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Read Providence by Alan Moore and @Jacen_art (no relation-probably). While it was beautifully illustrated the story left me a bit flat. All the Lovecraft deconstruction you could want, but with an overstory that just wasn't engaging enough. It seemed to wander around too much.
Finished Three Jokers by Geoff Johns and Jason Fabok and I walked away thinking, "It's not you Batman. It's me." Filled with great set pieces, the whole left me flat and longing for a time when I didn't see our hero as more fucked up than his antagonists. Very qualified recommend
Read the first few issues of Strange Academy by @skottieyoung and @humberto_ramos and I have to say I like it. It does some interesting things with compressing time without it being a typical training montage. Double- plus good. Definitely recommend.
Just read Giant Size X-Men: Fantomas by Hickman and Reis and while it was a good looking book it just didn't work for me. I haven't been following the X-world since the relaunch (event fatigue) and it felt like I was missing a lot of the story for a one-shot. Maybe it's just me.
Does anyone know how SMBC reads my mind? Am I entitled to compensation?
Whenever the granny at the next gas pump hears my Devo blaring, Cha Cha slides over, and reaches for my ham candle.