'Trinity: Generation S'.
But it is funny, fun and cute in its own right.
It's fine if you don't think too hard about DC continuity (whichever King is working with at the roll of a dice).
The trio, with their differing personalities, really bounce incredibly well off of one another. They are surprisingly believable as kids/young people living together, and tolerating each other, and then loving each other like a family.
What is up with the issue where Black Canary, one of the major female superheroes in the DCU, is a Taylor Swift-alike pop star? Is it a career change for her? Is she still a superhero?
Lizzie reluctantly takes care of Jon and Damian when they are turned into corgis again. The babysitting roles are only reversed when animal transformation is involved, it seems.
Zatanna makes a cameo. She's cool.
It's always cool when Trinity/Lizzie interacts with female heroes, as a change of pace.
One issue I have to highlight is 'Mothers and Daughters'. It is my favourite of the collection. Why? Because unlike 'Trinity: Daughter of Wonder Woman', it is actually about Wonder Woman and her daughter. It is about them as Amazons. It is set in Themyscira, in a combat stadium. They interact. They are in the same scene together the whole time. Jon and Damian are nowhere in sight, nor are they mentioned. Neither is Steve Trevor. It is only six pages long, but it made me understand the relationship between Diana and Lizzie better than any other comic did, plus the relationship between Diana and her own mother, Hippolyta - this is a generational story. It is magnificent and poignant. And it revolves around a mother pointing a gun at her own daughter.
I'm choosing to ignore Lizzie's final line in the next issue, about kangaroos, also set in Themyscira, but does feature Jon and Damian: 'I'm an Amazon. I don't mind forever. Y'know. As long as it's with you
boys.'
Such contradictory whiplash and unself-awareness has never been known before. What were you thinking with that line, Tom King? Are you trying to set feminism and female rep in comics back?
Trinity/Lizzie is such an irrepressible, irresponsible, impulsive, reckless, arrogant, egotistical, loud, rude, borderline obnoxious person. And I love her for it. She's got true youthful spunk and enthusiasm.
I still don't know how she ended up with three lassos.
Eh. I had a nice time overall with 'Trinity: Generation S'. It works as a companion to 'Trinity: Daughter of Wonder Woman'; it expands upon it. I'm willing to take whatever Wonder Woman and/or Trinity comics I can get nowadays.
Colourful, wild, random, stupid yet clever superhero fun.
I'm tired now.
Final Score: 3.5/5
Such contradictory whiplash and unself-awareness has never been known before. What were you thinking with that line, Tom King? Are you trying to set feminism and female rep in comics back?
Trinity/Lizzie is such an irrepressible, irresponsible, impulsive, reckless, arrogant, egotistical, loud, rude, borderline obnoxious person. And I love her for it. She's got true youthful spunk and enthusiasm.
I still don't know how she ended up with three lassos.
Eh. I had a nice time overall with 'Trinity: Generation S'. It works as a companion to 'Trinity: Daughter of Wonder Woman'; it expands upon it. I'm willing to take whatever Wonder Woman and/or Trinity comics I can get nowadays.
Colourful, wild, random, stupid yet clever superhero fun.
I'm tired now.
Final Score: 3.5/5