Gillings crew - along with Eve - gets ambushed by The Divinity. Now a prisoner of a savage commune of freaks, Eve is forced to play a sadistic game of survival while trying to find a way to escape her captors. Meanwhile, a seemingly clever pack of primals has followed Morgan and his crew back to their compound as the monstrous beings search for their own form of vengeance.
As The Courier: Liberty and Death nears it end, the stark reality of survival continues to shock us with moments of extreme violence balanced by the rare chance of compassion for those left behind. However while the story seems familiar, it is the grimness of sickening artwork made all the more captivating due to gravitating colors that captivates the audience and with a wish to see even more to satisfy our morbid curiosity. And yet as Eve finds herself trapped within an impossible situation, you cannot but wonder how she will make it out alive, even as those who work against her reveal their cruelty knows no bounds within a world with inconvenient laws. Read Full Review
I think this book did a solid job representing itself. On paper during a pandemic, this comic shouldn't work well but it succeeds spectacularly. Eve is a great protagonist and while we mostly get action in this scene, we do know she cares about people and has a stubborn will to survive. Read Full Review
THE COURIER: LIBERTY AND DEATH #2, successfully mixes apocalyptic and dystopian stories to give readers a unique twist on a familiar trope. The art is solid and not afraid to get gory. And the story keeps a steady, tense pace from start to finish. Read Full Review