It Came!
It Came! is a warm and constantly joyous parody of British cinema’s cult, sci-fi B-movies.
Graphic novel reviews
It Came! is a warm and constantly joyous parody of British cinema’s cult, sci-fi B-movies.
Harvey Kurtzman’s Jungle Book, originally published in 1959, inspired such comics greats as Art Spiegleman and Robert Crumb, and after a 25 year hiatus is finally back in print.
We often associate mid-life crisis with middle-aged men, but in the touching and gentle Lulu Anew it’s a middle-aged woman who finds herself questioning her life, throwing caution to the wind and taking a no-ties guilt-free holiday from her husband and three kids.
Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill’s Nemo trilogy has followed Janni Dakkar, the daughter of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen’s pirate submariner, across the globe. In this final book the threads come together as she chases an ancient enemy up the Amazon river.
Ready for a blast of classic old-school 2000AD? Never-before-reprinted Return to Armageddon is one of those classic thrills that could be from any boys’ adventure comic of the 60s, 70s or early 80s, before comics grew up to become graphic novels.
We reviewed the second of a planned trilogy of books set in Hong Kong’s walled city of Kowloon late last year but it’s only just been released – here’s the review to refresh your memory.
Richard McGuire’s Here doesn’t change its perspective over millions of years, charting the history of a small corner of the universe and the people that pass through it.
The middle volume of Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill’s Nemo trilogy sees our heroine taking on Fritz Lang’s automatons and Adenoid Hynkel, Charlie Chaplain’s version of Adolf Hitler.
Exquisite Corpse is a romantic comedy that’s long on style and atmosphere but a little light on substance.
Mixing the science of bugs with a story of insect exploration, Last of the Sandwalkers is an all-ages adventure comic with an educational twist.