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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


Manga:
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


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Comics Unmasked by Paul Gravett and John Harris Dunning from The British Library






Comics Art by Paul Gravett from Tate Publishing

1001 Comics  You Must Read Before You Die edited by Paul Gravett