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Dec 19, 2023
A wonderful issue in every way.
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Dec 20, 2023
the best
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Aug 24, 2025
Wow this was one hell of a comeback for me. Going in with low expectations because frankly so far this run has been horrible issues #4 really turned it around, and I hope this stays as the definitive turning point. Please keep up these vibes.
The dialogue wasn't as bloated and there was more intimate character moments that helped this setting grow more familiar to me. I was really happy to see Amanda Waller show up talking to Sgt. Steel, should be great to see how she f**KS with Diana. Steve getting into a brawl with his fellow soldiers calling him a cuc* and put**y whipped for not talking bad about WW.
The Sovereign is still kind of dumb for me at the moment but what is good is he was presented better in here making it easier to und
erstand what he might be. When he made the POtUs kiss his ring and talk about the mother and the king, and how they breed him and his family, shows that he's not immortal probably this is some secret society like the masons or illuminati I mean just short hand something like that.
This book gave more time to Diana too with her visiting a boy dying of cancer and she brings him to Themyscira for a day. Rendering some beautiful sad moments between her and him. I hope this continues in this direction and not the over bloated writing of previous issues, oh and of course the art in this was perfect! more
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Jul 14, 2024
What a great comic! Art and writing is top notch!
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Dec 20, 2023
This is so political! I love it.
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Dec 22, 2023
Hard not to appreciate this story.
It, and this run have not been subtle in its messaging, but King knows very well what the core of this character is about, love and compassion.... above ANYTHING else.
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Jan 16, 2024
Solid issue but the back up was fantastic and probably the best thing Tom King's done in a while.
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Oct 08, 2024
I feel similarly to how I felt with the previous issue here, when it comes to both the main story and the backup story. I did really like a lot of of the stuff with Diana and Jack, though, particularly towards the end of the issue. Sampere, of course, drew just about everything beautifully, and Ortega's art fits right in with the tone of the backup story, as well.
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Jan 17, 2024
Loved the back-up, which almost felt like a Tomasi-written Super Sons adventure featuring Lizzie. The main story was good with amazing art, though the big storyline didn’t move forward all that much, though we do get to see The Sovereign extend his influence into the seat of power in America. Another great chapter but I’m ready to see how the end-game plays out.
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Apr 24, 2024
This is the issue where this arc takes a weird shift and the focus becomes much more myopic, which isn't great because I feel like King has so far failed to make Wonder Woman herself engaging. I don't really *get* what King is going for with her character, even with the minimal character depth we do get. She's talking about choosing love, but it seems like she's a very contemptuous person in her interactions with anyone who's not currently a dying child. It just seems disconnected. Sure, people are multi-faceted and sometimes Wonder Woman is right to be cold, but why is she threatening her fellow Amazons when talking it out seems like the better option? It points to the major flaw I find in Diana's characterization thus far. King wants to s
how that she's strong and powerful, and has agency, but we don't see the value in that strength and power, and agency, because we never see her struggle, nor do we ever see her question herself.
There is a great moment with the dying kid, and it actually hits back on the larger patriarchal conflict this book is about. The child is questioning whether they're bad or abnormal for not liking what's expected of them to like by society's self-imposed gender norms. Whether they're sick and dying because those norms seem so ingrained into everything that it must be how God wants it. It has to be something far beyond humanity's control. Something innate. That's good stuff. Wonder Woman rambles on it too long, but I applaud the effort.
Unrelated, I wonder if we'll get follow up on that scene with Steve Trevor where he gets into a fight over some rude, sexist comments from another soldier. This scene is played straight, but it nags at me because it's played straight. I'm not sure what it's saying. Because while the soldier is being sexist and wrong, he's also doubting Steve's manhood and Steve has to prove him wrong by... Punching him out. Which seems like toxic masculinity if I've ever seen it. But is the scene saying, "Hey, Steve's right" or is it saying, "Hey, look at all the ways patriarchy affects us"? Eh, I don't know. The scene with the kid questioning whether he's bad or not is what saves this one for me.
The backup is cute although I find it really reductive to say Damian has no hopes and dreams. Kind of flies in the face of everything I've ever read with that character. But it's Damian, so who cares? more
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Dec 19, 2023
I’m not sure what it was, but something felt very off with Diana here and it made this issue one of the first clunkers in what’s been an amazing first few issues from Tom King. Diana’s interactions w/ the parents of a dying child felt out of character, including her asking them to call her Wonder Woman when it felt like she’d allow them to call her Diana. How she even ended up involved in this weird Make-A-Wish style situation was never explained and felt like a really strange way to set up the conversation towards the end about her being a mother given Trinity/Lizzie’s involvement in the series (her introduction via backup stories with Damian and Jon continues to be utterly endearing). The political subplot was still well written
, if not redundant to what we’ve seen so far.
Daniel Sampere’s art was limited given the lack of meat to work with in a rather uneventful issue, though it’s still one of the better drawn comics on the market. I love his little newscast pages where we get to see his interpretation of our 24-hour newscycle. more
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Dec 19, 2023
6.5/10.
I was initially rather impressed. But as the series goes on, he seems to be trafficking in some racial and gender stereotypes that I find troublesome. The art is the saving grace.
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Dec 26, 2023
If you read my Amazons Attack review, then you know I'm a fan of this event that Tom King has set up. It makes no sense that thousands of Amazons would move from Paradise Island to live in "man's world." They might visit, try out the food, and the men and then go back to the island. Also, having one person commit a murder would never cause the entire world to turn on a particular group of people. I think he's trying to make a commentary regarding current-day immigration. Despite all of this this turmoil, Wonder Woman decides to take a day off to spend with a cancer kid. It's touching and the art is great, but it doesn't fit into the larger story. It makes Diana seem like she doesn't care about what's going with her sisters. She is an ambass
ador! Then the boy tells Diana that there's "something wrong inside him" because he's a fan of WW and not Batman and Superman like his friends. I think Tom King is alluding to the being gay because he's a fan of WW. This is complete crap if this is what he's trying to comment on. Just stop it already. Let's get back to the story and see if he can make any sense out of it by the end.
My Comic review Channel - https://youtu.be/VhMnHoatz_I more
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Dec 23, 2023
This book once again frustrates. It is a tale of two stories. And dont get me wrong, the art throughout the book is gorgeous. However, if you know King, he often uses amazing art to cover up his poor story telling.
Main Story:
1) This book was a slog to read. So much text and so much of it meandering. I didn't have fun reading this, it felt like a chore.
2) I dont know how anyone can defend the tone. Its really really mis-matched. Of course I don't expect King to be above using a dying child to go for the cheap 'feels'. It is sort of his MO to kill children at this point. That being said, the contrast he was trying to paint falls flat. If you would have had that dying child story with another writer in another situation I would have
loved it, but it is contrast with the Sovereign. Her inactions and chilling with a kid will no doubt cause lives to be lost down the line. It was also the extremeness of it. Like Tom King needed us to bond with Diana, so he was like ok lets pull out the classic dying kid trope. Its cheap and hackney. Why not use her connecting with people who think she is a monster but she shows them what a hero looks like? Not a kid who already loves her. Totally misses the mark.
3) All the characters act so dumb in the first story. Just feel like a bunch of poor choices, and the fact the Sovereign is just essentially the ruler of the USA still feels like a cheap writing device.
Back-up story.
1) This is the only reason I buy this book. The art is great and the story is sweet. It would not surprised me if King used a ghost writer to write this because it doesn't feel like his writing at all. It has hope, lightheartedness and laughter. If you are honest with yourself in King's writing history, he doesn't really do that. Dude has a lot of issues. more
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