When teenage Mary gets the Witchblade, the plans of Sonatine, Sabine and Kenneth Irons are disrupted. Emissaries of the Darkness and the Angelus pressure Mary to side with them and her decision causes hilarity and awesomeness to follow in Sejicstyle!
I must admit that it was the beautiful artwork that originally drew me to have a look at Switch, but its the really well written story that is going to make me stay. Stjepan Sejic really is a comics double-threat. Hes an artist who can write and a writer who can draw. Read Full Review
Except for a few bum notes this issue is mostly a very worthy issue. The art and the writing work well, the story building is strong and the world being built around the new wielder of the witchblade is a riveting one the relationship between Mary and the others is very good, in particular the protective sibling relationship lending to the story and it will be good to see how the story progresses moving forward in the next few issues of the series. Switch does well at making the witchblade fascinating under a new character. Read Full Review
Switch #2 continues writer/artists Stjepan Sejic's focus on Mary Parker's feelings and reactions to being the Witchblade bearer and its effect on her personal relationships while keeping the larger mythos elements, like the Darkness, Angelus, and the purely evil and 100% human Kenneth in the intriguing background. His skill with facial expressions and changing up layouts adds some extra zip to this conversation heavy issue. Read Full Review
'Switch' belongs in the conversation of other books geared toward young adults like Black Canary, Batgirl, and Ms. Marvel. Sejic has reinvigorated the Witchblade brand with a likable new bearer and world building that is primed for action. 'Switch' is a winner. Read Full Review
Switch #2 is a solid continuation to the series, giving us a better look at our main character and the world she has found herself falling into. It also sets up future events nicely, with the storytelling skills of Stjepan eji being as slick as ever. Read Full Review