Ene fights a monolithic beast on the outskirts of space and time as He-of-Troiia tells stories in the mad hope to save his life.
MAJOR PLOT POINT
Ene versus Proteus, the giant space whale.
Reasons to buy this book for most people probably include a certain inclination toward Matt Fraction, or Greek mythology, but really people who buy this book should be those who appreciate an intellectually stimulating story and fabulously hallucinogenic art. If you even want to forget the story, the book is worth buying alone for the beautiful splash pages you get on page two and three. Read Full Review
Even the narrator, the fellow traveler of Queen Ene, survives and only has a story left to share. Life, history, and mythology are all cyclical narratives, bound with destruction or endings only to bear creation and beginnings. “And thus, does blood beget blood.” Fraction and Ward were able to beautifully convey this lesson within their very own story, not only convincing the reader that ODY-C is, indeed, a good story, but also that a good story can truly save a life. If you haven't given this series a chance, please reconsider and let yet another story bring you life. Read Full Review
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