• It's a murder mystery at Strange Academy, and not the fun kind with the pretend roles.
• Toth has been shattered and everyone is a suspect.
• Can the teachers discover Whodunit? Could it be ONE OF THEM?!?!
32 PGS./Rated T+
Strange Academy #11 delivers another excellent issue in this series run. Its pages are filled with emotion, energy, a hilarious guest appearance, and the cliffhanger it ends on provides the perfect build-up to keep readers hyped for the next issue. Read Full Review
Strange Academy #11 diverges from its magical path, but is still ripe with the character development that makes the series so wholesome. Read Full Review
Ramos delivers some beautiful art throughout the issue. The characters look amazing and there is a brilliant attention to detail that makes every panel engrossing. Read Full Review
This book really does represent the best aspects of the classic Generation X book, students who bicker, are searching for themselves, are incredibly selfish and heroic in turns. It uses characters and concepts which encompass the Marvel Universe while still being contained enough to be an incredibly entertaining ride in its own right. Read Full Review
Good, solid issue with a nice mystery and an exciting ending. Read Full Review
Issues of Strange Academy are few and far between these days, but when they land"they land hard. Read Full Review
Seeing some of the other reviewers here I do not understand their negativity about Issue #11. It seems an interesting whodunit with Calvin's cloak revealing itself as a symbiote aka like venom etc. The artists, writers, and letterers for the issue was terrific as usual and the next issues are all set up.
Some unenlightened people seem to get their dander up whenever Howard the Duck appears. He is funny, logical, and I always enjoy his views on soplving cases. Already eager for Issue #12.
I enjoyed this issue a whole lot. Howard the Duck is always a plus.
When crystal kid Toth gets shattered, Doc Voodoo calls in Howard the Duck to investigate. The dark subject matter mutes the humor. And as I discovered in the last issue, I like the lead characters (Emily in particular) more than the supporting cast, and this issue is all about the ensemble. This isn't my favorite portrayal of Howard the Duck, either. But the fundamental charm of the series and the outstanding art are still there, lifting this up toward "good comics" territory despite my subjective nit-picking.