• Super Fight Club is here and She-Hulk isn't going to break the rules.
• Good thing Rainbow and Rogê are going to break the first rule and talk about it just for you.
• Jennifer Walters never promised (us) not to break rules at her day job. Rule #1? No super hero clients.
• She did promise her boss, though, so...
RATED T+
Rowell and company may have found a nice balance, but it will remain to be seen just how well the series navigates its way beyond the Jack of Hearts story that opens up the series. So much of what Jens going through right now has a very familiar feel to it. Where Rowell decides to go from here will determine just how likely the series is to continue indefinitely into the future. For now, Jens been just as pleasant as she has been in the past. With any luck, Rowell will have an opportunity to explore life with her for a long time to come. Read Full Review
A good series gets even better. I want to see Rowell's takes on every Marvel character ever, and that's a huge compliment! Read Full Review
While the Jack of Hearts storyline seems to be dragging on a bit, I'm a huge fan of what Rainbow Rowell has done with the character of She-Hulk and the worldbuilding for this series. Backed by great art from Luca Maresca and superb coloring from Rico Renzi, thisShe-Hulk run is already one of my favorites featuring the jade giantess. Read Full Review
I am enjoying this series and would recommend it to anyone who likes this character. I am not sure how much of this is going to be in the TV show if at all or it will be an entire new storyline for it? Read Full Review
The continued search for what happened to Jack of Heart's leads to some insightful dialogue; it's only the underwhelming cliffhanger that gives one the sense that this dialogue might be better suited for prose after 11 pages. Read Full Review
So much about this comic is done right and done perfectly. But this is the third issue in a row that continues to cover the exact same ground with little to no actual story, plot or character advancement. Read Full Review
She-Hulk #4 contains absolutely nothing of consequence. The titular character spends the entire day hanging out with friends and chatting about nothing of consequence. After four issues with a $3.99 cover price, this story is worth less than the paper it's printed on. Read Full Review
it's weird to see low scores on this book. I think it's awesome comics. The relationship between Jen and Jack is ofc front center and it's amazing, feels so real, like you really see 2 real people interact, progressively getting to know each other and discovering how much they actually enjoy each others company, even tho they knew each other before, but never had a reason to took things to the next level. You know i can relate to that in pretty much exactly the same way. Yeah, there is no drama and that's cool. Everything about the book is low-key. Firstly She-Hulk is a tamer, balanced and seems a lot more comfortable in both her skins, which again it's a lot more down to Earth compared to the way, she was presented in Byrne's run and big pmore
Glad to see an update on the Fight Club here after it was first introduced in Issue #1. Although it was shorter on time spent, it was still fun and brought more participants into the fold. Ben and, later, Reed's interactions with Jen were done well, as they both showed their genuine concerns for Jen. The majority of this issue was spent centered on Jen and Jack that was great. It wasn't anything earth-shattering, but it was just good quality stuff. It was surprising to look back on the conversation and realize how long it actually went on for, when it didn't feel that long whatsoever. It just felt like to people talking to each other, which is great. Plus, the moment where the two of them almost made physical contact was a nice touch. Good more
A really enjoyable fun series to follow
Rainbow Rowell bringing slice-of-life and romance into comics, something I havent seen in a Marvel or DC book since... well probably her excellent RUNAWAYS run and DAN SLOTT'S SHE-HULK. The artwork is great, the tone is soooooo relaxing and charming; this She-Hulk has a soft humanity to it that Rowell is so good at.
Love the radiation conversation. Love what's happening with Jack of Hearts. I really wish we could have all the issues at once though, as I do feel this would read so much better in one sitting as opposed to month-to-month episodic installments.
Rowell is a novelist and while Runaways had enough characters to explore from issue to issue, She-Hulk has a novel structure to it that four issues in we are technically still more
I love this series, but I gotta admit it barely works as a month-to-month book. It's well-drawn and hilarious and the character work is impeccable, but the plotting is sooo slow.
The more comedic "slice of She-Hulk life" stuff in the front half of this issue would work fine as the supporting material to a different main plot. Jack of Hearts' story is fascinating, but it's just not paced or portioned for 11 pages a month.
This is hardly the first time I've said "this'll read better in a trade," but I don't think it's ever been more applicable than with this series.
I liked seeing Jen outside of She-Hulk, but it's just a bunch of conversations and the fight club stuff at the beginning is stupid and juvenile. Let's get the ball rolling.
what is this jim and pam energy they're spending so much time on