Back by popular demand and now with her own miniseries…Trinity! Itall begins when the daughter of Wonder Woman embarks on her mostdangerous adventure yet to enter the timeline to find her father. As theyoung hero knows, messing with time has its consequences, but that doesn’tmean she learned her lesson the first time. Things are about to get ruff andthe Super Sons have gone to the dogs. Prepare for a Crisis of Infinite Corgis!Writer Tom King and artist Belén Ortega return to Trinity after theircelebrated run of backup stories in the pages of Wonder Woman. Trust us,you won’t want to miss Lizzie’s first full-size adventure!
Trinity: Daughter of Wonder Woman is a gift to readers, expanding the heroic adventures of the next generation of DC's heroes in an extremely entertaining storyline. Trinity's unlikely team-up and timey-wimey travel through some of the pivotal moments in DC's rich history work in tandem to create a unique character-centric experience. From the art to the lettering, all elements of this book hit. Readers are in for a treat with the first chapter, “Crisis on Infinite Corgis”, and I can't wait to see how the story unfolds in subsequent issues. Read Full Review
Trinity: Daughter of Wonder Woman #1 is the perfect book for anyone who needs to remember what makes comics so great. The tone perfectly balances heart with comedy, creating a story that feels uniquely genuine while it makes fun of DCs continuity. Read Full Review
King finds a respectably bewildering opening to a new series featuring a daughter of Wonder Woman who is quite solidly her own person. Its also a clever study in character development that manages some very deft narrative maneuvers involving someone who has casually stumbled through time travel at various stages in her life. Its all quite well-executed o nmore levels than it has any right to be. King really has something here, but its going to be kind fo weird to see how it is that hes going to be able to resolve it all in the end. Read Full Review
. Trinity is obviously a new character without many defining stories, but this issue was a strong start combining real pathos with some great Silver Age-style silliness. Read Full Review
In a mythos all about mothers and their relationships with their daughters and having not previously explored Diana and Trinity's relationship extensively, this feels like a really avoidable misfire. Read Full Review
this was very confusing, and Tom King's writing really doesn't make me engaged because it doesn't sound like how I imagine people to talk, and it kind of comes off as Tom King trying too hard to sound cool.