#screenshotreviews- What's The Furthest Place From Here #2, Rorschach, and Asadora V4
Check out our capsule reviews of Tyler Boss and Matthew Rosenberg's What's The Furthest Place From Here #2, Naoki Urasawa's Asadora! Volume 4, and Tom King and Jorge Fornés Rorschach.

Tom King’s Rorschach > Tom King’s Strange Adventures.
— Scott Cederlund (@ScottCederlund) December 26, 2021
That’s the kind of quality comic criticism that you come around here for.
With the holiday's over, it's time to get back to doing the serious business of talking about serious comics. While Mike and Scott are hard at work to get you the hard-hitting criticism that you've come to enjoy from them, feel free to check out some of the #screenshotreviews (and one Twitter thread) that we've tweeted out recently.
This week, we return to the second issue of a new Image series, the latest Naoki Urasawa jam, and a DC cashgrab comic that's actually a pretty decent and harrowing read.
- What's The Furthest Place From Here #2 (Image Comics)
- Asadora! Volume 4 (Viz)
- Rorschach (DC Comics/Black Label)
What's the Furthest Place From Here #2 by Tyler Boss, Matthew Rosenberg and Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou, reviewed by Scott Cederlund


Asadora! Volume 4 by Naoki Urasawa, reviewed by Scott Cederlund


Rorschach by Tom King, Jorge Fornés, and Dave Steward, reviewed by Scott Cederlund
*click on the link to read the full thread.
Scott here. I read @TomKingTK and @jfornes74's Rorschach over the weekend. It's a really interesting read, about how "relative" truths can become absolute truths in our minds. 1/10 pic.twitter.com/ulUPByZiZ1
— From Cover To Cover (@FromCovToCov) December 19, 2021
There's no justice in this book but there is a definite malevolent spirit hoving over everything, corrupting the world through concepts and ideas. Rorschach is a frighteningly prescient book as we go into 2022. 10/10
— From Cover To Cover (@FromCovToCov) December 19, 2021
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