![]() It takes until the penultimate chapter for everything to fall into place for Dresden, and once he has the understanding it’s still far from easy to do what has to be done and still come out with his skin intact. ![]() As the sample page shows, it’s not pretty, as the cartoon aspects of Conley’s style are exaggerated to distortion.īutcher’s novel introduced a fair amount of characters that he and Mark Powers transferred to the first volume of this adaptation, and the relationships between them are clarified here, in what’s a satisfyingly twisting conclusion. ![]() Conley added much of his polish at the inking stage, and without that the art is very ordinary, lacking detail, with strange figures and expressions. A friend has died, it remains to be seen whether he’s fatally compromised his relationship with one of the few police detectives who trusts him, he’s further rubbed up Chicago’s crime boss the wrong way, and there’s some werewolves baying for more blood.Ĭhase Conley’s art was a welcome improvement for the series on the first part of Full Moon, but handing over the inking to Nick Nix is a major mistake. ![]() At this halfway point adapting Jim Butcher’s Full Moon novel, things aren’t going well for Harry Dresden. ![]()
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