Everybody has issues. Some have back problems, some suffer from depression. In Tom’s case, everywhere he goes dead bodies with his face and fingerprints pop up, seemingly from alternate realities. Tom struggles to make friends, find love, and pay the rent atop an ever-growing mountain of corpses.
Camp and company are going to have a very tricky time trying to top the seventh issue in the series. Its remarkably well-executed seventh issue. The full reality of the anthology series hasnt quite been revealed yet, but the seventh issue really manages to find the perfect space in the perfect place for a new format on everything as it all moves forward into the next issue. Tom Doublay is SUCH an interesting character in so many different ways. There are so many different ways of executing everything. Its remarkably good work. Read Full Review
Assorted Crisis Events #7 is a devastatingly inventive standalone chapter that turns a bizarre sci-fi nightmare into a quiet, aching meditation on isolation, emotional burnout, and being unseen by the people around you. Deniz Camp once again proves that this series thrives on taking absurd concepts and grounding them in painfully human experience, while Eric Zawadzki's expressive, color-driven art finds beauty in the grotesque. It's unsettling, funny in the darkest ways, and deeply empathetic; a reminder that sometimes the weirdest stories hit the closest to home. Read Full Review
Zawadzki delivers great looking art throughout the issue. I really love the visual style of the story and how it frames the characters within it. Read Full Review
Assorted Crisis Events #7 delivers a fun and weird story with some amazing art. The message is a little lacking but that doesn't take away from the entertainment value from the story itself. If you are looking for a weird and unique story this issue and series is definitely for you. Read Full Review
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