And she’s trouble in a way that Babs never is. She’s a mystery, even to her band mates in Black Canary. While Babs has friendships aplenty to keep her connected to the world and a lightness of being in her crime-fighting, Dinah stays aloof and carries the world’s weight on her shoulders. Her solo volume does much to reverse that, giving Dinah the chance to build sympathy while maintaining her tough, feminist, loner leanings. She came off as haughty in her irritation with Babs, and without prior sympathies built up, Dinah never won me over, instead remaining an annoyance through her appearance in that volume. In that first introduction to Dinah, I didn’t think much of her. 1: The Batgirl of Burnside, I can’t help but make comparisons. Since I was first introduced to this new iteration of Black Ca 1: Kicking and ScreamingĪrt by Annie Wu, Pia Guerra, Sandy Garrell
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |