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Here is a review of DARK METRO as seen as in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
"Terminal Transportation"
Subways aren’t exactly the places you want to hang around for very long. Besides being a bit musty and a gathering place for some of the less favorable members of society, it’s a bit creepy. Jest look down the train corridors that fade into darkness--kind of spooky, isn’t it? DARK METRO taps into that eerie world that speeds along ill-lit corridors. At night, when the subway closes and the last train departs, the subway becomes a portal to the land of the dead, especially those carrying grudges. A young man named Seiya does what he can to save innocent, unsuspecting victims. We get a taste of his background in this tantalizing first volume of spine-tingling vignettes. The artwork and story prove to be irresistible books for fans of things that that go bump on the tracks.
Jessica Severs, Trib p.m.
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
A review of DARK METRO as seen as in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
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