From Bitch Planet to Lumberjanes to Monstress, the idea in many girl/woman-centric comics in the present time would seem to be depicting a world with as few men as possible. And if you watched any of the recent Kavanaugh SCOTUS hearings, it may have crossed your mind to envision this kind of future, too: How can we get rid of all these vicious, aging mean-spirited representatives of the patriarchy that is destroying women and the planet? The tones differ; Bitch Planet (for adult women) is snarky and funny and profane; Lumberjanes (for young readers) is funny and sweet, and Monstress is intense and violent and lovely, ranging from cute fox girls and talking kitties to steely murderous women who all look like models (and when DO they take the time to do their hair to look like that?!). All three are All Girl Power, All the Time; Bitch Planet is connected to current political landscape; Lumberjanes is, well, set in a summer camp, and Monstress is a complex fantasy set in a medieval landscape. Men are basically peripheral in all of them.
The third volume of Monstress comes on the heels of the recent 2018 Eisner Awards, where it won for best continuing series, best publication for teens, best painter/multimedia artist (Sana Takeda, who also does wildly populat Ms. Marvel with Willow Wilson), best cover artist and best writer. The main impressions I have is that 1) first and foremost it is gorgeously illustrated, atmospheric, from cute and cartoony to sleek to horrific and majestic; 2) it is, given all the pretty pictures, surprisingly profane (though this doesn’t bother me in the least, just noting); 3) it is violent and 4) I have no idea how all the various factions and dimensions work, maybe in part because I am just not much of a High Fantasy reader. There are periodic “lecture experts” from Professor Tam Tam, a history, who is supposed to help us make sense of it all, but I need more help, really
So in volume 3 we finally get a Big War so we get to see how Takeda handles action (thought we already know she knows how to do bloody violence). And as with many such stories, after all the death and the world is saved, we understand that family and friendship are what makes the world go ‘round. The rest of it? Well, I am still reading! For my own taste and tolerance of multiple swirling levels of fantasy, I would say 3.5, which I round up because of the Beauty which gets ten stars, and because some very real action happens and some stuff gets resolved and because of the main girl character and Girl Power, yay.