• Jessica Jones' new secrets start to unfold. How far did Jessica go to uncover a deadly secret in the Marvel Universe?
• From the original creators comes an all new chapter in the world-famous private eye's ongoing adventures.
Parental Advisory
You should definitely go pick up this book and series. It is absolutely amazing and fun. Jessica is not your regular hero and nobody writes her like Bendis. Read Full Review
If you're a fan of the mini-series - or the original Alias comic series - you're bound to like this. Read Full Review
Want to read a comic that takes the piss out of other comics? Jessica Jones is the one for you. There's a wide range of characters for Jessica to roast, and she takes every opportunity to do it. From superhero names to superpowers, nothing's left unscathed. It's this awkward and playful charm that keeps us firmly in love with Jessica, she's truly Bendis' best creation. This comic leads us on, and we're completely fine with it. Read Full Review
Some of my favorite humor from Jessica Jones comes from them making fun of the rest of the Marvel universe, being open that it's characters are different " that the book is different " as Jessica makes fun of corny superhero names and Alison acknowledges their shared disdain for all these heroes and their superpowers. The mystery for readers is who Alison is and what could she want from Jessica, which seems pretty boring as I write it, but fits with the pacing and adds to the questions that need to be answered without leaving us so clueless as to be frustrated. We're being strung along and it's working so far. Read Full Review
Jessica Jones finally gives us an intriguing and compellingissue as we are given some answers that reveal the overall idea behind thisfirst storyline. It is incredibly satisfying but doesn't end the questions thatI still have about the book. It reveals enough without revealing everything andI think that's pretty damn impressive. New questions race through my mind andinstead of it being tedious and enraging, it is terrific and engaging. Read Full Review
(I mayhave an outlandish theory that she is an aged up, embitteredversion of Layla Miller, who is from another timeline or the Ultimate Universe because, like Alison, she“knows stuff”, was a mutant P.I. with X-Factor once upon a time, and is also a Brian Michael Bendis co-creation.) Read Full Review
While this won't be for everyone (much like every Jessica Jones series, in fact), it should satisfy just about every fan of the character. Plus she drops some trademark insults, so remember that this is for mature readers only… Read Full Review
Would she honestly accept a job putting her knowledge of the super-hero community to use for a shadowy organization which won't identify itself? It sounds implausible, but let's face it, Jessica Jones hasn't always made the brightest decisions. And with Luke and his friends still hounding her, how far will she go to earn a little peace? Worth a look. Read Full Review
The art really clicks for me but the story doesn't show much than an attempt to recapture old magic. Read Full Review
Bendis and Gaydos aremaking a fine comic, and I do want to see where this is going, but the latest issue accomplishes very little and adds even less to the ongoing story. Rather than fully dive in to the new storylines he's introducing, Bendis spends a whole issue just sort of teasing everything that could come later. Read Full Review
This has been very good so far but I’d say this was my favorite of the first three issues. I love the writing style and the set up for what’s to come.
So far, Jessica Jones is shapI got up to be even better than Alias, as Jessica meets new villain Alison. There was no action or fight scenes at all this issue and yet it is still amazing, which is really a testament to Bendis’ writing skills. I sure love Luke Cage’s involvement and I hope Jessica and Luke make up
Jess meets Alison, a lady who wants to harness her considerable rage for almost certainly sinister purposes. The whole issue is a classic Bendis conversation with a few frills to liven it up. The conversation is a fascinating one and there are plenty of interesting questions still to answer. I felt this issue fell short of perfection because Michael Gaydos fell into headshot exhaustion illustrating Alison & Jessica's endless chat. True, the point of the art may have been that these are two give-nothing-away hardass ladies with the ability to throw world-class RBFs, but it translates into a pretty dull sequence of visuals.
Progress made in the first two issues falls off a cliff here. This issue goes nowhere, failing to advance the plot in any way. And it's boring.