This is it! There are some spoilers in this review, but frankly if you have read this far, then you are familiar with the Invincible series and can properly geek out with me over the reveals in these concluding volumes.
Volume Eleven:
Mark and Eve have settled somewhat uneasily into life on the planet Talescria, and when he and Oliver are helping keep Thragg and his soldier children at bay, Mark is sucked into a deep cave and meets a strange entity. In a deus ex machina plot device, he is thrown back into his past on Earth as a teen but with his current memories. With his hard-won knowledge, he is able to keep his father from killing the Guardians of the Globe and helps the various heroes (good to see Rex Splode again!) prevent mishaps that save millions of lives. However, he knows by remaining in this timeline, he will never have his baby girl Terra so he makes the hard decision to return to his original life, erasing all the good he was able to do in the past. Going between dimensions, the timelines don’t sync and he returns five years later finding Terra a child. Just wanting to reunite with his family he declines to help Allen fight Thragg, but Thragg and his children don’t care what Mark wants. More battles, more betrayals, and then a devastating death that I felt was unnecessary.
This volume has Ottley do the art in the first half, and Walker in a more cartoony format illustrates the second half. I’ve noticed that Kirkman and Ottley are always ego-boosting Walker in the sketchbooks that conclude each book, so I wonder what was going on behind the scenes between them all. But I am looking forward to seeing how the three of them conclude this entire series in the next volume!
Volume Twelve:
The end of all things! We open with Oliver’s funeral…I am still salty about this. We’ve had some hard deaths in the past, especially Rex Splode, but this death hurt. We find out Allen had him spying on Thragg and pretending to betray Mark, because I didn’t believe for a minute Oliver would have gone to the dark side. But that left me hating on Allen, who used the philosophy of sacrificing the one for the many. Mark even understood this, but still. (Aside: The Viltrumite genes are supposed to be so strong than any child will look humanoid despite the alien species they are mating with. But it was a big stretch that insectoid Thraxan mothers would not pass down any of their characteristics to their children- like Oliver and then all of Thragg’s offspring. I could even accept that, but when Oliver has children with a lobster-looking alien, his twin children still look like him!)
Thragg and Mark have their final battle, but at a great cost to Thragg’s children. At one time he seems almost loving to his twin daughter Ursaal, but then he reveals his true colors as he admits he has bred his children to be fodder in battle. He views them as inferior and doesn’t care they are dying by the thousands for him. Mark’s last fight with him was very talky, as Mark is explaining how his cause is better, and thus he has more to fight for. While Omni-Man survives the battle, he takes a hit that proves to be too much for him. He is able to have some last poignant words with Mark, but I was very upset that Debbie was a few minutes too late to be with him. As a wife and mother myself, that upset me, because I have really bonded with her character. (Another aside: I have enjoyed getting to know many of the heros and villains that dip in and out of stories over the course of the twelve volumes. But where did Tech Jacket and Wolf-Man disappear to?)
With Thragg dead, now Mark can finally deal with Rex. Rex has had absolute power, but that power has absolutely corrupted him. He was given a pass for far too long, with Nolan even accepting him, but Mark knows the good can’t last. Finally the two of them have it out, and Mark is able to neutralize Rex but still harness his intellect. The story can now conclude, as Mark steps up to lead the Viltrumites and meets Annissa’s son, Markus. We see Markus and Terra age (Terra is such a brat!) with Debbie as a loving Grandma. A few threads are left open if the story is ever continued with Mark or with his children, but the series is brought to a close in a neat bow.
Invincible has been an amazing series! It took familiar superhero tropes and twisted them in unusual and bloody ways. Kirkman, Walker and Ottley told a story from beginning to end and were able to offer fresh commentary on issues going on in our own world but adapted into the Invincible universe. I am amazed that Kirkman was creating and writing about The Walking Dead at the same time, with a fifteen year overlap. In fact, as much as TWD has been heralded, I feel Kirkman’s Invincible was the better of the two. And in a graphic novel the art work is as important as the writing, if not more, and both Walker and Ottley contributed mightily to the series. Their illustrations defined the books. I’m loving the animated series, and look forward to many years of watching future episodes, and seeing how similar or dissimilar it will be to these graphic novels, so I’m happy that I have more Invincible in my future!
-Nancy

Read my reviews of previous books:
Volume One, Volumes Two-Four, Volumes Five-Six, Volumes Seven-Eight, Volumes Nine-Ten
October 16, 2021 at 10:18 am
You answered the question I had as I read this! I know how much you enjoyed TWD so I was curious how ‘Invincible’ ranked alongside the Grimes Family Zombie Parade. So thank you for already having that answer waiting for me :). But OH MY GOSH that is high praise indeed! I’m a little stunned. I’m sure the comic is worthy of it but I think there was just sooo much TWD superiority everywhere for so long I wasn’t ready to read that. But that’s exciting! And I think it makes ‘Invincible’ even more intriguing. I love that you loved it so much!
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October 17, 2021 at 3:43 pm
While I really enjoyed TWD, Invincible just had that something extra that pushed it ahead. One thing that it had in its favor, is that I waited until it was completely done (after reading V1 years ago) and then read the entire series this summer/fall. Perhaps it fared better because I had S1 of the new tv series fresh in my mind and then got to live in the Invincible universe without gaps, unlike when I read TWD over the course of years.
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November 30, 2021 at 9:40 am
Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. It’s wildly high praise for the comic all the same! And it makes me more inclined than anything else I’ve read to check it out. I think it’s interesting to see so many modern comics working like this. You have a set creative team handling almost the entire run and, when they say the story is over, it’s over. With comics like this, you don’t see the traditional handing of a popular title off to a new creative team. In that way, comics – at least certain comics like ‘Invincible’ – come to feel more like a novel than a serial story and reading them “all at once” certainly helps the experience of the story.
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November 30, 2021 at 7:54 pm
I always appreciate when a creative team stays consistent throughout a series. My fav series- Locke & Key, Revival, Harrow County, Saga, Bone Parish, Invincible & TWD- all have the same author and artist(s) for the entire run.
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November 30, 2021 at 9:39 pm
Can you imagine if that approach was always the case with comics?!? Like what if Marvel stopped doing Spider-Man when Stan Lee and Steve Ditko left or if DC retired Superman when Jerry Siegel and Joe Schuster left the title??? That is SO WILD to consider! The entire world of comics as well as the modern landscape of pop culture would be entirely different!!!
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