CAGED PART 5
• Luke is home at last, and all he wants to do is read a bedtime story to his little girl, Danielle.
• But is there something more to this fairy-tale than meets the eye?
Rated T+
This issue acts not only as a love letter to Cage's legacy, but to the joys of parenthood. Read Full Review
Overall. This is a nice final issue of the ‘Caged' mini-series, which would work just as well as a stand-aloneissue. Given that other than Luke returning home. It had very little to do with the story arc, which really closed out in the last issue. But as its own thing. This issue works well and offers up some nice respite from the intensity and action of the previous 4 issues. Read Full Review
Luke Cage has been one of my favorite heroes since I started reading comics around the time of the original Marvel Civil War. While this series wasnt perfect, it was still great to get an ongoing solo series about the Power Man for the first time since in my lifetime. This was a personally important series to me, and it will be sorely missed. Mr. David Walker, Mr. Nelson Blake II, Mr. Guillermo Sanna, and Mr. Marcio Menyz, if any of you get to read this, know that this series was greatly appreciated and enjoyed. The same goes for Power Man and Iron Fist, Mr. Walker. Read Full Review
Luke and Danielle tell a wonderful bedtime story together. It illuminates the bonds of love running through the whole family and does a superb job of capturing the boundless imagination of kids. It falls short of perfection only in that the real-world art is slightly rushed; the fantasy scenes of King Luke and Princess Danielle are outstanding. This whole series has been solid but largely unmemorable; it ends here with a standalone issue that easily slots itself into the short list of "all-time great Danielle Cage-Jones comics."
As much as this volume of Luke Cage has been nothing special, this story is great send off. It's unique, it's fun, its colorful. It's just a good time comic.