A team of elite special agents run counter-terrorism operations utilizing a secret form of time travel technology called "transference" which enables them to send their consciousnesses back in time - but, when their pasts are altered to reshape their lives in the present, they discover this technology isn't as exclusive as they thought. Now the team must prevent a large-scale insurgency in the U.S. - and do so in the transference-past, where a terrorist's consciousness could be in any body, so everybody is a potential suspect. The complete sci-fi saga coming to print for the first time, by writer Michael Moreci (Roche Limit, Black Star Renegades, Wasted Space), artists Ron Salas (Spider-Man), Toni Fejzula (Veil), and Chris Peterson (Mayday), colorists Tamra Bonvillain (Doom Patrol) and Marissa Louise (Hex Wives), and Eisner-nominated letterer Jim Campbell. "Michael Moreci has done it again! He has created another page-turning, mind-blowing, genre-bending book! Transference has everything you are looking intriguing characters, a smart and inventive story (that will leave you begging for more), lots of surprises, and, quite frankly, it's just a whole lot of fun." -Craig Tittley (Agents of SHIELD)
Michael Moreci is a bestselling comics author and novelist. His original works include the space adventure novels Black Star Renegades and We Are Mayhem, as well as the comic series Wasted Space, The Plot, Hexagon, Curse, Archangel 8, and more. The Plot appeared on numerous best of 2019 lists, and Wasted Space has been hailed as one of the best comics of the past decade. Moreci's comic trilogy Roche Limit was called one of the best sci-fi comics of all-time by Paste Magazine, and Black Star Renegades was an Audie Award finalist for best sci-fi of 2018.
Moreci has also written for Star Wars, Battlestar Galactica, and the DC universe--including the YA graphic novel The Lost Carnival: A Dick Grayson Story. He's also adapted Eoin Colfer's bestselling Artemis Fowl series into graphic novels.
I usually have some minor trouble following story plots involving time travel, as they usually involve some paradoxes and mind-twisting events. The good news is this "Transference" is somehow easy on the brain and interesting to tag along. The bad news is the art is lacking/subpar in some scenes and specially in the 2 final chapters. Ron Salas drew chapters 1 to 3, and those were undoubtedly the best. It's a pity, as the story would be way more enjoyable with him drawing the complete series. Anyway, this graphic novel is interesting enough for time-travel/sci-fi fans.