otterwally wrote:
,,,Well it deals with the aftermath of a previous issue but I think with just the context of the issue itself someone could figure out what had happened, so, potentially, a non-Spidey reader could avoid being lost for long. But what really makes it good is that it takes a common story in Spider-Man comics, Spidey doubts himself and his mission, and turns it on its head. The fact that Marcos Martin's art is so fantastic in it doesn't hurt at all either.
Thanks, I'll go check it out! Meanwhile, I couldn't go comics shopping last week, so I caught up this week.
Alpha Girl #1 starts a post-apocalyptic series in which all women and girls except for foster teen Judith Meyers have become speedy zombies. This issue is mostly backstory but hints pretty strongly at why Judith's immune and is pretty different from
Y in other ways too...
American Vampire #23, "Death Race" #2 keeps mixing together 1950s suburban teen culture (specifically, in Glendale, California) with vampire hunting pretty well. I hope Travis sticks around for longer than this story arc, he's already got plenty of good characterization.
Rachel Rising #5 has a recap of sorts, so if you haven't read the previous issues it'll still make sense.

Rachel wakes up from a 36-hour nap and telling her best friend Jet what happened, from the top - with some details she remembers and Terry Moore didn't show us the first time.

Then, the action switches to Zoe and another escape...
The Sixth Gun #18, "A Town Called Penance" #1 switches back to Drake and Becky for this arc. The scenes switch from one to the other, and both get approached by potential new allies with different motives.