


If Daredevil knows geniuses like Hank Pym who help him out, why wouldn’t he bring Foggy to Avengers Mansion for treatment rather than a hospital? In fact, in a world with people like Reed Richards, Hank McCoy and Tony Stark running around, how does cancer even still exist? Hell, Dr.

I had a moment where I questioned that a bit because it seemed to bring up a problem inherent to comic books. This is set off nicely by the personal stuff of Foggy’s life threatening cancer. The bad guy who rises out of that feels like a true threat threat capable of not only killing Daredevil, but of also driving him into a near panic at the threat looming over him. It was an especially nice touch to have someone doing brutal experiments on people to try and recreate the accident that blinded Matt and gave him his power. It seems like Mark Waid had sneakily been laying the groundwork for the revenge plot for a while now, and he did a solid job of making the whole elaborate scheme believable. Put the two of them together and you get something pretty great. If it had been just about Foggy getting cancer and how Matt tries to be there for his best friend, it could have been damn good. If this collection had been just about the revelation of a plot by a hidden enemy to destroy Daredevil, it could have good.
