Wonder Woman: Black & Gold #6
| Writer | Michael Conrad, Christos N. Gage, Marguerite Sauvage, Liam Sharp |
| Artist | Noah Bailey, Kevin Maguire, Marguerite Sauvage, Liam Sharp |
| Cover Price | $5.99 |
Nothing gold can stay including this remarkable celebration of Wonder Woman beautifully presented in her signature colors! It all concludes, featuring our hero saving a life that will in turn save thousands, a superhero climate crisis, a body swap with one of her greatest villains, and more!
CRITIC REVIEWS
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9.6
You Don't Read Comics - Russ Bickerstaff
Nov 24, 2021In the past couple of years, DC has done more than a few Wonder Woman anthology series. Inspired quite heavily by tales of heroism in ancient myth and legend, Wonder Woman takes to shorter narratives quite well. Its too bad that there isnt a standard, ongoing Wonder Woman short story anthology. Black and Gold, Sensational Wonder Woman, and the 80th-anniversary issue have shown that Diana can make some impressive statements in very, very short narratives. Read Full Review
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9.0
Geek Dad - Ray Goldfield
Nov 23, 2021Overall, a strong final collection with one all-timer in Liam Sharp's installment. Read Full Review
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8.7
Comic Watch - Clint Theron
Nov 23, 2021Wonder Woman: Black and Gold comes to a close with this final issue, but what a joy it has been to see a diverse collective of writers and artists celebrate Wonder Woman's 80th anniversary with this anthology series. This issue features two of the best stories in the entire anthology with "A Lesson in Truth" and "Role Model". Read Full Review
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8.0
ComicBook.com - Evan Valentine
Nov 24, 2021Black And Gold simply is one of the best Wonder Woman series around and while this issue might not have hit me as hard as some of the previous takes, its an anthology that has something for everyone. Read Full Review
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5.0
Razorfine - Alan Rapp
Dec 01, 2021The concluding issue of Wonder Woman: Black & Gold offers five more tales of Wonder Woman's adventures in black and white, with a splash of gold. The six-issue mini-series ends on more of whimper than a bang. Read Full Review