• Squirrel Girl may have avoided going to jail, but now Kraven's a fugitive on the run! It's been a difficult day!
• Can Squirrel Girl stop Kraven and Spider-Man from fighting before it's too late?
• Can a squirrel named "Haskell" be a major part of a super hero epic?
• Can Brain Drain use some well-applied existentialist philosophy to save the day?
• The answer to all these questions is, "I dunno, MAYBE?" And you'll have to read the comic to find out anything more specific!
• UNBEATABLE SQUIRREL GIRL #35 is your one-stop more
As always, Unbeatable Squirrel Girl is a must for your pull list, no matter your age or gender. Read Full Review
The issue's initial ending is fine, but the issue's true ending is 10 times better and has loads of potential if it's not a one-off joke. Though to be fair, even if it is, it was still crazy worth it. Read Full Review
Sorry folks this is what the perfect comic looks like and I'm not actuallly sorry at all.
Squirrel Girl and her supporting cast manage to defuse a Spider-Man/Kraven fight - no small accomplishment. Kraven brings the story to a bittersweet end by admitting that he's not ready for the clean slate Doreen wants to give him. It's a nicely-rendered story, particularly in its art, but it's talky and it feels decompressed. Still a thoroughly satisfying conclusion, which is something this title sometimes struggles with. This whole arc has been a nicely-nuanced look at the limitations of Doreen's optimistic "why don't you just quit doing crimes?" MO. Kraven turning down her team-up offer nudges her into recognizing more complex moral questions without being cruel about the potential naivete of her usual outlook.