The mysteries of Maria Hill. Ousted by the world peacekeeping task force she dedicated her life to, Maria Hill has no choice but to turn to Jessica Jones to help her find...the last secrets.
Parental Advisory
Jessica Jones #10 is a solid issue, and certainly one of the best of this series so far. It's crude, funny, mysterious and entertaining. You'll just wish there were more of it. Read Full Review
Mystery comics done right, as we're given some answers but far more questions. Read Full Review
There's fun to be had here and the tone you'd expect from the series, although the events don't do much to push Jessica in one direction or another. By the end of the issue all Jessica knows is that she doesn't know much (not unlike Marvel's… oh, you know). Worth a look. Read Full Review
Overall, this issue reminds us the volatility of the series, the up-again-down-again wave that feels like a bad relationship. When it's good, you remember the potential; when it's this, well, you wait for the next one. Read Full Review
An immaturely-written story that nonetheless has interesting artwork. Read Full Review
This 6 issue arc could’ve easily been 4 or 5 as barely anything important happens in Jessica Jones 10. Great artwork, narration, and dialogue as usual. I just find it really really really hard to care about Maria and her situation
An okay issue. Not much happens, but it's not boring either. More excellent Gaydos art. Not great, but not bad.
Just ok compared to last several issues
Not a bad issue. A lot of stuff is building but I felt this issue was a bit lacking in tension. It's hard to care too much about Maria HIll's stuff and we don't have enough answers to really care.
'Twas Maria Hill put the hit out on Maria Hill! Can Jess solve things by looking at family connections? "Oh, ☠☠☠☠, the whole book's just one scene and I've only got 6 pages left! Maybe I can bump up the scene with Jess's mom and tie up the parental stuff in cheap parallelism? Need a name for the new detective then … Susanna … Punch! That sounds like a human name, sure!" There's plenty of good stuff in this title, but sometimes reading it issue-by-issue leads to an aimless feeling. I also get the feeling that Alias didn't have that disjointed sense, but I might have a case of rose-colored hindsight.
I agree with Black Nerd Problems - Jordan Calhoun's snippet. This one was so boring. And Spidey catches Hobgoblin off panel?! What book is going to acknowledge this?