Join today and start reading your favorite books for Free!
Rate this book!
Write a review?
This volume read too quickly. I'm still enjoying the series, but I kind of wish there was a little more dialogue. There seemed to be too much action in this volume.
Read the last two issues back to back cause after the ending of the penultimate issue of this volume I has to. Interesting to reveal a couple of the main characters backstories without it taking up a huge chunk of this volume
Each one of the characters can easily carry the story and I love how strong they are on their own.
I'm still not loving the shift to Ireland. It feels like two totally different books squished together.
I like this! Best volume so far.
Almost at the end now and shit is going down. Gigantic woman running around the streets like Godzilla? Check. Rori going to war on behalf of her father? Check. Everyone getting killed and sent to die? Check. Betrayals around every turn? Yep Yep Yep. This is the climax people. While Rori tries her best to help her father and his tribe of demons, we have all our other heroes stuck in Japan dealing with a giant girl roaming the streets destroying everything! Overall, a solid volume again if not gre...
I don't even know ...it's like the Irish/Japanese version of American Gods only there's been no real thought put into it at all. Also it's been a few months since I've read the last volume and I've forgotten what literally almost all of these characters do, and I feel like the storyline is trying to do so many things at once and BE so many different places at once and that it's definitely not conducive to helping me remember. If this is almost over [and honestly it feels like it SHOULD be] then
Great story
I really like the Wayward series and even though they introduced Celtic mythology recently too I just did not get as much enjoyment out of this book. Maybe I am still bummed about Ayane and seeing a moment of grieving brought that back to me (after all they already have a crazy kitsune girl why did they need a crazy Nekomusume too even though she was there from the beginning basically.) Not to say the artwork is not amazing as usual but something was just off this time for me.Now what I want to
Wow! Best volume so far!What’s it about?Holy s***, that would take a long time to explain... I’m gonna skip that bit!Why it gets 5 stars:The story is still really interesting and lots is happening!The art is still amazing! So many beautiful panels in this volume!The characters are still very interesting. I was worried about that because one of my favorite characters was killed off in the previous volume but no, the rest of them are still super interesting.There’s some fantastic action throughout...
Very nice story, great characters, beautiful art, but this volume has a little bit too much action and too little dialogue. Read in 30mins.
Hmm... as much as I love Wayward, things are getting a bit messy. With characters all split up and the addition of Irish magical folk, the narrative is a chaotic mess and it's hard to follow what is going on or where things are headed. But by the end, everyone joins up again in Japan and... do I see cats? Well, that makes me look forward to volume 6! Plus I do want to see the fallout of the strange Ireland aside.
NEVER BUY A WHOLE SERIES JUST BECAUSE YOU THOUGHT THE FIRST BOOK SHOW POTENTIAL, or THE PROBLEM OF ONLINE SHOPPING ON A WHIM.The art is still nice
This volume (up to issue 24, I believe) presents the answers to some of the questions that have been building as well as offering a hopeful hint to the future.
The parallel action finally begins its inevitable and fated twist toward resolution! Rori's tragic encounter with a legion of magical Irish bastards has left her angry and scarred. Emi and Shirai, after an evening on the run, must reconcile what it means to be lost and without a home in a world run by itinerant spirits. Inaba and Segawa must team up and rescue Nikaido from the clutches of the military. It's all coming together! Sort of. The fifth volume of WAYWARD has plenty of fantastic portal
A lot of plot threads to follow in this volume of Wayward but it wraps up a first first season arc of the story . I like this series a lot but have to admit it has been awhile since I read the last volume. The release schedule for this series is very slow. But the artwork is really top notch. This book continues to be a visual treat and I am looking forward to the looming war that Zub has been building towards since volume 1. This book suffers a bit when it comes to pacing and the dialogue loose...
It has been a long time since I read the first 4 volumes in this series, and unfortunately my memory of the previous works is hazy. The story read fast and the art impressed, but something seemed missing. Also, the story didn’t do enough for me to catch up or remind me of the previous stories.What worked really well was the alternating narrative between Ireland and Tokyo. It highlighted the wonderful color work of the volume and kept the story racing.The art, coloring, and layouts are fantastic....
Split up and messy storyline. The whole Irish story more or less abruptly ends and Rori goes back to Japan.
A fine inclusion in the Wayward series. The characters, previously scattered, slowly reunite. They fight some crazy villains, including a giant doll and the entire Irish magical community. Although, I really wanted to learn more about Ireland's old powers before the battle. Maybe have a pow-wow, a little let's-talk-things-out time? Alas, this volume moves fast, sometimes too fast.The new powers vs old powers thing is finally explained in a coherent way - a few volumes too late for that, I think....
This story has turned into a real mess. Too many characters doing too many things, and the writing isn’t good enough to keep them together. I found myself not caring about any of them, and being generally confused at many points. The pacing was totally off, the action flat because it had been too long since the last part with those characters so the tension was broken. Nothing is handled with any depth or care.There were also several cringe-inducing moments: Irish characters who were walking ste...