Crisis In Time
If you’re going to write about Crisis On Infinite Earths, it’s best to go deep, and in Tegan’s latest installment of Ice Cream for Bedwetters, that’s exactly what she does.
If you’re going to write about Crisis On Infinite Earths, it’s best to go deep, and in Tegan’s latest installment of Ice Cream for Bedwetters, that’s exactly what she does.
While we can’t make every Thursday Eleanor Davis Day, this Thursday is Eleanor Davis Day, and if you don’t like it…well, i’m sure there’s a bus station in your crappy town. Make use of it, buster!
Nancy Drew meets David Lynch in this mystery thriller graphic novel set in a remote and eerie east-coast village, published by Conundrum Press.
Two of the most talented artists working today sit down to debate the value of guilt, celebrate the potency of the competitive spirit, and demand a better way to live.
What’s good and bad in new webomics — and a look at what could be called “Tumblr style.”
It’s time for your breakfast, and your breakfast is a review, a podcast and more.
The Photobooth and Long Red Hair creator discusses Geneviève Castrée, Jillian and Mariko Tamaki, Ames Lettering Guide revelations, and her favorite circus art.
A preview, an interview, a review, and a link. But don’t you want to get more specific than that?
An excerpt from Dilraj Mann’s upcoming graphic novel with Nobrow, the science fiction thriller Dalston Monsterzz.
Ardo Omer wanted to know more about how gg makes her comics, why the quest for freedom keeps coming up in her stories and most importantly, what’s up with all that pink?
Through writing for this site and being employed by its publisher, I occasionally am lucky enough to get sent books in the mail. None of them have floored me quite like one I received a couple weeks back called Qoberious Vol. 1. It was completely striking, yet familiar; esoteric, but entirely personal. I read it,… Read more »
A look into the heart of a man, a reminder of the death of criticism and some major hire for the Gray Lady.
Matt Seneca’s new column for the Journal documents what he’s read so far this year–the good, the great, the bad & The Authority.
Bud Grace’s wicked cultural satire ends its thirty-year run.
The comics made by contributors, a reminder that anti-vaxxers aren’t the only ones who don’t care about herd immunity, and a visit to the other House of Ideas.
Disease strikes, and the question of whether to seek medical attention begins in this preview of M.S. Harkness’ upcoming comic, Tinderella!
Within the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, we come across Sherrie Levine’s 1989 art work Untitled (Mr. Austridge: 2). It is not currently on view, but was up in the galleries from June 30, 2010 through September 12, 2011. It is an exact replica, save the grain of the… Read more »
Free comics, the hopefully final word on the latest Neil Gaiman non-Sandman cash grab and a giant, glorious interview. It’s Thursday in Heaven!
Joe Infurnari has some battle scars to show for his years in the comics industry, and he’s not afraid to tell the stories behind them. The Toronto-based artist and occasional writer recently completed “So What That You Can Draw!?”, a collection of his sketchbook art inspired by a massive falling-out with a longtime artist friend.… Read more »