The Invisibles Vol 3, So, for most of this volume I’ve felt a bit lost (look, I’m not too proud to admit it), but for whatever reason, I felt like I picked up the thread a little bit in this issue. I guess moving toward an impending clash will do that?

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The Invisibles Vol. 3, This builds nicely to the payoff of basically this entire volume so far (I think?), when King Mob looks at slick and puts on his sunglasses and says, “The Invisibles ride again.” Pretty cool.

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The Invisibles Vol. 3, Read this one yesterday and forgot to post, but this issue is rather sweet/sad....and also a bit horrifying as it pertains to Sir Miles, though you don’t quite feel for that guy.

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The Invisibles Vol. 3, This felt like a bit of a return to more structure, or at least it had more scenes with King Mob, Lord Fanny, and Jack, which as far afield as the book travels, is the crew that always seems to draw things back.

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The Invisibles Vol. 3, This was a good issue. Like the rest of the arc, a bit heavier on Sir Miles than I initially suspected. I think the most interesting story thread to me at the moment is whatever is going on with Jack.

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You'd think by now the Invisibles would all learn how to talk to one another. It'd same them a whole hell of a lot of headaches.

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Day 116 you say? Rich Regency pickings: Hats & bonnets were all the rage. We included several in our 2017 exhibition Royal Pavilion. Also had repros for trying on.
Model: Curator's own.
Cartoon: Les Invisibles by Gillray,1810

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The Invisibles Vol. 3, The Division X stuff has been a fun diversion and a nice bit of long-form storytelling, but I’d be lying if I didn’t say the scenes with The Invisibles we’ve seen the most of aren’t more welcome to me.

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The Invisibles Vol. 3, This issue serves up a bit more of Division X disorientation before eventually reorienting with a big reveal...and the pivoting quickly to set the stage (I believe) for the final 10 issues of the book.

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The Invisibles Vol. 3, Well, this issue was certainly different than what I expected to come after the last arc. This book is subversive not just with its ideas but in the way it conveys them, and the shifts between arcs is an example.

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The Invisibles Vol. 2, Compared to recent issues, this one felt a bit subdued. It also stands out to me for being heavy on Mason, heavy on the other side, and steeped in things that may or may not be about to happen.

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Volume 2 of the Invisibles concludes in "The Tower" by Grant Morrison, Chris Weston, John Stokes, Daniel Vozzo, and Todd Klein in

King Mob and Mason wax philosophical about politics and reality, while Jack convalesces after the end of "Black Science 2".

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The Invisibles Vol. 2. I feel like all the previous issues in this volume so steadily chipped away at linear structure, that an issue like this one barely registers as abstract, which is fine, because I can use more of my brain to ogle the artwork.

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The future is weird. Or at least 2005 from the 1998 perspective is weird. It's also always strange as to where fiction placed us in terms of technology and what didn't occur. While iteration in different avenues took off.

Also, Robin writing the Invisibles story is something.

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Everything gets a little meta in the conclusion to "Black Science 2" in The Invisibles Vol. 2 by Grant Morrison, Chris Weston, Ray Kryssing, Daniel Vozzo, and Todd Klein.

Ragged Robin writes a book and Fanny & Jack hook up with some baddies.

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The Invisibles Vol. 2. Action action action. Plus some time travel, and some other rather more abstract material to remind us what the bigger overarching ideas here are. Great pacing throughout this one, and lots of blood/death.

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Welcome to the Invisibles where everything's made up and the points don't matter.

Though, it does make you wonder, if everything that we've been reading's been a lie, would the content be enriched or diminished?

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The Invisibles Vol. 2. I read through this issue so fast, I guess really wanting to know what happens but also just thoroughly engaged. This run has had so many great character combinations and we get several in this one issue.

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I don't blame Boy for wanting a normal life, after everything that's been going on with the Invisibles, but split attentions tends to be deadly in these sorts of situations.

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