There's a lot going on in this book and focusing the story a little would elevate this book from good to awesome. Read Full Review
Hopefully the answers will be just as compelling. Read Full Review
With just one more issue left in the opening storyline, things really pick up with this week's issue of Morning Glories. We see more character development in this issue than any of the previous, which bodes well as Nick Spencer absolutely kills here. To back him up, Joe Eisma steps up his game with perhaps his best effort yet. Two great creators working in perfect sync on an equally as great concepthow can you go wrong? Seriously, if you aren't reading Morning Glories, you are totally missing out. Read Full Review
Another very good and fun issue of one of the breakout hits of 2010. The weirdness is ramped down a lot in this issue and we get a lot more story. It seems like Spencer is going to be paying off some of his mysteries very soon. I can give this a definite “must buy” rating for your Wednesday visit to the comic shop. Read Full Review
The final pages of Morning Glories #4 made me grin with the same excitement that I had reading Runaways under Brian K. Vaughan. Similarities aside, both have a tension missing from the usual mainstream ensemble book. As much as I love, say, Uncanny X-Men, you know that Cyclops and Jubilee are Cyclops and Jubilee and you dont have to worry about them until the big yearly crossover. In Morning Glories you never know wholl survive or where their loyalties lie. Because its an ongoing serialized comic and not a weekly TV series from the '60s (though The Prisoner uses the repetitive nature of television to artfully absurdist ends), Im confident that each story arc wont end with the cast waking up in their dorms only to start all over again, so I cant wait to see what happens next. Read Full Review