Cuando Hazel forja una amistad importante, Alana deberá asumir un nuevo papel muy peligroso, mientras el equilibrio del poder de la galaxia empieza a cambiar. Romeo y Julieta se mezcla con Star Wars en esta space opera de ciencia ficción y fantasía sobre dos personas enamoradas de dos mundos enfrentados.
La serie SAGA lleva vendidos siete millones de ejemplares en todos los formatos, ha sido traducida a veinte idiomas y ha obtenido múltiples premios Eisner y Harvey, además de un premio Hugo, un premio British Fantasy, un premio Goodreads Choice, un premio Shuster, un premio Inkwell y un premio Ringo, entre otros.
Brian K. Vaughan is the writer and co-creator of comic-book series including SAGA, PAPER GIRLS, Y THE LAST MAN, RUNAWAYS, and most recently, BARRIER, a digital comic with artist Marcos Martin about immigration, available from their pay-what-you-want site www.PanelSyndicate.com
BKV's work has been recognized at the Eisner, Harvey, Hugo, Shuster, Eagle, and British Fantasy Awards. He sometimes writes for film and television in Los Angeles, where he lives with his family and their dogs Hamburger and Milkshake.
I still don't dig the vibe as much as I did before they killed off Marko, but I keep showing up. This volume sees the kids getting older, Brobot having mental health issues, and their mom having to decide how to get him the help he needs. Will and Gwen deal with the death of their (for all intents and purposes) child, and do a piss poor job of it. <--as I'm 100% sure I would do as well. The war between the wings and the horns rages on, even while some of the warmongers switch sides and leave their people in the lurch. Alana has to decide whether or not she's ready to potentially let a new man into her life, AND has to deal with her past, as we are introduced to her backstory with her father.
Plus, other spoilery things. I wish I could get more excited about this, but... Recommended for fans of Saga.
Saga Volume 12 marks the series' return after a significant break, and unfortunately, it feels somewhat underwhelming. While not outright bad, this installment struggles to recapture the magic of its predecessors, arguably becoming the weakest volume to date. The narrative feels overly busy, attempting to balance numerous plotlines that don't quite coalesce.
The slice-of-life moments, usually a strength, often feel aimless here. While Squall's storyline provides a poignant emotional core, the plot device of selling out Hazel and Alana feels tired and uninspired. The Will's narrative, while intriguing, feels abruptly cut short. This volume feels more like setup than a substantial chapter in the Saga epic.
Despite the consistently excellent art and the reliably witty dialogue, Volume 12 ultimately feels like a less impactful bridge between larger arcs. A 3 out of 5.
Solid, but very slow on the actual plot progression. Dropping back to one arc a year has really killed Saga's massive momentum for me, and while the art remains phenomenal, I'm finding it a lot harder to stay invested when I've forgotten half the characters every year.
saga baby i love you but please invest in a plot. i'm begging. issue 72 and we've finally had ONE (1) significant military update. surely we've done the exposition by now. normalize things happening.
Oh I missed this series. And it feels like so much time has passed and none at all, the characters have grown but still feel like the same ones I have come to love. This new era has a different feel, since Hazel is now more of a character than just a baby to be protected. I’m really excited to see how she comes into her own-it is *her* series after all!
I feel like this series is starting to lose some of its magic for me, and there are a few reasons why. The release schedule has become really slow, with long gaps - especially between Volumes 9 & 10 and now again between 11 & 12. Because of that, I end up forgetting some of the characters and plot threads. I might have waited to binge-read the whole thing once it was complete, but if I recall correctly, this is meant to be a pretty long series.
It used to be addictive, but now the plot drags, and the twists feel repetitive, just the same cycle of backstabbing, which makes it hard to trust or invest in any character. New storylines have been introduced, but they aren’t as compelling, and I really just want the main plot to pick up again. It was a great series, and I’m still hoping the next volume brings back some of that original spark.
We will never ever come across a series as engrossing as this one. One that becomes more human each time it strays from the realities we consider law. Squires arc brought me back to a troubled 15yo I used to when I faces a mirror. Alana might make a tonne of mistakes but one thing is certain: she's an incomparable mother. Watching her parent always fills me with joy and my eyes with happy tears.
Hazel is so grown now. At 14 she has adapted well to their unconventional lifestyle, gaining from those around her an unshakable integrity driven by empathy. I'm excited to see the woman she will become!
Will be sat and ready for the next volume. Brian,please don't die until it's finished 🫶
Literally every collected volume is five stars. The story, characters, and art are just perfection. Relatable and relevant. Anxiously awaiting volume 13!
In a long running series, there will be peaks and there will be valleys. But, for me, as long as the quality is still there, as long as the promise of another peak on the horizon is evident, I'm absolutely along for the ride.
I'm reading a lot of reviews of this volume where the main complaint is, it's weak, not much happens, it's boring, and I wonder how those same readers would feel if this was the standard Marvel plot: well, we don't have much planned here, so let's have a couple of heroes—preferably ones who've fought together to save the world/universe at least twenty times—meet up, misunderstand each other's motivations, and punch each other out until the real villain shows up at the end of the issue and the heroes both grab their heads and think, "why the heck was I fighting my long time hero friend?" and they happily prepare to scrap with the villain.
I mean, it'd still be weak, with little occuring aside from punches, and it'd be boring because it's stupid. But hey, there'd be action.
Vaughn and Staples are playing a long game here, so there's going to be periods where they do the work to prepare for the next impactful storyline. But, in the meantime, we're treated to some intriguing new characters, and most of the major players are currently dragging themselves from the Dark Time of the Soul.
And the writing for all of this is superb. And the art is...well, perfect is too small a word for it.
'Took me a while to learn this, but the most important moments in life aren't about finding lost amulets or toppling evil empires. It's the mundane shit that changes everything.'
Oh wow, not this volume dropping not one but two major bombs. For a series that spans so many characters, I'll say Vaughan and Staples balance it all out pretty well. SKISH, THOUGH IYKYK AKDJFL
As usual, all spoilery reactions/thoughts in spoiler tags:
The art remains immaculate. Although, Alana looks so different that I didn't even realize it's her on the volume's cover. I guess life and its continuous shittiness is slowly getting to her, huh. On a similar note, .
In all, a very Saga volume. Let's just hope the next volume drops 6 months later from now and not an entire year later...
You can tell the current pace of Saga is mega slow when I can barely remember what happened in any individual issue during this arc. There was a lot of teenage angst, if I recall?
The final issue was major setup for the next season, but that won’t hit for another six months at least. Quality stuff as always, but good lord is the wait for the good stuff punishing.
As BKV said in the letters at the end of the last issue, 2/3 of the way through! Only 36 issues to go.
The art and writing are as good quality as ever, but ...
It has become difficult to enjoy the series at the rate the collected volumes are now emerging. Too much time passes, the experience of too many side characters' arcs are muted, it's difficult to stay engaged with the story. I wonder what it's like now for people reading single issues as they're published?
I'd be better off just waiting for the series to conclude at this point, then reading through from the start.
I would totally collect the omnibus of the series' first half or the grouped issues when I can find a good deal on them, but it's not yet safe to keep this in my home with children, given the frequency of giant monster dongs and other genitalia on display.
I am not getting these series anymore, this series is turning into a teenage drama and stuff, it’s loosing the uniqueness, now its all about normal people’s emotions and daily life dramas, hopefully it will comeback to its original fun and stuff.
I didn't intend to end 2025 with Saga. My intention was to finish up Discovery. But life happened. The kind of life that makes it impossible to focus and pushes you towards something that feels familiar and safe and effortless (and full of illustrations). And so . . . Saga.
And that's what is happening in this volume. For better or worse, the characters are trying to get on with life after life altering circumstances occur. Some are doing a better job at this than others.
There are some big shifts in here that will (hopefully/probably/more than likely) lead to some interesting future volumes, and for the first time, I'm having to wait with the masses for what's to come (boo, that stinks).
Saga's return from its hiatus hasn't exactly been triumphant, but each of these volumes moves the story along in thoroughly unpredictable ways, which I appreciate, while maintaining that pleasantly weird Saga vibe.
In this volume, Hazel narration really seems to move to the forefront. She's older now, making friends, and learning the ropes in the space circus. Squire, on the other hand, is suffering from depression and, like most real-world teens, seems to have retreated into a virtual space. Alana is tentatively moving into a romance ().
On the other side of the universe, Petrichor tracks down the Will, who has descended into addiction (who hasn't in this series?). More interestingly, the TV robots switch sides in the war - potentially huge ramifications in future volumes for sure. For now, though, we're still mostly looking at Hazel's odd little family as they make their way through the universe. Good enough Saga is still pretty darn good.
I liked this better than Volume 11. Alana, Hazel, and Squire are hiding as roustabouts in a galactic circus, and Hazel has made a close friend, Emesis, who appears to be a spider. They enjoy each other's company, but are working through issues being of different species. Alana is getting close to a bartender, while one of the clowns recognizes Alana and is trying to collect on the bounty offered, reaching out to the Will. The Will is dealing with some personal trauma, and does not respond. Alana decides that Squire needs to go to a camp, and the bartender turns out to have quite the surprise in store for Alana and Hazel.
3.5 Stars. This one seems like it was kind of a middle/preparatory for something larger Volume. Still good, but not tons happening. Highlights: - Alana and Hazel are adjusting to life in the circus well, Hazel getting a new friend Emesis, a spider-like being, and Alana getting a new friend/possible love interest in Feld - Squire needs interaction from other robots and emotional help, so he leaves to go to a camp called Windy Tooth - We get more from The Will, Petrichor, Lying Cat, Ghus, and others, but none of their plotlines advance much - Finally, the Robots switch sides in the war, and Feld reveals he has been sent by Alana's father... he wants to see her one last time before he dies.
Overall, good, but I don't want to wait too long for the next one. Recommend.
Worth it for the -skish- panel alone, but I’m looking forward to the next volume and seeing things shake out a bit more. Fiona’s artwork is stellar as always and the new characters fit in well with everyone else (& I’m delighted to see old faces too).
That last issue's delay really drove me nuts, but I'm excited for the coming final third of this story I've been following for almost ten years now. Crazy how time passes.
Still a very good series, however this is already one volume past feeling like there's not going to be much of a payoff. Many characters are treading the same paths they've been treading, some shocking new territory is still the same territory we've gone through before. Still, I love these characters, and the art and writing still has me hooked. There was one really good payoff in this volume, but it felt sort of sudden and not so built up in this volume itself. And some of the setups from the past two volumes seem to have just piddle off, much like the twist setup in this one.
I’d hoped for better, and it does seem like Vaughan and Staples are setting up for the final major arc. The switching of sides for the robots really helped remind readers that this entire Saga is about how terrible, pointless, arbitrary, and needless war is. My favorite part was watching Alana struggle as a parent of two teens (and now maybe a third), and how teens will be teens, but also they’re deeply traumatized. I did sigh a little about Alana being betrayed again.