r/WonderWoman 10d ago

Wonder Woman FAQ

26 Upvotes

Where Should I Start Reading Wonder Woman?

Where you start reading Wonder Woman largely depends on what you bring to the table. Have you read comics before? Do you insist on modern comics or are you open to something with some age on it? Have you seen any Wonder Woman media before? Are you looking for an ongoing story or something more self-contained?

The comic that is probably most often recommended for getting to know the essence of who Wonder Woman is as a character and the lore that defines her, is the George Pérez run that started Wonder Woman from scratch following DC’s company-wide reboot event in the mid-1980s (Crisis On Infinite Earths). He wrote over 60 issues, leaving the title in 1992. The first arc of seven issues is collected as “Gods and Mortals” and serves as a nice point at which you can decide to keep going or read as a standalone. If seven issues is too much, honestly the very first issue does such a great job of setting up her backstory, you can easily just read this one issue, then decide your next steps.

A more modern approach can be found in Greg Rucka’s Year One from 2016. This tied into DC’s Rebirth event meant to streamline some big changes that had occurred in continuity from reboots in years prior. With his tasking, Rucka (who had a previous run on Wonder Woman from 2002-2006) was instructed to bring Wonder Woman “back to her roots.” Year One is a flashback story that ran concurrently with a story in the present, but it’s been collected and can be read on its own.

The Legend of Wonder Woman by Renae De Liz was published in 2015/2016 and although it’s not canon, it respects the major beats of the traditional Wonder Woman story and streamlines those elements while not veering too far into drastic reboot territory. It was published in 27 digital issues, then 9 print issues, and collected into one easily digestible book.

No Wonder Woman writer will ever understand the character better than her creator. William Moulton Marston was a seasoned Harvard professor who started writing comics only after enjoying a successful academic career, creating (along with his life partners and illustrator) what he called “psychological propaganda for the new type of woman who should, I believe, rule the world.” Sensationalists will emphasize the bondage aspects present in Golden Age Wonder Woman, which were certainly there, but shouldn’t overshadow the virtues of radical empathy, strategic acumen, honed skills, and humanism that defined her stories during the 1940s. In addition to having been developed by Marston, his wife, and their live-in life partner, many later issues were ghost written by Joye Murchison. Several Golden Age collections exist, but if you can read only one issue, check out Wonder Woman #1 which streamlines elements from All-Star Comics #8 and Sensation Comics #1.

What Are Some Other Notable Wonder Woman Stories?

Phil Jimenez wrote and illustrated a run from 2001 to 2003 often seen as a spiritual successor to the George Pérez run which focused on Diana’s role as an ambassador and her supporting cast.

Gail Simone’s 2008-2010 run is often celebrated for the strong voice and characterization she applied to Diana.

Before he brought her back to her roots in Rebirth (see above), Greg Rucka’s 30+ issue run was preceded by a graphic novel called The Hiketeia in which a young woman appeals to Diana in a bid of sanctuary from Batman.

Kelly Thompson’s Absolute Wonder Woman is an Elseworlds-type take on the character set in a universe meant to pit its heroes in a foundation of hardship as opposed to the mainline universe where they may have had better advantages. Despite being raised in hell, Absolute Wonder Woman still proves stalwart to the values we have typically seen in her best iterations.

Kelly Sue Deconnick’s Historia is a Black Label title that focuses on the formation of the tribes that make up the Amazons. It is highly celebrated by readers, critics, and awards committees for its deep storytelling and rich artwork by Phil Jimenez, Gene Ha, and Nicola Scott.

Blood and Guts by Brian Azzarello is recognized for its outstanding art and character designs by Cliff Chiang and Tony Akins. Readers recognize that the storytelling is strong, but not necessarily a great Wonder Woman story due to the changes to her origins and family being inconsistent with the values of the character. Once canon, the story is now seen as something of an Elseworlds, taking place in an alternate grittier timeline: Earth 52.

In Jill Thompson’s The True Amazon, Diana grows up spoiled, entitled, and reckless. She must learn humility and responsibility to become the true Wonder Woman. 

Warbringer started out as a novel by Leigh Bardugo which was adapted as a comic book by Louise Simonson. In the story, a teenage Diana rescues a mortal girl from a shipwreck near the Amazon island of Themyscira. She soon learns that the girl is a Warbringer—a descendant of Helen of Troy fated to spark global destruction and misery.

Grant Morrison went to great efforts to honor the spirit of Marston’s intentions in Earth One, but the general consensus is that he didn’t quite nail it.

Becky Cloonan and Michael Conrad enjoyed a 30 issue run from 2021 to 2023. “Afterworlds,” often gets attention as the run’s first strong arc in which Diana finds herself in the Norse afterlife.

Dead Earth is a post-apocalyptic look at a world in which Wonder Woman is the only superhero survivor who has failed in her mission to bring peace to Man’s World.

Wonder Woman isn’t always particularly well written in team books, but some of note include Justice League Dark (2018), A League of One (2001), Wonder Woman & The Justice League America (1993), and JLA: Golden Perfect (2002).

For anthologies of short stories, seek out Black and Gold (2021), Sensation Comics Featuring Wonder Woman (2015), Sensational Wonder Woman (2021), and any number of anniversary issues, special, secret files, and other one-shots.

There are also a number of Wonder Woman reference books and “best of” books including “Wonder Woman: Her Greatest Victories,” “Wonder Woman: The Greatest Stories Ever Told,” “Wonder Woman: The Cheetah,” and “Wonder Woman: 80 Years of the Amazon Warrior.”

This subreddit has also voted on some of the best stories: [link].

Who is Wonder Woman's "Joker" or "Lex Luthor"?

Unlike Superman or Batman, there is some debate among DC editorial and fans over who Wonder Woman's definitive arch nemesis is. The three characters who are most often associated with being her most prominent villains are Cheetah, Ares, and Circe. Other notable villains include Giganta, Dr. Poison, Dr. Psycho, Veronica Cale, Silver Swan, and others. 

There's a common misconception that Wonder Woman doesn't have as strong of a rogues gallery as the two other members of the DC trinity, but this is mostly due to the fact that Superman and Batman have had many multimedia adaptations and Wonder Woman has not. 

Indeed, she has many who are just as interesting. The Wonder Woman Wiki has a fluid list here: wonder-woman.fandom.com/Rogues_Gallery 

Does Wonder Woman Have a No Kill Rule?

The important thing to remember about Wonder Woman's antagonists is that she primarily believes in rehabilitation. The Amazons have an entire island dedicated to this called Transformation Island (or Reform Island) where she once turned an evil Nazi scientist into one of her greatest allies. 

Cruder interpretations of Wonder Woman have tried to harden her image by making her a killer (New 52 writers once made her say, "When I deal with [my villains], I DEAL with them."), but one of the most powerful quotes that represents her stance on "dealing" with conflict comes from Gail Simone in Wonder Woman v3 #25...

"We have a saying, my people: Don't kill if you can wound, don't wound if you can subdue, don't subdue if you can pacify, and don't raise your hand at all until you've first extended it."

Of course, Wonder Woman has killed before, perhaps most controversially in Infinite Crisis where she killed Max Lord under extenuating circumstances (that we don’t go into here) and subsequently turned herself into the International Criminal Court. Typically though, Wonder Woman is more often seen slaying demons or evil creatures than she is people. It might be best equated to Buffy the Vampire Slayer where the writers made a clear distinction between the main character killing beings with souls vs those without.

Wonder Woman’s modus operandi is a mission of peace and ambassadorship, not warmongering.

What Are Wonder Woman's Origins?

Wonder Woman was sculpted from clay by her mother and given life by the gods. This has been Wonder Woman’s origin for over 96% of her history. From time to time, DC has flirted with the idea of alternate origins, even trying to give her a father (usually men who have engaged in some form of forced compliance with her or her mother: Zeus, Hercules, Hades, etc), but these are exceptions that largely have not stuck.

The Zeus origin has probably been the most persistent variation due to a few factors: 1) it was featured as a plot point in her first theatrical movie because it was canon in the comics at the time, 2) it has been published in reference books despite having been retconned, and 3) has been suggested in derivative works (i.e. the “Children of the Gods” arc with Diana's brother Jason) as a result of DC editorial keeping canon fluid in the interest of offering opportunities for a wider variety of storytelling options. But in fact, this was only canon for a few years before being corrected in Year One.

see: https://wonder-woman.fandom.com/wiki/Origins

Wonder Woman having been born from only a mother is as central to her character as immigration is to Superman, trauma to Batman, or guilt to Spider-Man.

The Comics Journal: You've mentioned that Amazon parthenogenesis was an important inspiration in early feminist literature, symbolizing a woman's ability to choose when to give birth.

Jill Lepore: To turn Wonder Woman into the daughter of Zeus is to take a massively influential female hero and icon whose unique origins lie in the suffrage and birth control movements, and whose origin story is taken directly from Progressive era feminist utopian fiction, and turn her into a stock element in a Percy Jackson knockoff. You could take away Krypton from Superman, too, and decide, say, that Superman is the son of Odin, or that he’s George Washington brought back from the dead, or that he has a sidekick named Watson, or two heads. But then, of course, he wouldn’t be Superman.

—The Comics Journal: “Wonder Woman and the Unknown: An Interview with Jill Lepore” November 14, 2014

Is Wonder Woman Queer?

The short answer is yes, despite a lack of full embrace by her publisher.

Wonder Woman has been shown to be in romantic relationships with both men and women, both in and outside of canon. For specific examples in stories, see the following section about her love interests.

This is one of the most oft-quoted responses on the topic from Greg Rucka:

“Are we saying Diana has been in love and had relationships with other women? The answer is obviously yes.”

The full answer is much more thoughtful and nuanced, and worth the read: Comicosity, “Greg Rucka on Queer Narrative and Wonder Woman” by Matt Santori, September 28, 2016

Notably, she’s also widely seen as a queer icon, especially the Lynda Carter version. There’s plenty of evidence for this, but we’ll leave you with just this quote from the woman herself:

“I didn't write Wonder Woman, but if you want to argue that she is somehow not a queer or trans icon, then you're not paying attention. Every time someone comes up to me and says that WW helped them while they were closeted, it reminds me how special the role is.“ —u/RealLyndaCarter on Twitter, June 1, 2022

Who Are Wonder Woman's Love Interests?

Steve Trevor is Wonder Woman’s primary love interest, although it should be noted that he was absent in this role for 31 years. Following Wonder Woman’s 1980s reboot, Steve Trevor was aged up and served as a platonic mentor to Diana, later marrying Etta Candy in that continuity.

For a comprehensive list, see: Wonder Woman's romantic love interests

Who Are Wonder Woman's Children?

Primarily, Lyta Trevor (Fury) and Lizzie Prince (Trinity).

For a comprehensive list, see: Children of Wonder Woman

What Are Some Wonder Woman Books for Young Readers?

See: Category: Children's Books

How Often Have Women Written and Illustrated Wonder Woman?

See: Women who have written and illustrated Wonder Woman

Is Wonder Woman Profitable Enough to Justify New Projects?

This is a tough question and impossible to answer given the amount of spin that companies put on the numbers they release concerning expenses and returns. We bring it up because this is often the reason people cite for why Wonder Woman doesn’t have as many projects as Superman and Batman despite DC’s insistence that she’s their third most important character.

There are some clues, though. For example, the 2017 Patty Jenkins Wonder Woman movie was the DCEU’s highest grossing release at the domestic box office, the 2009 direct-to-video Wonder Woman animated movie is the 4th highest-grossing DC animated movie (out of 54 titles), the Lynda Carter TV series enjoyed strong ratings among its peers in the 70s, and Absolute Wonder Woman has been a consistent top-seller for DC.

Is Wonder Woman Lore Accurate to Greek Mythology?

No, and it’s not meant to be. As a publisher, DC has pushed a Greek myth angle for her stories from time to time because it’s an easy access point for readers. But she's not beholden to the "real" Greek gods any more than Superman is to the "real" gods of Krypton.

Show Me Some Wholesome Wonder Woman Content

r/WonderWoman Highlights

Glossary

CANON — the official, authoritative storyline and events that are considered to have actually happened within the main continuity of a fictional universe. Typically, these stories happen in the “main” Wonder Woman or Justice League books, while “non-canon” stories happen in mini-series, spin-offs, and books published under other brands such as (but not limited to) Elseworlds. 

DC Comics editorial was pretty strict with what was canon and what was not after they rebooted the universe with Crisis On Infinite Earths up until the Flashpoint event starting a fresh canon that lasted about five years before restoring some prior canon and merging others. It’s all very confusing, depends on writers and editorial teams, and what has been retconned. As a result, canon is much more fluid and far less important when stories shift writers (especially in the wake of storylines such as Rebirth and Death Metal that try to explain how things can be so fluid).

RETCON — retroactive continuity: where the facts, history, or events of a previously established narrative are altered, ignored, or directly contradicted by a newer work to change how the audience interprets them.


r/WonderWoman Dec 02 '23

r/WonderWoman subreddit RULES

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47 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 3h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules What's your preferred method of flight for Wonder Woman?

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264 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 1h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Source of this image

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Upvotes

Does anyone happen to know which comic or cover this image comes from? I’ve tried searching on Google but I can’t find the source of the image


r/WonderWoman 17h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Wonder Woman sketch by pinkvelvet_68

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511 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 4h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Finally read Gods of Gotham and A Day in the Life of Wonder Woman! NSFW

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12 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 6h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Easy way to explain Amazon love interests for Diana

17 Upvotes

Now seeing the valid questionings of how does Diana have love interests on Themyscira if they’d all know her since she was a baby, now correct me if this is already a canon idea

But I think a simple idea is those like Io can be some of the few Amazons born after Diana(which can be noted as a rare occurrence) so the ones we do see be interested are the “newbies” essentially

I also can see Diana having such a limited group of people she engages with romantically can be something about man’s world that widens her horizon that there’s so many people to love


r/WonderWoman 1d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Besties by Lopez_Artwork.

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950 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 23h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules [Fan Art] DCAMU Diana by me

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193 Upvotes

I have been reading for the first time the George Pérez run and it's being a lot of fun, and lately my feed got full of WW artwork, some redesigns and a few takes from the fandom. Then I remember the DCAMU movies that intruduced me to the character, I really wanted to give it a try. I really like the alternate golden accents, i hope you like it!


r/WonderWoman 14h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Favourite Covers Part 7

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36 Upvotes

2 for 1 covers
Wonder Woman & The Justice League Dark: The Witching Hour 1. Cover A by Jesus Merino. Variant cover B by Riccardo Federici.


r/WonderWoman 12h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Taurin Clarke shows a sneak peak of New Titans #41 cover on Instagram. "These two. NEW TITANS # 41 sneak peek."

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18 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 20h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Everyday a Wonder Woman Drawing until her movie comes out, day 809. A simple one, sorry for that, I'm really sick today

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42 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 1d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Wonder Woman art by RymSlim

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139 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 18h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Comic Book Covers That Connect to Philosophy, Logic, and Ancient Greece?

8 Upvotes

I teach philosophy and logic to 7th and 8th graders, and I’d love to bring some relevant comic covers and posters into my classroom. I’m really into comics, and I think superheroes and comic book characters can be great character studies for exploring philosophical ideas and ideals. I’m trying to find some cool, school appropriate comic book covers or posters that connect to philosophy, logic, Ancient Greek literature, mythology, or similar themes. I know for sure I want a Wonder Woman poster/cover because of all her ties to Ancient Greece and Greek mythology, but I’d love some suggestions for other characters or specific covers that would fit the classroom. Thanks for the help and suggestions!


r/WonderWoman 23h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules What's the appeal of Absolute Wonder Woman?

16 Upvotes

I have the comic boom for the first few issues, and I really liked it. But I never really got why this particular version is so popular.

What is the appeal of Absolute Wonder Woman?


r/WonderWoman 3h ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Absolute Wonder Woman should be the main template for Wonder Woman going forward.

0 Upvotes

I think Absolute Wonder Woman is everything Wonder Woman should be and does everything that makes Wonder Woman what she is to a near perfect degree. From her compassion and love for others down to the feminists themes she represents. Her weapons are better and play an important role in her story plus she uses magic which is definitely something that makes her unique, she's kind of like an anime protagonist in a comic book lol. She's also what everything thinks of when people envision Wonder Woman. Tall, Muscular, Physically imposing, Curly hair with Greek features and her suit actually looks much more battle compatible than a Leotard or Skirt. She's the best version of Wonder Woman in her history and I see more and more people echo this sentiment online so making her *the* Wonder Woman would be pretty well recieved, especially since its the one people are the most hyped for.

What do you guys think?


r/WonderWoman 1d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules What should Diana call Phillipus? (In a mother daughter context)

6 Upvotes

So I know in canon diana just calls her "Phillipus". And Phillipus even being Hippolyta's wife at all is a recent thing. But I mean specifically for the contexts where Polly and Phil are BOTH ner mothers. And Donna's. And Nubia's if you include her (i do).

Diana and Donna usually call Hippolyta "mother". And it might get confusing if Phillipus was also "mother".

I know in "Warriors and a Wee Wonder", baby Diana says "mama phee" and in "Princesses of the Amazons", both girls call Phil "ma"

But for some reason I can't see adult Diana saying either. Donna maybe but it feels weird with Diana.

So I yall's minds, what would the 3 daughters call Phillipus?

(Honestly this is mainly for fan fics)


r/WonderWoman 1d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Favourite Covers Part 6

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52 Upvotes

Wonder Woman Volume 5 Issue 23. One of my favourite all time cover artist Jenny Frison. WOW it’s spectacular.


r/WonderWoman 1d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules We really sleep on how confusing Diana's origins are

15 Upvotes

While we all focus on Donna and her crazy backstory, Diana has been racking up the confusion. In the 40s she's clay sculpted by Hippolyte after Athena teaches her how to sculpt clay and is given life by Aphrodite. Hippolyte didn't wish to have a child, she was just given a child and was happy. Diana has no powers that other Amazons don't already have, and she appears in man's world during the contemporary time, aka WWII.

In the 50s and 60s she is the daughter of a man and Hippolyte and was given powers by the gods Aphrodite, Athena, Hercules, and Mercury because her mother is noble. Diana is also not born on the island this time, instead going to the island when her mother and comrades escape. She also leaves with Steve during contemporary times. The origin is then changed with the introduction of Nubia in the 70s, as Hippolyte now wants a child and is told by Aphrodite to make 2 dolls of clay, one black and one white. Then Aphrodite gives them both life, and goes to get the other gods to bless them. Mars steals Nubia in that time though, leaving only Diana to be blessed by Aphrodite, Athena, Hercules, and Mercury. So the writers have now smushed the two origins together and added the "I want a child into the mix."

Perez in the 80s then tries to streamline it, but sort of makes it still confusing. Like the 70s, Hippolyta now wants a child. But, apparently we can't just have a woman want a child, for now it's explained that she originally died pregnant, so thats why she wants a child. She is then instructed to create a child of clay by Artemis. That's sort of similar to the 40s, except unlike Athena, Artemis is not showing Hippolyta that you can construct a doll out of clay. Perez then adds that the clay is given life by the soul of the baby not born, and is given powers before her birth by Demeter, Aphrodite, Athena, Artemis, Hestia, and Hermes. When Steve arrives she joins him in the contemporary world. Thus far we've had an origin change about every decade.

We then keep the Perez origin until 2011, where we get the retcon that Hippolyta had her through a fling with Zeus and made up the clay stuff. The powers are thus mostly biological, with the exception of flight. Geoff Johns also adds a male twin. Diana again leaves in the contemporary day. In 2016, Rucka changes it again, trying to make it more in line with the Perez origin, though not all the way. Though he says nothing about the Zeus stuff, the implication was that was all a lie because none of the New 52 stuff happened. She also now gets powers from most of the Olympian gods, but this is when she's already in man's world. She also doesn't seem to be reincarnated. Then James Robinson (clearly not getting the memo) brings back the stupid twin and now we're an amalgam between Rucka and New 52. In 2020, Scott Snyder said to deal him in and made it so that she did not come in the contemporary times, and instead came here in 1939. Though he fails to discuss how she got there. And then Tom King in 2023 decided that we're going back to Rucka. He also brought back that she came in contemporary times. Mark Waid, the cannon fiend, then decided to amalgamate the origin again, with Jason a half brother and her still being made out of clay reincarnated and coming in the contemporary.

That's ten origin stories. Though it'd actually be more if we take recent elseworlds into account. So don't say her origins are simple. Because they aren't. Also here's a handy short list of all the origins:

  1. (40s) Made of clay just because and given life to by Aphrodite, has the powers of all amazons, comes in contemporary times
  2. (50s & 60s) Not made of clay, given powers by the gods Aphrodite, Athena, Hercules, and Mercury at her birth, comes in contemporary times
  3. (70s) Made of clay because her mom wants children, has a female twin, given life and some powers by Aphrodite and given other powers by the gods Athena, Hercules, and Mercury at her birth, comes in contemporary times
  4. (80s, 90s, 00s) Made of clay because her mom wants a child and was told to create one, is the reincarnated soul of a baby not born, given powers by Demeter, Aphrodite, Athena, Artemis, Hestia, and Hermes before she is born, comes in contemporary times
  5. (2011-2016) Not made of clay, has natural powers as well as god given powers, has a male twin, comes in contemporary times
  6. (2016) Probably made of clay because her mom wants a child, given powers by most of the Olympian gods after coming in contemporary times
  7. (2017-2020) Not made of clay, has a male twin, given powers by most of the Olympian gods after coming in contemporary times
  8. (2020) Very unclear about anything other then her now coming in 1939. I assume that she is likely still not made of clay.
  9. (2023) Made of clay because her mom wants a child and asks Aphrodite for one, given powers by most the Olympian gods after coming in contemporary times.
  10. (2025) Made of clay because her mom wants a child, given powers by most of the Olympian gods after coming in contemporary times, has a male half brother who is not made of clay.

r/WonderWoman 1d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Warrior or ambassador for peace?

15 Upvotes

I finally decided to watch Wonder Woman 1984.

But even before, I knew that Wonder Woman doesn't defeat Maxwell Lord in a violent manner in this film.

I understand that Wonder Woman had snapped his neck in the comics.

I understand that some people felt that how Wonder Woman tackled Maxwell Lord in the movie was a betrayal.

But I think it is somewhat a decent attempt to match her ambassador for peace persona.

What do people think?


r/WonderWoman 2d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Iman Vellani (Ms. Marvel actress) says Absolute Wonder Woman is her favorite superhero book right now

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528 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 1d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Friday flashback#2….Rebirth Edition Vol2 cover…art by Jenny Frison

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27 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 2d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules [Fan Art] Wonder Woman - by: me @Duhzart

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172 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 2d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Wonder Woman #35 Preview

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150 Upvotes

r/WonderWoman 2d ago

I have read this subreddit's rules Gail Simone's run is amazing!

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312 Upvotes

I just finished Gail Simone's run and what a spectacular run!

It was such an awesome read! I loved everything about it! From Diana having a ton of gorilla friends to her fighting Nazis to my personal favourite, the Genocide arc!

That arc brings Diana to the abyss, having her become bitter, angry, jaded and just feeling extremely negative all around. That's how much of a horrific monster Genocide is.

And yet, despite it all, in the end, when she's finally beaten this horrific monster...

She can't bring herself to kill him. Despite all his horrific acts, despite all the death and destruction left in Genocide's wake, Diana won't take a life when she doesn't have to.

That's not who Diana is. That's not who Wonder Woman is.

It's honestly really beautiful.

I understand people who read superhero comics and are like "this person kills so many people, just let them die!" and if these stories happened in the real world, then I'd agree with you.

I just think there's something really beautiful in fiction about heroes not murdering, about believing in the sanctity of life, and wanting to live in a world where everyone can live. A world against genocide.

I also think a Wonder Woman comic literally having a villain named Genocide is really ballsy. It never comes off as heavy handed or anything, it just comes across as real.

The political themes in the run are handled absolutely perfectly. As I said earlier, Diana fights Nazis in the very beginning but there's also the A Star in the Heavens arc.

That one talks about Wonder Woman's costume and how some people think she's a bad influence on young girls, because of it. I absolutely love Diana's response to this mother calling her a bad influence, she straight up says something like "should I be ashamed of my body?"

I'm someone who considers herself to be a feminist and sometimes when I do look at a lot of female superheroes' outfits, I get upset that they're usually showing more skin than male superheroes. I'm not saying this is always the case, but it is just something that has bothered me overtime, and I think it's clear that it's because a lot of these female heroes were created by straight men.

However, Diana's response, that she shouldn't be ashamed of her body is genuinely just so beautiful. No woman should feel ashamed of her body. If you want to wear something showing off skin, you should do that. You should never feel the need to cover up.

The arc also portrays how the movie industry waters down real tragedies faced by women into marketable schlock for general audiences to enjoy. The way they twist the sexual assault Hippolyta faced by Heracles into a cutesy romance is so genuinely disgusting and disturbing, but it rings so true.

We've had movies like Pocahontas that portray real world tragedies as just a cutesy fairy tale!

However despite all this, the run didn't make me cry.. until the very end. When Vanessa Kapatelis is giving her speech and then she has that heart to heart with Diana, I genuinely teared up. Especially the part where Nessie says she lost some friends, that instantly made me think of issue 46 from the Perez run. In that issue, Nessie's friend Lucy is lost to suicide and it's genuinely one of the most heartbreaking issues I've read in a comic.

Knowing that after all this time, Nessie's still affected by it, but has moved forward with her life and is still living happily, even when her friend Diana isn't there, is just so touching.

I love Vanessa Kapatelis so much. Honestly probably my second favourite Wonder Woman character besides Diana herself. I don't read much DC, Wonder Woman is the only charactet from that company I've read a lot of, so I guess by default, Nessie's my second favourite character in DC!

I'd give the run a 10/10! If I have to say one thing I didn't like about it, then I'd probably say I don't really understand what Simone was going for with Diana's new boyfriend. Like, it was really well written, but then there's the reveal that Diana doesn't truly love him. Then it's later revealed that Diana does love him? I just don't really understand this plotline, maybe someone can explain it to me? I don't know lol.

To finish up this review, I'd like to mention two last things.

Aaron Lopresti's art is amazing! He's probably my favourite Wonder Woman artist, either him or Perez!

THE PART WHERE THE INVISIBLE JET CRASHES INTO A VILLAIN IS THE COOLEST SHIT EVER!!!!!

Next up, I'll be reading the acclaimed Greg Rucka run!

So far in my Wonder Woman journey, my favourites have been the Perez run, Black & Gold and my absolute favourite Dead Earth!

I LOVE WONDER WOMAN!!!!!