Thứ Bảy, 20 tháng 10, 2018

Giant Days #30

Giant Days #30 Reviewing a good, consistently enjoyable continuing series is hard. There aren’t any creative changes to rave or rant about and no big events in which to hide word count as plot description. Nevertheless, Giant Days remains an immensely readable, goofily funny soap opera about three British college students and their struggles with everyday life. Some of the events are crazy, but under it all, as written by John Allison and illustrated by Max Sarin and Liz Fleming, there’s a good […]

Reviewing a good, consistently enjoyable continuing series is hard. There aren’t any creative changes to rave or rant about and no big events in which to hide word count as plot description. Nevertheless, Giant Days remains an immensely readable, goofily funny soap opera about three British college students and their struggles with everyday life. Some of the events are crazy, but under it all, as written by John Allison and illustrated by Max Sarin and Liz Fleming, there’s a good heart.

Esther, Susan, and Daisy aren’t made fun of, which makes for humor it’s easier to enjoy. They care for each other and so we care for them, although they can be rather extreme in their gothness, radical practicality, or naivete, respectively. No matter the situation, though, there’s always something I can relate to or sympathize with.

In Giant Days #30, Daisy is still blissfully in the throes of her first relationship, although her girlfriend Ingrid is horrible in many ways. Daisy’s roommates are finding the interloper increasingly frustrating for small but annoying traits, as can be seen in these preview pages, but they still want to support her in the newness of her identity.


Link : Giant Days #30

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