Carnage #16 – REVIEW
It’s been a wild and at times unending ride from start to finish, but after fourteen months we’ve come to the end of Gerry Conway and Mike Perkins’s tale with Carnage #16. The
It’s been a wild and at times unending ride from start to finish, but after fourteen months we’ve come to the end of Gerry Conway and Mike Perkins’s tale with Carnage #16. The
Fifteen issues of Carnage have lead up to this moment. This series has been a roller coaster of stops and starts, with plot threads weaving back and forth between Carnage and his
Carnage is certainly one of the more out of left field books that Marvel is currently publishing, and this issue continues that tradition in spades. With second-person narration, unholy conceptions, and
The jungle seems to be doing good things for Carnage. Back again with another month of darkness and dread, Gerry Conway and Mike Perkins deliver the next chapter of Carnage
Carnage #11 is a breath of fresh air. With a Marvel-wide soft-reboot expected at the end of Civil War II, no sight of Carnage in the list of titles to fly under the new
As enjoyable as the Carnage ride has been thus far, the fifth issue presented a major test for the series: how would a book starring a character that has never been able
If there’s been one hard and fast rule about Gerry Conway and Mike Perkins’s Carnage series, it’s take everything you read/learned/absorbed from the previous issue and toss it out the window, because your predictions
When it comes to great sounding creative pairings, writer Gerry Conway, whose most iconic comic book work took place during the industry’s Bronze Age, coupled with the serial-killing villain Carnage