
By: Jim McCann (story), Rodin Esquejo & Dan McDaid (art), Arif Prianto & Lee Loughridge (colors)
The Story: Elle remembers what happened at the subway, and it is not lawsuit-worthy.
The Review: It all comes down to that fateful, rainy night on a subway platform. That is, after all, where this story started. The mystery of exactly what happened to Elle just before she ended up comatose has kept us tantalized for a good long time, and McCann has definitely milked the whole thing for all the intrigue it could spare. You’re at the point where you feel as though once you know the truth of that incident, you’ll know everything.
But even though Elle finally recounts the whole ordeal with firsthand details, you’re chagrined to discover that the subway accident is not everything—not even close. While it’s clear that Elle knows much more about what’s happening to her and why than you’ve previously believed, you the fact that her memories are coming in piecemeal and out of order sets a firm cap on how much McCann chooses to reveal before he’s good and ready.
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Filed under: Image Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Arif Prianto, Dan McDaid, Elle Peterssen, Image, Image Comics, Jim McCann, Lee Loughridge, Mind the Gap, Mind the Gap #13, Mind the Gap #13 review, Rodin Esquejo | Leave a comment »