JUMPING ON POINT!
"Burn Your Life Down" Part 1
Sela's duties once again take her away from Arcane Acre when former HiboCorp agent Jessica Ciampo approaches her with a dangerous task. Back at the school, a spirit appears to Ali with a message for Hailey. A new evil is rearing its head at Arcane Acre and, before sun falls, it will strike out against the students.
Andrea Meloni is back on art duties for this one, with Erick Arciniega on colours, Ghost Glyph Studios on letters and the duo of Sean Chen and Ylenia Di Napoli on the cover. I've loved Andrea on the art for this issue since the #101 issue, and this is more of the same goodness. There's this edge of hard vulnerability to the characters brought about by the narrative and Andrea's art with Erick's colours really seems to capture that, not to mention that the visual flow is aces here. The artists switch between a lot of different combinations and the end result is fantastic. Read Full Review
A good entry point that has me intrigued and wanting to know more. That's the sign of a good comic! Read Full Review
Grimm Fairy Tales #107 represents a comic that's over a hundred issues old, but thanks to the current status quo, feels new reader friendly. Add in the sheer entertainment value and this easily comes recommended. Read Full Review
Leaving us on a cliff hanger is so cruel, but I guess it's so people like you and I will tune in next month, which I definitely will. Read Full Review
This is a book that gets a certain amount of cache based simply on the setup. Abook like this can get some good mileage by simply not screwing up a great idea.One significant nod I will give the writing team of Joe Brusha, Ralph Tedesco,and Pat Shand is that these guys know how to do depict social media in a comicwell. It is not overly contrived and feels genuine. The current creative team onDC's Batgirl could learn a lot from the GFT team. Grimm Fairy Tales #107 followsthrough on a great premise and offers up some pretty decent craft along the way.This series is one to keep an eye on. Slow and steady often wins the race, andthe formula for just such a run is clearly and evidently in place here. Read Full Review
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