A review by the_graylien
The Invisibles, Vol. 3: Entropy in the U.K. by Paul Johnson, Mark Buckingham, Steve Yeowell, Grant Morrison, Dick Giordano, John Stokes, Mark Pennington, Phil Jimenez, Tommy Lee Edwards

5.0

Having read this ends the third volume (of seven) of the graphic novels and the first volume of the entire Invisbles series. (The series as a whole was split into three volumes.)

The series continues to astound me as I read through it and amazes me more each time I come back to it.

This third volume sees Morrison continue to blow our minds with discussion of magick, government conspiracies, world religions, differing concepts of God, and the development of the characters themselves.

This volume also imparts plenty of information on '60s and '70s pop culture, literature and music. It gives us plenty to chew on and plenty to go and seek more info on if we were to be interested enough to go into the background of The Invisibles as a series (and who wouldn't be?).

This volume also marks the first appearance of art work by Phil Jiminez, a wildly talented artist who brings, in my opinion, a certain unmatched flair to the series.

As the series goes on, more volumes can only mean more amazement, and this one was no exception.