"Second Thoughts" is like a David Lynch screenplay with fewer bodies. We're presented with a man and a woman whose brief encounter in an airport spurs changes in both of their lives...or does it? Characters go by multiple names, and wake up in bed with different people. Things aren't helped by the first-person camera view that Asker employs on some pages.
After reading it a couple of times, its unique structure came together. However, if it weren't for the blurb on the back cover that "reality and fiction overlap in this...graphic novel about he lives we imagine for ourselves and the lives we imagine for others," I would have been completely lost. On the plus-side, Asker has a very clean inking style that deserves a second look.