by Jarrod | Aug 31, 2017 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!
By Arpad Okay and Jarrod Jones. Comics that challenge us, slay us, beguile us — the comics we simply can’t wait to devour. That’s DoomRocket’s Staff Picks. Here’s what has set our hearts ablaze this week. Lady Killer 2 #5 Dark Horse Comics/$3.99 Written by Joëlle...
by Jarrod | Aug 30, 2017 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!
Required Reading is DoomRocket’s love chest, where each week one of our contributors goes crazy over a book they just can’t seem to get enough of. This week, Courtney assesses the debut of ‘Saltwater’, by Rick Quinn and Dana Obera, available now on...
by Jarrod | Aug 30, 2017 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!
By Stefania Rudd, Arpad Okay, and Jarrod Jones. Undercover is our opportunity to lovingly gaze upon gorgeous works from magnificent artists. Each week, we single out the most striking covers that grace comic book stands and gush all over them. Darkseid Special #1, by...
by Jarrod | Aug 28, 2017 | TUBE ROCKET
Season Seven, Episode Eight — “The Dragon and the Wolf” By Jarrod Jones. The Wall is down. Ice dragons breathe blue flames. Cersei is a duplicitous monster. Jon Snow is not “Jon Snow” at all. And Littlefinger bled out into the stone...
by Jarrod | Aug 28, 2017 | TUBE ROCKET
Season Three, Episode Sixteen — “The Return, Part Sixteen” By Brad Sun. In many ways, Twin Peaks: The Return has been a show about waiting. From Sam staring intently at the mysterious glass box way back in “Part One”, to Big Ed at the...
by Jarrod | Aug 25, 2017 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!, HEY, KIDS! REVIEWS
By Stefania Rudd. In the opening frames, bold white letters: “New Jersey, 1998”. Chris, 17 years old, frantic, running. She’s late for something. As the panels move along she bumps into (literally bumps into) her coworker at a record store called Vinyl Mayhem....
by Jarrod | Aug 25, 2017 | HEY, KIDS! COMICS!, HEY, KIDS! REVIEWS
By Brandy Dykhuizen. Don’t you love it when you pick up the first issue of the series, and you can just tell it’s gonna be a great run? War Mother #1 packs quite a bit into its inaugural 32 pages, and every inch of it counts. The 41st Century looks like one hell of a...