
By: J.H. Williams III & W. Haden Blackman (story), Trevor McCarthy (art), Guy Major (colors)
The Story: Sometimes people are so close, it’s like they share one body. Sometimes they actually do.
The Review: This fragmented approach to storytelling that Williams-Blackman have taken on has been an interesting experiment, and a pretty successful one. Keeping six different plotlines running at the same time in each issue and somehow delivering a coherent, unified read is no easy feat, so in that respect alone, Williams-Blackman have been wildly effective. But up until now, there didn’t seem to be any reason to write the arc this way except for sheer novelty.
Now, however, with each plotline running closer to each other in time, all coalescing into the “Now” of the present story, you can see how each informs and plays off the others. Imagine one of those photo-mosaics, where you have scads and scads of little pictures, each with a distinctive subject of its own, yet all coming together to form a single, focal image. We’ve been too close to the individual pictures, and only now do we step back and see what we’re really looking at.
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Filed under: DC Comics, Reviews | Tagged: Batwoman, Batwoman #10, Batwoman #10 review, Bette Kane, Cameron Chase, Colonel Kane, Commissioner Gordon, DC, DC Comics, Guy Major, J.H. Williams III, Kate Kane, Killer Croc, Maggie Sawyer, Maro, Medusa, Sune, Trevor McCarthy, W. Haden Blackman | 7 Comments »

