Jess learns the truth about these new champions of The Assembly and whose side they're really on. But the shocking reveals keep piling up with the return of someone we thought was dead!
Rated T+
The relationship between Jessica and Liberty quickly becomes one you hope to see more of, something the team of artist IG Guara and colorist Arif Prianto deserve high praise for. Read Full Review
Solid book, if I had to pick a weakness it would be that I don't care for the art. It's not my preferred style, Guara has never been an artist I care for. It's a fun book though, Spider-Woman is one of my favorite Spider-characters, the setup and setting is solid. These "Young Thunderbolts" are pretty interesting. The story isn't particularly deep or outstanding but it's good solid entertainment.
I must be reading a different comic to a lot of others.
Yes, it has a nice cover, the art is vibrant, and the use of Angar is creative, so there’s the three stars, but…
The early scenes with Liberty were mawkish, and set Jess up, again, as being a generally useless. She’s solved nothing. Even the idea to reuse Angar, and the spy stuff, belonged to Liberty. Jessica is literally a passive narrator in her own book. Her only role is to constantly remind us that she’s a mommy nowadays. All the answers have fallen into her lap, and not a one of them have been shocking, or unexpected, even the big reveal at the end repeats the last issue. A villain, with no previous ties to Jessica, has been resurrected and provides more