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[[Category:Graphic Novels|*]]
[[Category:New Reviews|Graphic Novels]] __NOTOC__<!-- Remove -->
{{newreview
|author=Duncan Watson and Brian Bicknell
|title=Ratchwood Dilemma
|rating=3.5
|genre=Graphic Novels
|summary=Well, this is a singular book and make no mistake. The first part of the trilogy led us in quite bewildered steps from a hive mind crash-landing at Roswell and infecting a scientist, through a religious espouser being shot live on TV and the death of Judas, right up to some kind of godhead having to better the existence of what, you know, the more commonly perceived God, had left us with. I think. Here we start with an A&E case where one of a pair of twins is left in near-vegetative state, but one advisor suggests that before the crash or whatever that caused the problem in the first place there might have only been one person. We see a man with the ability to snatch people out of space/time – in a world where that can happen who knows how stable anyone or anything or anywhen might be? And what might any slight imbalance in the universes mean?
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1524666513</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Burne Hogarth and Rob Thompson
|summary=Meet Evie. She's surprisingly unwelcome and alienated at school – for a trendy and attractive girl, nobody at all seems to have any time for her, apart from the geeky card-collecting boy with the milk-bottle glasses on the bus. Perhaps it has something to do with her father's thatched house – after all, she must be a witch to live there. It's not that she would wish to live there, with nobody else around, and the memory of her deceased mother. But luckily someone is choosing a place for her –her father is able to put all his work into a cyber-world for her, the E-Scape, which is close to the perfect world. All that remains is to programme the humans to be her friends, and make the connection Evie has with them and them with her in return to be of mutual, confirming, happy benefit. But someone else has entered the E-Scape, and their influence seems all that much more powerful than Evie's tentative happiness…
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1473619130</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Michael B Jackson, Martin Brennan and Simon Bisley
|title=13 Coins
|rating=3.5
|genre=Graphic Novels
|summary=''For the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil.'' There, I've done it – quoted the Bible in a review. It's certainly pertinent in the world of this graphic novel, where the fallen angels have one get-out clause they have been seeking since those very lapsarian events. They turned a little section of chain holding their leader eternally captive into the titular coins, which can influence the human holders into sheer evil, but might just cause an open war on Heaven, whether they or the best of the holy on earth use them all. The best of the holy then, offspring of the good angels, are culled as a routine, but not one – John Pozner, who of course has no idea of his place in the celestial circle of life…
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>178276061X</amazonuk>
}}

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