Lionheart of Avalon: Part 2
The Avengers adventure in Brittan continues.
Together with Austen, the creative team makes even little scenes mesh within a layered story, and a few continuity gaffes in the artwork cannot distract from a superhero story that has the under-hyped appeal of an average tale but swells into something more special. This story celebrates rather than deconstructs. Read Full Review
Together, Copiel and Austen have created a character-driven plot that, amidst action, highlights the characters core powers and weaknesses. And though the issue has a few flaws, especially in its re-explanation of the Scarlet Witchs powers, the reversal of superhero roles and the possible ramifications of these reversals create a suspense and tension that make the month-long wait between this issue and the next almost unbearable. Read Full Review
Wanda’s powers are basically whatever the writer needs them to be. Seriously though, compare Wanda from Stan Lee, to Roy Thomas, to Kurt Busiek, to Geoff Johns, to Chuck Austen, to Brian Michael Bendis, and to James Robinson and her powers and abilities are always different.