A review by jekutree
Hawkeye: Omnibus by Jesse Hamm, Steve Lieber, Annie Wu, David Aja, Javier Pulido, Alan Davis, Francesco Francavilla, Matt Fraction

5.0

Matt Fraction and David Aja work together seamlessly to create this utterly unique Marvel Comics experience. It feels like an indie book, but it isn’t. It follows Clint Barton and Kate Bishop as Clint defends his apartment building from Russian Gangsters and Kate becomes a private eye. This almost slice of life superheroics gives the book a unique tone that wasn’t in mainstream comics at the time. It really paved the way for books like King’s Mister Miracle. The book also features two well executed experimental issues. One told entirely through ASL and the other being told entirely through a dog’s perspective.The art in this book by David Aja is some of the most impressive art I’ve seen in a comic(Might be my personal favorite). Aja’s storytelling, paneling and line work is top notch. The coloring from Matt Hollingsworth on Aja’s pencils is also very impressive. Each issue has a rigid color scheme that compliments the tone of the book perfectly. If any book is a modern classic, it’s Hawkeye.