• Jen Walters used to fight for justice in the courtroom as a lawyer and outside of it as the super hero known as She-Hulk. But after the events of Civil War, Jen's Hulk persona has changed, seemingly putting the super hero part of her life out of reach...
• But a new drug has hit the streets, turning people into monsters, and Jen can't help but be pulled into the craziness of it all...
• Is She-Hulk back? Or is her new Hulk a new breed of hero?
Rated T+
Hulk #10 is a solid ending to this arc as it brings back Jen's psychological narrative in full force. Read Full Review
I'm glad to see this arc ending with a set up for the next chapter. It's looking like the next adversary will be more grounded in Jen Walters' personal life. I'm personally more interested in Walters new internal struggle as opposed to her helping others through what she has gone through. Read Full Review
Yet another underrated and overlooked book. Awesome series.
Jen lets out the Hulk to finish Oliver's monster story in a slightly unsatisfying way. There's a lot of play about duality here, and Jen's narration segues from glib Frankenstein chatter into some great talk about rage and suffering. The art is a remarkable disappointment. Julian Lopez & Francesco Gaston both do great work. Either could easily produce an above-average Hulk comic on his own. And their hugely contradictory styles could be cleverly merged by making one responsible for Jen and the other responsible for the Hulk. Simply splitting the book in half, though, manages to weaken both of their productions and significantly degrade the comic's reception. Basically, you are guaranteed to hate at least 50 percent of how this book looks. Tmore
I'll give this one a 1.5, the .5 is for the first half of the book that had solid art. Everything else was pretty much what you come to expect with this awful comic. Terrible all around.