This is the third installation in a series of one-shots featuring our favourite God of Thunder. I am a little confused as to why all three books have been labelled as one-shots when each one leads into the next. Nonetheless, this was another great book. Djurdjevic's cover was beautiful. His painterly style really lends itself to period piece such as this.
Inside the story was broken into two smaller stories. The only change from part one to part two however are the artists, as the story keeps moving in the same direction all throughout the book.
Odin finally decides that he has had enough of Thor's selfish behaviour. Funny thing is, Thor feels the same way about Odin and the manner with which he has set up Asgard. After a series of failed attempts to subdue his rampaging son, Odin finally takes matters into his own hands. Most Thor fans know the way this ends. Nothing teaches humility more than being in the service of others. With his powers and memories stripped from him, Thor learns this first hand. A crippled doctor living on Midgard now replaces the God of Thunder from Asgard.
This was a great looking book filled with action and history. It wasn't as well written as the first two, but was entertaining all the same. Fraction has proven that he is deft at branching out into varied genres.