"STRANGE NEAPOLITAN": Sometimes, without a word, your life splits into three.
If you haven't picked this series up yet, this issue alone showcases every single reason I could tell you to do so. In peak form. So, what are you waiting for! Read Full Review
Ice Cream Man #6 is another bizarre issue that is also strangely beautiful in every way. W. Maxwell Prince has created a unique comic book and Martin Morazzo and Chris O’Halloran have contributed majorly to its success. This sixth issue is somber and scary and yet is incredibly fun to read. Read Full Review
This is a true treat of a comic and one that will likely leave Ice Cream Man skeptics, like myself, coming back for a second and third serving. Read Full Review
In the most emotionally impactful issue to date, W. Maxwell Prince shows a man asking for a three dip cone and how each flavor represents a certain path he can take depending on how he walks away from the ice cream truck. Read Full Review
Ice Cream Man #6 knocks it out of the park again with a unique, story-appropriate spin on silent horror. Read Full Review
Ice Cream Man #6 tells three distinctive and captivating stories that range from the tragic to the disturbing. Couple these stories with an issue devoid of dialogue that enhances the storytelling and you have a masterful creation that is a must read. Read Full Review
Ice Cream Man continues to seek new ways to elicit reactions from readers, this time going for the jugular with an increased focus on emotions. Many can relate to how it feels to be abandoned, and the incredibly unique approaches of no dialogue combined with three alternative paths regarding this issue render a variety of scenarios that are heart-warming, saddening, and horrifying all at once. "What if" will never be the same again. Read Full Review
Ice Cream Man starts its second arc with a strong, but silent, issue. Highly recommend! Read Full Review
Ice Cream Man #6 is another astoundingly well-done comic that scares you as you read and then lingers with you existentially for days after you finish. This series continues to be one of the most unflinching looks at everyday lives in modern American...in any storytelling medium. Read Full Review
As has been the case in this book all along, we get more questions than answers. Like a comic book equivalent of Twin Peaks. This sense of pervading mystery is coupled with enough information to build a curious story around. I like the formula and each issue is intriguing. Read Full Review
Ice Cream Man hasn't stopped being weird and this issue brings quite a mix of emotions with all that happens to this man in all three of his lives. Read Full Review
This was a pretty good one.
Definitely the best one so far.
Quick, beautiful and as always disturbing.
I've seen this before, multiple stories unfolding at once, but the way Prince and Morazzo executed the ideia here, it's beautiful
An improvement on the last two issues, particularly as the Ice Cream Man is actually relevant to the story again. I can see where Prince is going with this, and it might work if he can avoid the nonsense of issues four and five.