If superhero comics are rooted in myth, why can't Wonder Woman get ahead of the curve? Writers have tried many things in the past couple decades, but nothing's really worked to everyone's satisfaction, has it? Dynastic models (supporting casts) have been created and discarded. John Byrne tried to give her a contextualizing city. In perhaps the most successful run, George Perez bubbled her up in Greek Myth.

Bubble Worlds exist in a larger universe. If they don't, they're just Worlds.
Things for Wonder Woman are looking up, however. After the last shift's wrong-headed direction (divorcing the character totally from her actual concept), she's building a Bubble World for Diana. Temporally, she's telling the story of Amazons through time and how Hippolyta even conceived of having a daughter. I'm actually interested in the queen's honor guard, so Simone is doing something right.

Spatially, the idea of Greek Myth is back, but one of the things that isolated Wonder Woman's world in the 80s is that the DCU has shown us countless pantheons and religious worldviews come to life (and I'm not really talking about the disappointing War of the Gods, though it does get a passing mention in WW #15). The Greek worldview should be important, but Gail Simone gives us a Wonder Woman who exists in a polytheistic universe.

And yet, she's not outside the mainstream DCU. Just as Green Lantern gets to bring the fight to Earth, Diana fights Captain Nazi and hangs out with talking gorillas. Gail Simone is uniquely suited to keeping the Amazons in the real world because she's got her fingers in so many titles. Characters and events she's developped for Birds of Prey can swerve into Wonder Woman or the All-New Atom, etc.
Though it's going to take a few issues to shake off or reinvent the trappings of the last shift's creative choices, I think Wonder Woman has finally become a title I can get into.
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