![]() ![]() ![]() With the second book released this week, Super Sons: The Foxglove Mission, the question is whether or not this creative team can keep up the momentum of both absorbing storytelling for all ages and believability of its characters. Also in book one is the introduction of new characters, Candace (a girl with a mysterious past) and Tilly, promising the potential of a new young super team. The book showed how these two young heroes could step out of the shadow of their fathers to stand on their own in the face of not only a global climate threat and conspiracy, but to issues within their own circle of family and friends. When I had the opportunity to review the debut book in the DC Zoom graphic novel trilogy by Ridley Pearson ( Kingdom Keepers) and Ile Gonzalez, Super Sons: The PolarShield Project, I was impressed by how well they were able to establish a multifaceted look at the personalities of its two young protagonists.Īs Super Sons was the first project at DC for both Pearson and Gonzalez, there is always a pressure to start off strong, and Super Sons: The PolarShield Project came though as a bestselling, spirited new take on the sons of Superman, Jon Kent, and Batman, Damian “Ian” Wayne. ![]() Jon Kent, Damian “Ian” Wayne, and their friends continue to take on global-scale disaster while learning to rely on each other in the second book in Ridley Pearson’s DC graphic novel debut series. ![]()
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