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Great British Comics:An Introduction
Contrary to some claims that British comics are dead, in fact they continue to this day and are thriving. More...
Posted: July 30, 2006
Alan Moore:New Moore's Almanac
His recent retirement from mainstream comics also signifies his creative renewal and rebirth. More...
Posted: July 23, 2006
Savage Pencil:The Bite Of The Pencil
Savage Pencil's cartoons embody the punk rock spirit of Britain in the late Seventies. More...
Posted: July 9, 2006
Barry Windsor-Smith:Comics Registered Genius
Would you fly to New York aged 19, with no money or job, hoping to break into Marvel Comics? More...
Posted: July 2, 2006
PG Tips No. 3:Paul Gravett's Recommended Reading
Paul Gravett reviews more books of and about comics from his recommended reading list. More...
Posted: June 25, 2006
Matt Broersma:We're Not In Texas Anymore
He is weaving together quirky dreams, unresolved intrigues and striking atmospheric landscapes. More...
Posted: June 18, 2006
Rob Dunlop & Peter Lumby:Tozzer
Tozzer has more gags per second than a supermodel in a restaurant toilet. More...
Posted: June 11, 2006
Andrzej Klimowski:Unlocking The Secret
He questions the act of looking, being looked at, the perception of characters, narrator and reader. More...
Posted: June 4, 2006
PG Tips No. 2:Paul Gravett's Recommended Reading
Paul Gravett reviews books of and about comics from his recommended reading list. More...
Posted: May 28, 2006
Ron Regé Jr:Cute Brut
Slow down when you read his pictures and ornately lettered words and they will leave you awakened. More...
Posted: May 21, 2006
Frank Miller:It's Miller Time
He subverts the superheroes into a satire of political corruption, flabby liberalism and media babble. More...
Posted: May 14, 2006
Escape Magazine:The Great Escape Twenty Years On
Paul Gravett re-assesses the legacy of Escape, the 1980s comics anthology magazine. More...
Posted: May 7, 2006
Classics Illustrated:A Cultural History
After food, clothing, shelter and companionship, our other primal need will always be for classic good stories. More...
Posted: April 30, 2006
An Introduction
The flood of translated manga is only the tiniest toenail clipping of the big, scary Godzilla that is manga. More...
Posted: April 23, 2006
Dupuy & Berberian:A Double-Barrelled Partnership
The collaboration between Dupuy and Berberian has become a third person, with the sum greater than the parts. More...
Posted: April 16, 2006
Jill Thompson:A Walk On The Fright Side
With writing and ideas that crackle with invention, don't wait for Halloween to fall under Scary Godmother's spell. More...
Posted: April 9, 2006
British Comics:New Brits On The Block - Part 2
Six recent Brit books prove that the UK still has a vibrant comics scene. More...
Posted: April 2, 2006
British Comics:New Brits On The Block - Part 1
There are encouraging signs of UK publishers setting up and renewed interest from major publishers. More...
Posted: March 26, 2006
Curt Swan:A Superman Walked Among Us
Under his sensitive pencil, Superman won not just our awe and admiration, but our affection and sympathy. More...
Posted: March 19, 2006
PG Tips No. 1:Paul Gravett's Recommended Reading
In the first of a regular series of articles, Paul Gravett reviews comics from his recommended reading list. More...
Posted: March 12, 2006
Angoulême 2006:The International BD Festival
Paul Gravett reports on the four-day feast of global comics culture like no other. More...
Posted: February 26, 2006
Carla Speed McNeil:Finders Keepers
With Finder, she is creating some of the most sophisticated and satisfying science fiction in comics. More...
Posted: February 19, 2006
Nabiel Kanan:The Birthday Riots
With xenophobia and racial prejudice percolating across Europe, The Birthday Riots is all the more relevant. More...
Posted: February 12, 2006
Lewis Trondheim:Angoulême Grand Prix Winner 2006
Winner of the highest honour at the 2006 French BD Festival, he remains defiantly spontaneous and prolific. More...
Posted: February 5, 2006
Mike Mignola:To Hellboy & Back Again
A bright red child with cloven hooves, sawn-off horns, forked tail can only be called Hellboy. More...
Posted: January 22, 2006
Hergé & Tintin:Discover A World Of Tintinology
No comic creator or character has inspired so many books to be written as these two Belgian institutions. More...
Posted: January 15, 2006
Tintin At The Barbican:A Theatre Review
Paul Gravett reviews the Young Vic's stage adaptation of Hergé's favourite Tintin story, Tintin In Tibet. More...
Posted: January 15, 2006
Tintin & Snowy:A Boy & His Dog
While America has its costumed musclemen, Belgium has a spunky youngster in plus-four trousers. More...
Posted: January 8, 2006
Richard Corben:Getting Over The Underground
Underground artist Richard Corben is due a reappraisal as one of America's most individualistic comic artists. More...
Posted: January 1, 2006
Schuiten & Peeters:Cities Of The Fantastic
Explore grand designs of architectural impossibilities realised in ravishing, meticulous sequential art. More...
Posted: December 18, 2005
Dan Clowes:Send In The Clowes
Numbed by consumerism and obsessed with pop culture, Dan Clowes yearns for more than our mundane reality. More...
Posted: December 11, 2005
Sam Kieth:To The Maxx & Beyond
Sam Kieth has always shown a real empathy for troubled loners and female characters in his comics. More...
Posted: December 4, 2005
France’s New Wave:Lewis Trondheim & David B.
As co-founders of publisher, L'Association, Lewis Trondheim & David B have revolutionised French comics. More...
Posted: November 27, 2005
Dave McKean:Mixed Media
The radical art techniques of Dave McKean challenge the accepted notion of what comics can be. More...
Posted: November 13, 2005
P. Craig Russell:Magnum Opus
Adapting opera into comics, P. Craig Russell unlocks the medium's expressive powers to make his pages sing. More...
Posted: November 6, 2005
Osamu Tezuka:The God Of Manga
Would Japan's mammoth manga and anime industries exist today without the innovations of Osamu Tezuka? More...
Posted: October 30, 2005
Kyle Baker:The Fabulous Baker Boy
For genuinely funny graphic novels, few can compete with New York cartoonist Kyle Baker. More...
Posted: October 23, 2005
Will Eisner:The Grand Master Of Comic Book Art
A pioneer of the graphic novel, he was on a life long mission to fulfil the potential of the comic medium. More...
Posted: October 16, 2005
Marjane Satrapi:First Person History
Discover life in Iran during the Islamic Revolution with Marjane Satrapi and her autobiographical book, Persepolis. More...
Posted: October 9, 2005
Charles Burns:Body Horror In Black Ink
Investigate the worlds of horror, teenage plagues and black holes created by Charles Burns. More...
Posted: October 2, 2005
Trade Paperbacks:TPB Or Not TPB? That Is The Question!
What is the future of the standard American comic book? Does the stapled pamphlet even have a future? More...
Posted: September 25, 2005












