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Dryad #3

Dryad #3

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Things just got personal, and the entire Glass family finds themselves the target of a mysterious attack on Frostbrook. But they’re not going down without a fight and it seems that Yale and Morgan have a few tricks up their sleeves, and not to mention, a few secrets that have come back to bite them.

25 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 8, 2020

5 people want to read

About the author

Kurtis J. Wiebe

181 books771 followers
Kurtis Wiebe is a Vancouver, Canada based author. The founder and CEO of Vast Vision Publishing, he comes from a two decades long career in comics and games. He is the co-creator of over ten original comic series and a content creator spanning podcasts, live streams and other digital media. His stories have garnered multiple industry awards including two coveted Shuster’s for best writer.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Liz (Quirky Cat).
4,993 reviews88 followers
June 21, 2020
DRYAD #3, out July 8th from Oni Press, continues to merge science fiction and fantasy into something new, all while telling us the story of one family, and how their past has finally caught up with them.

The Glass family has quite the secret – one that is exploding out into the forefront in Dryad #3. What started out as a casual fantasy series has rapidly turned into a genre-blending tale as more technology is introduced by the moment.

From the start we knew that Morgan and Yale were on the run from something – we just didn’t know what. Well, after reading this issue, fans will have a slightly better idea of the where, but not the why. Not yet, at any rate.

Read the rest of my review over at Monkeys Fighting Robots
Profile Image for Cassandra.
109 reviews
July 9, 2020
The biggest let down of this issue was the inconsistency in the art. I want to say that only about half of the panels were done to the level that drew me to the series initially. The rest weren’t bad, but they weren’t on par with the first two issues.

As for the plot...while all the content was needed for context, it just was a lot less dynamic and more forced than the first two issues. I’m still intrigued by the plot as a whole and hope that the next issue is more in line with the first two.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews