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By: Mark Buckingham (story), Russ Braun (art), Lee Loughridge (colors)
The Story: Even a fox loses his charm once he turns human.
The Review: And we’re back! It’s been several months since the abysmal Mice and Men arc, and if I had any doubts at the time whether I was doing the right thing temporarily Dropping the series, I have none now. I’m in a much better spirit of mind than if I had forced myself to buy into Andreyko’s wandering, inconsequential storyline, and eager to check in with the less pressing side of the Fables universe, especially as we’re winding down to the series’ conclusion.
Since I’m still woefully deficient in my Fables history, I can’t confirm whether Prince Charming’s promise to provide glamours to all non-humanoid Fables was ever established before this issue, but it does lead to a solid plot for the Fables that tend to be overlooked. It’s true they don’t get enough respect; that will happen when you look like a walking sunflower in breeches or cat with a bonnet or some other anthropomorphized creature in medieval costume. Kind of hard not to see them as comical even when they have very real grievances.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews, Vertigo | Tagged: DC, DC Comics, Fables, Fairest, Fairest #27, Fairest #27 review, King Cole, Lee Loughridge, Mark Buckingham, Prince Charming, Reynard the Fox, Russ Braun, Vertigo, Vertigo Comics | 1 Comment »