Scan barcode
jhstack's review
3.0
Nice to get back into the noir-like world of Fatale. The 90s Seattle setting seems a little off, considering that the series has bummed around the decades from the '40s to the present day in flashbacks, but it helps add to Josephine's backstory.
mzjai117's review
5.0
This series just keeps getting weirder and crazier and I can't stop reading it!!!
old_tim's review
5.0
This series continues to be compelling. In volume 4, a classic rock & roll narrative is disrupted by our heroine.
http://fedpeaches.blogspot.com/2014/02/hey-arent-you-guy-from-that-band.html
http://fedpeaches.blogspot.com/2014/02/hey-arent-you-guy-from-that-band.html
bloodonsnow's review
4.0
Brubaker has a genuine talent in making minor characters truly fascinating and sympathetic, even if they're not around for long. I am, however, waiting for the main arc to progress. It's a minor nitpick, seeing as I don't mind too much, but at this point I wonder if the main arc really is what I think it is.
thehmkane's review
4.0
I didn't find this volume quite as compelling as previous stories, but it still holds its own. Love the idea of Jo -- or Jane -- as the muse for a band. Plus, the tale has a chilling connection to the overall Fatale storyline.
dumblydore's review
4.0
While I loved this volume also, there's a definite sense of finality at the corners of the narrative. Either that or it feels a bit tired, which to be fair is probably fitting given how poor Josephine has left such a trail of despair and destruction. I'm excited to see how it all ends.