![]() Pittman’s years of experience in animation are imprinted throughout Red’s Planet. Red eventually limits her companionship to the large-eyed Tawnee, very protective of a large egg that glows mysteriously on occasion, and a grumpy blue lion. The assorted aliens are touching, funny, and their reactions to being stranded are little different from any random group of humans under the same circumstances. Eddie Pittman has a hyperactive imagination, and constructs his story with the density that comes from attempting to end every page with a gag or shock, while still moving the plot on rapidly. To describe Red’s Planet as a roller-coaster of a plot completely understates the case. Not this time, as she’s abducted by an alien trader, taken to a vast market that’s attacked by pirates, then stranded on a desert planet with assorted other aliens. ![]() ![]() For starters, she’s not happy about being called Red, and additionally not happy with her foster home or her fellow fostered children, but repeated attempts to run away have failed. ![]()
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