![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The adventure ends up involving clones but turns out to involve Silk’s boyfriend which, again, makes it personal to the character. That adds to the value of the travel and makes it feel pertinent to the story itself. The travel itself ends up being a character wrinkle as far as Silk pushing her family away even though she just found them. Thompson does a good job with this short two-part story by sending Silk to San Francisco to aid J. But don’t worry: you don’t need to read Clone Conspiracy to understand this chunk of the story here, luckily. The story does take a bit of a tangent as it takes a detour into the Clone Conspiracy storyline before wrapping up Silk’s story in general. also makes her a different kind of hero who is less vigilante and more by the book. Making Silk more of an agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. The use of her boyfriend Hector Cervantez aka Spectro is quite good and his inability to touch unless he’s fighting is a clever way to create tension. Cindy’s ability to make webs is on full display throughout, as well, even though it’s a bit icky since webs come out of her fingers. Thompson clearly has a lot of ideas and mixes things up so this book never feels like any other. Overall this is a fun action-adventure with fantasy elements thrown in. Listen to the latest episode of our weekly comics podcast! ![]()
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