Arpad Okay, Doom Rocket:
“The depth of the story is SFF at its peak by being about everyday experience. Hot thoughts like mechs and sex capture the readers’ imagination, used to explore the soul and day-to-day life. The annotation zine makes much of what was previously left unsaid between the book and its creator much more concrete, and all the fan art further solidifies the book’s connections to the world in which it was published. The addition of multiple realities for Left and Right to populate also opens the door to untold stories. What if things developed in this vein instead of that one?
The real Sad Girl Space Lizard can undergo infinite repetition because what makes her up is something real. Something universal in its uniqueness you can dress in any skin, fit in any shoe, try any possibility with. Because what makes the sad girl space lizard Left (or Right) is more than a prompt or a metaphor; it’s allowing on the page for an idea to blossom into life. Craig’s is a diary, unlike the kind we’re used to peeking into when we read comics.”
Read the full review on Doom Rocket’s website here!