

If you haven’t read her graphic novel Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me, turn your attention to our list of the best comics from 2019, where we will insist that you should. Tamaki, who won an Eisner for This One Summer, is not just known for stories about women, but deftly-handled queer stories. The classic villain shows up in issue #760 looking for help, and Diana’s quest to do the right thing makes for a complicated decision.

Not helping the matter: the return of Machiavellian businessman Maxwell Lord. According to DC, the new story arc picks up with Diana in the aftermath of her battle with the Four Horsewomen, a time when life on the mere-mortal wavelength is tricky, and a new threat looms. Tamaki’s run on the title kicks off on June 10 with Wonder Woman #759, which features art by Mikel Janín and a cover by David Marquez.

“I have always wanted a golden lasso and an invisible jet, and I feel like now, writing Wonder Woman, I’m one step closer.” “Wonder Woman was the hero I grew up with, she was my little-kid-living-room-cosplay,” said Tamaki in a statement. Mariko Tamaki, a shining talent who recently penned the graphic novel Harley Quinn: Breaking Glass, is turning her attention to DC Comics’ trinity, taking over Wonder Woman this June.
