A review by themtj
Trinity of Sin: The Phantom Stranger, Vol. 2: Breach of Faith by Gene Ha, Fernando Blanco, J.M. DeMatteis, Dan DiDio

2.0

Ambitious storytelling, but ultimately it sinks to a mid-level pulp. Giving the Phantom Stranger a family was an interesting way to roll the dice with the character and his stakes. However, it was an epic that was rushed and mishandled. An odyssey that includes trips to hell and heaven shouldn't wrap quite as quickly or easily as this one did. Lots of detours along the way that seem more like killing time than building suspense.

I'm not a fan of the character and I'm not familiar with the writer, but I picked this up because I had a great interaction with a couple of the artists who worked on this run (although they mentioned that they were not necessarily fans of the character or this run.)