Title | : | Ms. Marvel, Vol. 5: Super Famous |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0785196110 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780785196112 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 144 |
Publication | : | First published July 12, 2016 |
Awards | : | Goodreads Choice Award Graphic Novels & Comics (2016) |
She's your new favorite. She's everyone's new favorite. And now she's joining the big leagues. But is she really cut out to be one of Earth's Mightiest Heroes? Saving the world is important, but Jersey City still needs its protector--especially now that a development company has picked it for a "renovation" project. When they co-opt Ms. Marvel's face to advertise, the fight against gentrification gets personal--but they've got more in mind that just real estate! Can Kamala take down the evil suits destroying her home without ruining her grades and personal life? Speaking of which, who's the new girl hanging around Bruno? And when Kamala creates an army of automatons to help her fight crime, will she learn that too much Ms. Marvel is actually a bad thing? Get back on board, Kamala Korps--the ride is about to get wild!
COLLECTING: MS. MARVEL #1-6
Ms. Marvel, Vol. 5: Super Famous Reviews
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8 months after the last volume…
The end of the world came and went with Secret Wars leaving Earth more-or-less the same as it was before. Also intact is G. Willow Wilson’s Ms Marvel series which thankfully remains awesome!
Except some things have changed. Love is in the air as Kamala’s best friend Bruno has moved on after she turned him down and begun dating a girl called Mike, much to Kamala’s dismay, while her brother Aamir decides to get married. Oh yeah, and Kamala’s gone from writing Avengers fanfic in the first book to now being an Avenger herself! But can she handle the added responsibility?
The relaunched Ms Marvel effortlessly picks up after the last book, despite the intrusive Secret Wars interlude, showing its resilience in being event-proof - yay! Super Famous is divided into two story arcs, the first of which has a real estate company, Hope Yards Development & Relocation Association (take the first letter of each word to see who it really is), gentrify large areas of Jersey City, jacking up most residents’ rents to unaffordable levels all while unofficially using Ms Marvel as their mascot.
Takeshi Miyazawa, who drew Volume 3, returns to draw most of this arc and his art is once again beautiful. I also liked that original series artist Adrian Alphona returned briefly to draw Bruno and Mike’s meet-cute flashback and that Loki’s adorable lightning golems are still hanging around Kamala’s school too. The main story itself though… ehh, Wilson’s done better.
The second arc sees Kamala overwhelmed with her responsibilities at school, home, and as a superhero, so she uses a 3D printer and Bruno’s knowledge (he’s suddenly a super-genius!) to make clones of herself to handle things… because there’s no way that scheme could go belly-up, right?! It’s a fun storyline that feels like early Spider-Man when Peter was juggling school, a part-time job and being Spidey all at once. It also has a Civil War II tease with the tension between Iron Man and Captain Marvel, and Aamir’s wedding is really sweet. Nico Leon’s art is great and reminded me a bit of Alphona’s style too.
Super Famous sees Kamala emerge unscathed from the madness of Battleworld, retaining the charm, inventiveness and top quality writing and art that’s made Ms Marvel one of Marvel’s best titles these past couple years. Fans won’t be disappointed with this embiggening addition to the series! -
I read this a long time ago and reviewed it but it wasn't showing! GR is getting on my nerves! And it shows I have read everything 2 times!! I give up
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Kamala Khan is busy. She has the normal teenager stuff like school, homework, and family obligations to deal with,
but then she's also the superhero Ms. Marvel. Did I mention she's an Avenger now too?
Ms. Marvel is facing off against an evil entity that is using her likeness to turn people against her while they take over Jersey City.
So Kamala and Bruno come up with a great plan to make clones of Kamala. I mean what could go wrong?
I like Ms. Marvel. I want to say that before anyone gets the wrong idea. My issue is I'm 1.) a guy, 2.) Over 30, and 3.) Not a Muslim. I say that because much of what makes Kamala special is lost on me because I don't relate. She's a fun character and her powers are interesting. She's massively powerful and even though she mostly just grows and shrinks, she can actually do far more. In Super Famous Kamala is just plain run down dog tired. School and family all day with superheroing all night will burn anyone out. Kamala is hanging in there, but it's not going that well. To top it all off Bruno has moved on and started dating just as Kamala was accepting his feelings for her. Sometimes it's no fun being a hero, but Kamala wouldn't trade it for anything. -
Another fantastic volume. There are two separate stories here, but they both revolve around Kamala struggling to balance friendships, family, schoolwork, and superheroing, particularly now that Ms. Marvel is now famous and an Avenger. It is not going well. This book probably does the best job I've seen so far of rushing past the artificially imposed "eight months later..." thing all post-Secret Wars books have to deal with: she's just been really busy and everything's a blur, ok? At any rate, the first story is fine, but not particularly memorable. The second story, on the other hand, is basically everything that's great about this book. Kamala is adorable, the action is fun, the guest stars are used perfectly (and sparingly), there's great dialog, and a few tiny, cute romance subplots: Kamala's brother is getting married, and it's adorable, and Bruno now has a super cute girlfriend and they're super cute together. If you've been happily reading Ms. Marvel all along (and if not, you should) then this volume will be anything but a disappointment.
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I enjoy this series and this wasn't my favorite book in the series. I did think it was funny, especially the last few chapters. I didn't like the beginning when she was fighting some weird corporation. I don't know, that left me cold. The end when she was creating golems to help her live her life and then they took over, that was hilarious and I loved that part of the story.
This is great story telling overall and Kamala is a wonderful character. Her brother is getting married in this one. The humor and levity in these books is wonderful. It is a graphic novel worth reading by Marvel. Yeah! -
How does this series continue to be SO GOOD. It is the only superhero comic I read that doesn't allow the larger events of the Marvel (or whatever) universe to completely mess with the narrative it's trying to tell. Kamala is always Kamala. I never feel discombobulated when I'm reading about her, even if I've missed issues where she's popped in to other superheroes stories, or there's been some sort of crossover event, like Secret Wars/Battleworld. No idea how that mess all got solved, by the way. Things seem to be back to normal in Jersey City. Well, relatively. Loki's lightning golems are still hanging around, because they seem to like New Jersey I guess.
It's been eight months, as you can see, and Kamala is an Avenger now. She has Iron Man's personal cell phone number, and he helps her with her math homework. Spider-Man is her pal. Captain America (the Sam Wilson variety) intimidates the hell out of her. (Thor is Jane Foster.) Vision is like, 'sup. AVENGERS ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
But Kamala is starting to fray at the edges. Her commitments to her family, to being a "super famous" superhero (as opposed to the newcomer nobody she was before), to her schoolwork and to her friends . . . she doesn't have time for it all, and all of it is suffering.
Not only that, but she's finding there are other perils to being famous. She's finding that her image is not quite her own. Now that it's out in the world, anyone can do or say anything about her, and there's largely nothing she can do about it. Also, her best friend Bruno, who we last saw confessing his love for her on a roof top, is now dating a girl called Mike, and Kamala is the very last one to find out about it.
This trade is broken into two stories. The first involves someone using Ms. Marvel's image to sell a gentrification project that is ruining Kamala's neighborhood and turning her neighbors against Ms. Marvel (of course there is also something villainish going on as well). The second involves Kamala trying to take the easy way out of her time management issues, and Bruno going all scientist, and well . . . things go badly.
G. Willow Wilson is just the master of this story. The characters THE CHARACTERS. I love love love Kamala, but all her friends and family are great, too. She introduces two characters in this one--Mike, Bruno's girlfriend, and Tyesha, Aamir's fiancé--who you end up really liking (I especially love Tyesha).
The way she navigates the relationship between Kamala, Bruno and Mike is really nice as well. Kamala is more upset that Bruno didn't tell her about Mike than anything else, and she and Mike end up becoming friends. No stupid fake girl drama here. And I just cracked up endlessly at everything involving Aamir and Tyesha's courtship/engagement. Especially their families interacting, and Tyesha being a huge nerd.
Long story short, Ms. Marvel is the best, and if G. Willow Wilson ever stops writing her, I will cry. -
The best volume so far. Ms. Marvel has to juggle family, school, superheroing and now being an Avenger. Full of evil hipsters, Canadian ninjas, and Mr. Meeseeks type clones. Plus she has to deal with the fact that Bruno has moved on.
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I can't say that Ms. Marvel is handling fame too well. But then, I suppose there wouldn't be too much of a story if she COULD. :)
Others will take advantage of her, of course, but no one can get her to say NO. Sigh. Overworked and ambitious kid. :) -
Thing is I like Ms. Marvel. She's pretty badass, she got some good jokes, her family mayham is fun, but I just don't love her solo books? This isn't to say G. Willow Wilson is a bad writer or anything, I actually think she's very solid, I just don't seem to connect to a lot of the plot or feel compelled by any of the fights/villains.
Saying that this volume is Ms. marvel working out her duel life. She's dealing with being an avenger but also trying her best to live a normal kid life. She becomes jealous of her best friend dating another girl, and then decides to take on the world by having copies of herself to take her place when she can't be everywhere at the same time. Sounds like a bad idea huh?
Good: Love the art still, think it's super fun and bright and everything is cheerful which I enjoy. I also love Kamala because she's a great coming of age hero who deals with a lot for being so young and coming from a VERY different background. I also enjoyed the stuff with her family and friends in here.
Bad: I just didn't care about the 2nd half. Whenever series gets to much on the action it loses me. The fights are never very interesting, the villains lame, and I just don't connect with any of that. I also thought some characters like Iron-man act a bit out of character here.
Overall it remains this series is very fun. For a younger audience this is perfect comic to get in to. I still like Kamala a lot, but not the stories as much. So for that I'll give it a 3 out of 5. -
4.5 stars.
Okay, first of all? I had no idea there was going to be a fifth volume of Ms. Marvel. I thought volume 4 was the end of the line, and all signs pointed to that with the way volume 4 ended. So colour me excited when volume 5 arrived at work the other day. Obviously, I processed it and covered it immediately so that I could STEAL IT ALL FOR MEEEEEEEEE.
Ahem.
This volume is basically "Kamala Khan Struggles To Find Work/Life Balance". She's torn between being the good Muslim daughter, the straight A student, a superhero AND an Avenger. Obviously, she ends up falling short on all of them due to a lack of hours in the day.
Further thoughts:
- I LOVE MIKE. When she first showed up, I was all "nooooooooooooooo, whyyyyyy". But the more we saw of her, the more adorable and delightful she became.
- Tony Stark cameos FTW.
- I loved the evil gentrification plot.
- DINOSAURS!
- I loved Kamala realising that not all her actions will be seen as heroic.
- The whole subplot with her brother getting married and the family dealing with their own racism was fabulous.
- The inclusion of Sam Wilson/Captain America seemed slightly pointless and he had literally the exact same facial expression in every panel he was in.
- The art was generally delightful, though I wasn't a big fan of the fact that it jumped between three different artists in the course of one volume.
So on the whole, it was pretty damned great. -
As we learned from the last volume of Marvel’s best new creation in years Ms. Marvel, the world was coming to an end due to the events of Secret Wars and for Kamala Khan, all she ever needed was not the super-heroics, but the friends and family around her. However, superhero comics are never-ending second acts as the world did not end but things have changed, such as Kamala becoming a member of Earth’s Mightiest Heroes.
Eight months have passed since the Incursion and Kamala is once again juggling her already chaotic life from not only her family, but also as Jersey City’s protector as well as her new position as an Avenger. As if it couldn’t get for more complicated for Kamala, her best friend Bruno is seeing a girl named Mike.
Continuing on with G. Willow Wilson’s initial run, Ms. Marvel still very much evokes the soap opera antics which were originally conceived within Stan Lee and Steve Ditko’s The Amazing Spider-Man, whilst retaining the charm of the previous volumes. With the eight-month time jump and despite the subtle changes, the characters are still as wittily written, even if they are a little older and moved on.
Split into two story arcs, this volume is centrally about Kamala wrestling with her superhero persona becoming a more prolific figure, not least from a company known as Hope Yards Development and Relocation Association has co-opt Ms. Marvel’s face to advertise its “renovation” project on Jersey City. Although the main plot is based on a typically convoluted supervillain plan, the joy of Wilson’s writing is both the wit and drama towards Kamala’s struggles, such as her coming in terms with Bruno’s new romance, as well as Ms. Marvel being seen as a public menace. As the primary artist of Volume 3, Takeshi Miyazawa returns to draw this arc and his beautiful manga-ish artwork are a delight, not least from Kamala being the Incredible Shrinking Girl.
During the second arc, things get goofier. Inspired by Bruno’s experiments of Loki’s lighting golems with the 3-D printer, Kamala takes advantage and creates two replicas of herself (one for schoolwork and the other for supporting her brother’s wedding) whilst the real Kamala can continue her status as an Avenger. However to quote Bruno himself, “this is a spectacularly bad idea.” The idea of an army of clones running amok has been used so many times that even The Simpsons used it in one of its Halloween specials. No matter how outlandish things get with the final issue seems to throw everything at the kitchen sink – with artist Nico Leon evoking Adrian Alphona’s art – the resolution happens too quickly but the story ends on a touching intimate note as Kamala learns that a hero isn’t just about being super.
Although Kamala Khan has indeed become “Super Famous”, G. Willow Wilson never feels like she’s selling out this wonderful youthful creation as her adventures continue to shine. -
In volume 5:
*Kamala Khan is now an actual Avenger fighting some villain instead of a fan writing fan-fiction about the Avengers. Oh, and that villain? The Hope Yards Development and Relocation Association (HYDRA!) that on the surface seems to be a resented tool of gentrification that has also co-opted her image for bulletin boards. Has the new Ms. Marvel sold her community out? When she finds out who/what is behind all this, how can she and the Avengers defeat the villain?
*And, after having rejected Bruno, Kamala is now jealous of his new girlfriend Mike (for Michaela).
*And her brother Aamir is getting married.
One of the questions from the beginning is how can a normally busy girl who is Muslim and respectful of her parents handle being a superhero alongside of the already “heroic” challenges of growing up? And don’t forget homework! In this volume the answer is cloning herself with the help of a 3D printer. Okay, the clones have smiley faces. Hmm, but okay.
The writing remains strong, the energy high. It’s always an adjustment for me when they switch artists on me, but Takeshi Miyazawa returns from his work in volume 3 to draw Kamala as tiny Shrinking Girl instead of Elongated Girl. There’s lots of fun and funny ideas lurking in this one. -
Upon reading volume one, this series became one of my all time favourite things to read and this volume is no different. This series has everything you could possibly want and I adore it.
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The BEST book Marvel is publishing.
After the last book ended with Secret Wars I was annoyed cause a lot of stuff and character development had happened in the last series that I was worried would be removed again, luckily this book takes place right after that and with the same creative team YEAH!
World: Where does Marvel find these artists?! The art in this series is consistently one of the best series that Marvel has right now and the multiple artists, which I generally don't like, are all absolutely wonderfully suited to illustrate this book and bring Kamala to life. The main reason is that they can illustrate human emotion so wonderfully well, Kamala and the rest of the characters come alive through their hands. There is also a sense of fun in the art that is missing in a lot of superhero comic books at the moment (there are some, but the majority is still so very doom and gloom and wannabe bad-ass). The world building here is strong just like the previous books in the series. There are no huge info dumps and the world is introduced and developed in a very organic and nonchalant way. It's alive and breathing and slightly exaggerated making it the perfect background for Kamala.
Story: Two fun 3 issue arcs here that are both laugh out loud fun and full of character building. The tales are so well paced and written that it reads super fast but there is a lot of meat to the story. Each tale has a purpose and a structure to it that is both satisfying to the reader and also has an emotional impact. I don't want to go into details about the story because of spoilers but I do like that the first tale is about external forces and the second tale is all about internal forces, they are character stories and that is great (it's one of the things missing in the Nova series which I've compared it to this series, both have new versions of superheroes that are very young). It's really good, just read it.
Characters: This is the emotional core of the book and Kamala is the center of it. She's a complex and fully formed character that I absolutely adore. I love that she's still a work in progress and the forces both external and internal pushes her into making mistakes and acting like a human being. She means well and has good intentions but that's not all that matters in the world. What I also like is that in the landscape of doom and gloom and broody mopey superhero comics she is still positive. You sense her enthusiasm and her love and joy of being Ms. Marvel. The rest of the cast is also stellar, with Mike being a standout this book, she's a wonderful new addition and great drama creating device for the series. I also love that Marvel is subtly introducing different body types to the cast of characters, it's a minor visual thing but it means to much to readers. Bruno is Bruno and continues to be the plot solving device for the series, but with the introduction of Mike I think a new level of depth is given to the character, especially between their interactions and their interactions with Kamala. The rest of the cast is great also as was the villain for the first tale, but I won't get into it here as this will be a really long review if I do. Just read the book, the characters are wonderful.
I love this book, this is climbing up my list of favorite books and characters of all time (Fables and Mignolaverse still win). Read this if you want to get into comics and are not looking for doom and gloom, read this if you want a great character, read this if you like stories. JUST READ THIS!
Onward to the next book! -
"She's your new favorite. She's everyone's new favorite."
The Goodreads blurb gets it right. Why? Struggling between schoolwork, cultural mores, maintaining friendships AND that superhero-ing thing ("Hey, you can't make a phone call in the middle of a fight!" says a hired goon), Kamala Khan's dramedy of balancing her life may cut closer to home for readers than we realize. (Oh, and she needs to sleep, too.) "Easy-peasy"? Not really.
Then there's schoolmate/potential rival 'Mike' - what a great, interesting new supporting character.
A scene where Kamala's mentors level with her may be the most heartwarming thing I've read in months. -
So, Kamala is an Avenger, and knowing her, we all know she loves it. But it is not all it is cracked up to be, especially since she is only a teenager, and in between hero-ing, homework, and school projects, she barely has any time for friends and family. Wish is why she does not know all that is going on around her, including Bruno’s girlfriend and why there is a company using her image to buy-out Jersey City. Poor Kamala, she just wants to fight a giant amphibian and go to sleep.
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2017 Hugo nominee for Best Graphic Novel, and waaaaaugh you guys I love this series so so much. This one picks up several months after the doomy events of the previous volume, everyone dusting themselves off and moving on; what with existential crises, the school being rebuilt (still with Loki's guardian golems trolol), Kamala joining the Avengers, and even down to Bruno dating someone new -- much to Kamala's horror, as she has to force herself to adjust to this even newer normal. It's such a deeply familiar and painful morass of feelings, that awkward place of jealousy and territorialism over your best friend that you kinda-sorta have feelings for.
But Bruno's girlfriend Mike is a great new character: with a streak of body positivity despite her being heavier-set, and with her two moms, Ms. Marvel continues to be such a beacon of diversity. It was also great seeing Kamala and Mike finally interact, and team up, and basically showcase #GIRLPOWER and how a guy doesn't have to be the be-all end-all.
The main arcs in this one are Kamala overextending herself with all of her various responsiblities; her grappling with her alter ego's newfound fame; and the Big Bad is a shady company seeping gentrification into Jersey City (OH NO IT'S TURNING INTO PARK SLOPE) (an arc which actually reminded me of the demonic yuppies in a Hellblazer issue from way back in the 90s).
There's also a multicultural focus with Aamir and his new fiancée, and the readjustment that both their families have to make in learning to live together. His freakout about it is so adorable: "Tyesha and I come from totally different worlds! We're like aliens to her family! What if I mess it all up?! What if all the aunties at the masjid are awful to her 'cause she's black? What if they're awful to our kids because they'll be blackistani? Why do human beings suck as a species?!"
... Actually, I use the word 'adorable' to describe this series a lot. Because it is. Kamala has so much heart and love, and that's what makes her a joy to read. And all of the above is important too: even when she's punching gigantic mechanical frogs, and Jersey City is being terrorised by a massive T-rex, the small, intimate, personal stories don't lose focus -- in fact they even kinda have more of the spotlight -- and that is what I love about this series. Reading all of the effusive reader letters gushing about this series' representation and diversity and how young non-white readers finally have something to see themselves in, well, it's just friggin' fantastic.
Also note: the second storyline, with the Kamala-clones, literally had me laughing so hard out loud that my niece & nephew flocked over to me to find out what in the world was going on. The visual humour is just so so good. -
Kamala Khan has joined the big leagues with her heroes, the Avengers. Being famous is great and all, but it's a little more difficult than she thought, balancing saving the world and Jersey City and her family and friends. She'll have to take on the suits using her face to gentrify her city without ruining her personal life, and figure out exactly what's been going on with Bruno.
Super Famous is another excellent volume of Ms. Marvel starring Kamala Khan that I couldn't put down! It takes up several months after the end of the previous volume after the Secret Wars which are referred to in passing, and it does a good job of getting us back into the swing of things. I loved both halves of the story, but I preferred the second half where we get to see a little more of Bruno and just how smart he is. That section has quite the young Spider-Man vibe, and it works well for it. Plus, I really like Mike Miller!
Overall, Ms. Marvel is one of my favorite comic series. If you haven't been introduced Kamala Khan, you are sorely missing out. Volume 6, Civil War II can't come out soon enough! -
Bullet Review:
Whatever happened between the last volume and this - well, must not have been too big of a deal because this book requires no knowledge of "Secret Wars"! It hops back into Kamala's crazy life and adventures of being a teenaged Muslim superhero Avenger.
The first set of stories were a bit silly - it didn't help the inclusion of the "romantic foil" (though kudos for the resolution!). Hell, the second set was equally cheesy - but dayum if it didn't charm the socks off of me!
Kamala Khan's Ms. Marvel isn't the most gritty, most innovative, most exquisite you will find - but she's FUN. Can you ask for better? -
I LOVE this volume. This series has been so consistently good, but this new story arc was fantastic. Loving the new artist as well.
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GR Ultimate Summer Reading Challenge One and Done.
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3.5 stars
Oh, Kamala Khan. What have you gotten yourself into this time?
Quick recap. Bruno has a girlfriend named Mike. Kamala tries to juggle being an Avenger, her brother getting married and schoolwork by having Bruno make some clones of her. The only problem is the clones start multiplying and take over the city. Bruno makes a giant T-Rex to eat all the clones?
Both plans essentially backfire so Bruno calls backup in the form of Loki while Kamala calls in the big guns. Captain Marvel to the rescue!
Moral of the story? You most likely can't do everything you ever want to do. Prioritize the important things.
I'm a big fan of Kamala Khan. -
reread #1: This volume is just stressful. Thinking back - being a teenager is hard. Add Superpowers to that. Yeah, no.
***
More like Super Overwhelmed, or Super Overworked!!!
Most of the time in the Volume, I just wanted to take Kamala out of the story and just hug her, give her a nice cup of tea and wrap her up in a blanket, cause there was just so much going on for her.
She's just my favorite. I love her whole story so darn much. She's amazing, she's real. She's everything.
Aside from Kamala, I seriously loved Mike in this Volume. She kinda came out of the blue (look what I did there, cause she has blue hair and...it's not funny, if you have to explain it, Nicole.) I need more Kamala and Mike scenes in coming Volumes. I also loved the weird little friendship between Zoe and Nakia that we saw a little bit from in the background. -
Update 2022: Kamala is definitely learning a lot about herself in this volume especially when it comes to Bruno moving on. She doesn’t expect it to happen so quickly so she has to navigate her feelings when it does. The amount of chaos that happens in this book is spectacular but I definitely think it had a lot to do with the fact that readers get an idea of how chaotic Kamala’s life really is. I’m glad that there was an emphasis on her remembering that she’s a teenager first before being a superhero.
I can't explain how much I loved this volume. This series has definitely improved from volume to volume and I love the story and arrows now and the diversity of characters. I can't wait to see where it goes and I will be doing a full review soon. -
I'm consistently impressed by how well this series negotiates the tension between Kamala's life as a teenager and her life as Ms. Marvel, and where those lives intersect. Also, major major thanks to this volume in particular for embracing different kinds of diversity in an inclusive rather than a "tolerance" way.
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Great evolution of the story. I love the small comedic elements to this story. Continues to be an addictive read.
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Ms. Marvel Vol. 5 Super Famous collects issues 1-6 of the Marvel Comics series written by G. Willow Wilson with art by Takeshita Miyazawa, Adrian Alphona, and Nico Leon.
Set after the event of Secret Wars, Ms. Marvel is now balancing a lot of different hats: high school student, friend and family obligations, solo superheroing, and being a member of the Avengers. Kamala comes up with the idea to “clone” herself so that she can be in more places at one time. Kamala is also forced to deal with a real estate and marketing agency who is using Ms. Marvel’s likeness in advertising without her consent. This has lead to the citizens of Jersey City to mistrust Ms. Marvel because of the company’s questionable beliefs and action.
This was a pretty fun story arc that sees the series dive more into its Islamic roots with the upcoming wedding of Kamala brother and new future inn-law family members. Kamala’s best friend and crush that didn’t work out, Bruno, has moved on and is now dating which cause tension between the two friends. This book does a lot of set-up of changes that will be happening in Kamala’s life. -
Story
The story continues to delight me. I just really love Kamala's determination and geekiness. This is the only super hero comic I read these days, and for good reason. Ms. Wilson does such a good job to make her interesting, even though I've never been an Avenger (Or a teen-aged girl for that matter).
I still continue to believe that if I found myself suddenly with super powers I'd totally fanboy out upon meeting the others, or the idea of joining the avengers. It's an interesting development that plays an important part of the story, but this is still Ms. Marvel's story.
Some of the Avengers are there on the periphery, but what makes this story so enjoyable is just trying to see Kamala balance school, family, friends, and being a super hero. Super powers don't make life easier. If anything they probably make it way harder. Learning how to manage your time is something everyone has to learn. I'm still not the always the best at it, and I don't have to fit in saving New Jersey into my schedule.
We also get to meet two great new characters, Mike & sadly I'm blanking on the name of the other. She's a love interest for Kamala's brother. Both look to be great additions, and I'm hoping we see more of them in the next volume. I'm definitely looking forward to it. Another great volume.
Artwork
I really enjoy the artwork. I'm glad things have settled down and we're back to Adrian Alphona on a regular basis (at least I believe so). I'm always bad at this part of my reviews, maybe I should drop it except when I find the art bad or something. Needless to say, I think it adds something to Ms. Wilson's narrative to have it be in graphic form. -
This is the new Ms. Marvel story I have been waiting for! The previous series of Kamala Khan served to introduce her and her world to us. Now, post-
Secret Wars, we finally see her deal with the ramifications of her existence on every level of her life. Like Miles Morales in
Spider-Man: Miles Morales, Vol. 1, people can see her and they do not always like what they see. They judge or perceive to judge her actions...and do not always like what those actions suggest. Throughout this, she still has a life to live as a teenager, and a Pakistani-American. In this volume, it all starts crashing down on her in ways which the previous series was hesitant to depict. It is handled very well here and cleanly clears the decks for the next big event she will be involved in, but leaves enough to be dealt with afterwards. -
3,5 🌟
Aww, I love Mike and Tyesha! They're an amazing addition to the cast. Ms. Marvel is getting busy, busy, busy. How will she deal with everything that's happening in her life?__________________________
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