And with Bombshells finished, I've completed #Roll100 for January. Looking forward to February's numbers!
@PuddleJumper
And with Bombshells finished, I've completed #Roll100 for January. Looking forward to February's numbers!
@PuddleJumper
2.75⭐️
World War II was a time when women stepped up and kept society running when the men left for the battlefield. What isn‘t usually mentioned though it just how much of a role women played in the war. In this first volume of Bombshells, we see just how impactful our heroines from across the world were in helping to fight off the Nazis.
I had such high hopes for this series but it ended up being so boring for me.
This storyline has a bit about bats spreading a deadly virus that's hitting just a bit too close to home right now.
There isn't a ton of plot in this arc, but there's some good development of Kate's fractious relationship with her father.
Scarecrow is the villain in this arc, so there's lots of phantasmagoria. The art shifts perfectly to distinguish hallucinations from reality.
This arc ends with a glimpse of a future Gotham patrolled by Bat-drones and under the control of a more brutal Batman. This storyline intersects with James Tynion's Detective Comics run.
Damage is part of any story, and damage must be owned.
Dive into Batwoman's past as she tangles with assassins, arms dealers, and corporate overlords.
I read this to fulfill Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge #21: A comic by an LGBTQIA creator. I really liked it! It's a sort of superheroine retelling of World War II. The artwork is gorgeous as well.