A review by rebus
Miracleman Book 3: Olympus, by Michael Kelleher, Steve Oliff, Alan Moore, John Totleben, Mike Alfred, Peter Milligan, Joe Caramagna

4.25

Moore shoots for an epic metaphysical ending and falls a little short in the conclusion. He's reaching a bit too hard for the Boomer vision of Utopia and like that narcissistic generation sees no other ideal. The main problem is that the Utopia is ushered in in a fascist manner and expected to be seen as the most benevolent of gifts (with the tired Boomer trope that cultural miscegenation can be Thanatic and Destructive or Erotic and Creative, while movements from that generation became sterile and reflexive). He does admit that the houses of gods are built on human bones, which recognizes the bonobo theory above is a little flawed, but it's simply not as engaging as previous volumes. 

Kurzweil's Boomer immortality trip is also touched upon, and entertainment is ludicrously included as a fundamental human right in this Utopia, but it simply doesn't resonate with Moore's supposed anarchist leanings and it's why the story falls a bit flat in the end.