 fulfills what this book promised to be. It is a highly fun and imaginative book that is all sorts of goofiness that a plot of giant mech type things powered by ghosts should be. But it also, plays with that serious note as well. The story tone is balances wonderfully well in this issue. It is that high school, punk band, coming of age, power rangers esq book that was promised. It is wholeheartedly serious and dramatic story telling, yet silly and fun all at the same time! Read Full Review
Wijngaard delivers some fantastic visuals throughout the issue. There are fun visual elements to be found in both the fight scenes and character moments. Read Full Review
If you want some kaiju-sized action,Home Sick Pilots #11 is your best bet this week. Not only that, it establishes the rules as far as these two mecha haunted houses and a missing piece required to help the good guys win. Read Full Review
Events are increasingly frantic, but Home Sick Pilots never loses track of its core characters or the scale of its story. It's an impressive return and one that promises even bigger things to come. Read Full Review
Dan and Caspar have really created a Kaiju battle made purely out of haunted houses, traumatized ghosts, and punk music.