A recharged Cave and company pack back into his interstellar Eye and resume their cosmic adventure, surveying the spelunked singularity Star Adam created. But they'll soon learn that it's not all stardust and laser monks when they stumble upon a warship manned only by the skeletons of a long-dead crew, still hell-bent on finishing their mission.
The father/daughter dynamic is worth sticking around for. This series will most likely end up on a satisfying note. The journey may be a bit of a struggle. As long as the focus remains on Cave and Chloe's relationship, this series will be a great read. Read Full Review
The art is simple but great from Oeming. It has the style and energy of a Jack Kirby comic. But it's it's own unique thing. And it's a book that will be missed greatly once The Young Animal line packs up house in the next couple of months. Read Full Review
Cave Carson Has An Interstellar Eye #4 takes everything the book has done well so far and adds to it by giving it an emotional core. By putting a focus on the relationship between Cave and Chloe, it gives readers something that was missing and makes the whole thing more realistic. It also casts the series in a whole new light. Its not just a bunch of trippy sci-fi adventures, its a journey of discovery for a man and his daughter as they learn to be better to each other. Its nice when a book can transcend what it was while keeping the same entertaining flavor, and this one achieves that admirably. Read Full Review
A one-off adventure of Cave and company is more than welcome, being that there's only three issues left to the series. There's a nice father-daughter moment, but you know we all come to look at the colorful psychedelics, and you get plenty of 'em here. Read Full Review
This series has been fantastic with the bizarre, surreal visuals, but it also doesn't seem quite as grounded in the relationship between Cave and his daughter as the previous twelve did. Read Full Review
Cave Carson Has An Interstellar Eye is one far out comic that never loses touch with reality. Read Full Review
This comic is borderline incomprehensible but it still gets me.