The Year in Comics, Week Six: On Bill Finger & Wayne Boring’s The Girl In Superman’s PastIt’s hard to tell at first from looking that the Clark Kent of 1959’s The Girl In Superman’s Past is desperately in love.
Miracleman, Chapter 3 ConcludesWe’ve introduced Miracleman and discussed its first and second, plus most of the third (part one, part two). We now conclude our look at this third chapter of Alan Moore and Garry Leach’s Miracleman stories,… [more]
When Adrian Veidt Owns Shakespeare: Why I’m Against Before WatchmenDC Comics recently officially announced that it would be reviving the characters from Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon’s revered graphic novel, Watchmen, for a slew of prequel spin-off comics. In my opinion, these prequels are… [more]
Why Batman Isn’t a WingnutRecently, a friend of mine clicked on a Batman-related TV show clip that found its way to the front page of Reddit.
The Power Ring and the Comic Book (Part 4)In part 1 of this series I wrote: When DC Comics issued their refurbished versions of such characters as the Flash and Green Lantern, the heroes still fought assorted “done-in-one-story” menaces while the narratives remained… [more]
Deconstructing Batman and Robin: The Grayson Foils, Part 3The first six issues of Grant Morrison’s Batman and Robin expertly put Dick Grayson in a position that readers weren’t used to seeing him in – one of vulnerability.
The Year in Comics, Week Five: Crime Does Not PaySome of it is still shocking.
Miracleman, Chapter 3: “When Johnny Comes Marching Home”We’ve introduced Miracleman and discussed its first and second episodes, plus the first page of chapter three. We now continue our look at that third chapter of Alan Moore and Garry Leach’s Miracleman stories, which… [more]
Two Books About Grant Morrison Now on KindleSequart Research & Literacy Organization’s celebrated Grant Morrison: The Early Years and Our Sentence is Up: Seeing Grant Morrison’s The Invisibles are both now available on Kindle.
On Breast-Feeding and BooberyI know that in my column here, which is unofficially titled “Living Fiction,” I usually adopt the hippy dippy angle of “comics are more real than we think” or whatever and apply it to whatever… [more]