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A review by scheepvaart
Civil War: Fantastic Four by J. Michael Straczynski
4.0
J. Michael Straczynski may be the only writer who got Civil War right. The focus on the FF follows Reed Richard's decision to side with Iron Man and create a prison in the Negative Zone. Sue Storm can't believe what he's done, and Johnny Storm, after he recovers from a beating he took in the main Civil War book, sides with her. The Thing, though, doesn't like either side, and flees. To France. His trip adds some needed levity to the book.
This book has several links to [book: Civil War: Spider-Man], which Straczynski also wrote--the nerd in me loves this tightly knit continuity. I still think Reed veered a little too far to far into analytical mode in building the Negative Zone prison, and he doesn't seem any more human in this book. And just like the Spider-Man book, there's a twist ending that should drive the next year of the book.
The book ends with an issue dedicated to the 45th anniversary of the team, which seems like an odd one to commemorate (Just wait five years. The team'll still be around in some form.)
This book has several links to [book: Civil War: Spider-Man], which Straczynski also wrote--the nerd in me loves this tightly knit continuity. I still think Reed veered a little too far to far into analytical mode in building the Negative Zone prison, and he doesn't seem any more human in this book. And just like the Spider-Man book, there's a twist ending that should drive the next year of the book.
The book ends with an issue dedicated to the 45th anniversary of the team, which seems like an odd one to commemorate (Just wait five years. The team'll still be around in some form.)