• The night the villains joined forces and overcame the world's heroes was the night that Wolverine's life irrevocably changed. He lost his friends, his purpose, and all that was left was the Wasteland.
• Now, Old Man Logan has found himself in the past, before the Wasteland, and he lives with the fear that the Villain Uprising may yet come to pass.
• And he just may just be right.
Parental Advisory
This issue of OLD MAN LOGAN may feel slow to some, but it is precisely what the series needed. It grounded Logan once again in the current X-Men situation, developed his relationship with Jean, and put a smile on this reviewer's face unlike any other comic. This series continues to be brilliant, and Lemire and Sorrentino prove again why they are masters of the comic form. Read Full Review
A wonderful look at Logan as he attempts to internally reconcile that the Earth he currently inhabits is not quite the one from which he hails. If he just stops to think about it, he just may find himself taking advantage of his new lease on life and actually begin enjoying himself... or at least not spending his time fearing the next tick over to midnight. Read Full Review
Old Man Logan #8 is a sweet, but ultimately unnecessary, one-off comic Read Full Review
Lovely quiet story
It would be awesome seeing a series like this of events of how all the heroes went down.
Still surprised how much I love this.
Lemire keeps dipping into the well of "Logan must learn that this isn't his universe, and what happened in his time doesn't necessarily happen here." The entire first arc of this series was centered around it, Logan's plot in the first arc of Extraordinary centered around it, the last arc centered around Logan NOT grasping that, trying to fix what wasn't actually broken, and just making things worse. Now we're getting yet ANOTHER issue centered around it. While just seeing Logan cope with how different things are could be enjoyable, instead it feels like we're rehashing the same story beats again and again.