The Pitch: Picking up shortly after the television series finale (“Chosen”), this volume answers the question every fan had in 2007: What happens after you activate every Potential Slayer on Earth?
The Long Way Home is not a nostalgic reunion special. It is a bold, weird, ambitious continuation that assumes you have grown up with the characters. It stumbles under its own weight at times, and the tonal shift to full-spectrum superheroics will alienate some purists. However, the core of Buffy —the pain of leadership, the power of found family, and the ability to laugh while facing the apocalypse—is intact. If you can accept that comics are a different language than television, this is the most exciting Buffy story since “The Gift.” buffy the vampire slayer season 8 volume 1
Buffy now leads a decentralized, global army of nearly 2,000 Slayers. Operating out of a castle in Scotland (paid for by a massive bank heist involving a dragon), she coordinates teams from Tokyo to Italy. The “Big Bad” this time isn’t a single demon but a military-industrial complex called “Twilight,” which views the Slayer army as the world’s greatest terrorist threat. When a mysterious government agent captures several Slayers, Buffy, Xander, Willow, and a newly revived (and flying) Dawn must break into their high-tech headquarters. The Pitch: Picking up shortly after the television
You finished “Chosen” and immediately wanted more. You enjoy Joss Whedon’s dialogue. You don’t mind giant Dawn. It stumbles under its own weight at times,