![the fall guy novel the fall guy novel](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/5183AbhgTpL._AC_UL160_SR103,160_.jpg)
Her sequential storytelling skills are really amazing. Her style is somewhere between a really smooth, direct, interpretation of the toys and the original Transformers cartoon. It’s so nice to have 1)a great artist on the book and 2)consistency!!!! She’s been part of the creative team for a while now and she’s a really great, solid, artist. We get artist Anna Malkova for the WHOLE ride this issue. Add to that, this is the beginning of a new story, so there’s a lot of action and other things going on. Ruckley does a fantastic job of doing a soft introduction to each character and where their loyalties lie. Not only that, but they know that Bumblebee is doing some undercover work for Orion Pax (the big guy who will go on to become Optimus Prime one day) so they dispatch a couple of their gang to “take care” of BB. As readers of James Lasdun s acclaimed fiction can expect, The Fall Guy is a complex moral tale as well as a gripping suspense story, probing questions of. Well shit, since the cover lets you know what’s going on in the issue, I guess I’ll break my no-spoiler policy a little and tell you that the main point of this issue is to get across that a small faction of Autobots are breaking away because they’re unhappy with the way things are going. Achebe gives a message through his novel that a man must change with time, and if that man does not act wisely and instead acts like a die-hard man like Okonkwo, he is hoisting with. The conflicts are manifested in Okonkwo’s inability to reconcile with the Change. Author Brian Ruckley gives us a great recap page every month in this title, but this issue is the first chapter in what I’m sure will be a game-changing story for this title. Achebe weaves conflicts in his novel between man v/s man, and man v/s. This issue of Transformers is finally one that people who’ve never read Transformers can grab and get in on the ground floor.