archive
The Extraordinary Adventures of Adele Blanc-Sec
Pterror over Paris and The Eiffel Tower Demon
Adèle becomes involved in an interlocking series of mysteries that involve a revived pterodactyl, a frightful on-stage murder, a looming execution by guillotine and a demon from the depths of hell.
News and Reviews
The Crackle of the Frost
One year after leaving his girlfriend Alice as a result of her request that they have a child together, Samuel returns to Alice when he learns she is pregnant to either reopen or close forever the chapter of his life involving her. Translated by Kim Thompson.
News and Reviews
Wonder Woman 1
Blood
When Wonder Woman learns the secret her mother Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons, has kept regarding her father, her life shatters.
News and Reviews
The Carter Family
Don't Forget This Song
In graphic novel format, tells the story of the Carter Family--the first superstar group of country music--revealing the family's rise to success, their struggles along the way, and their impact on contemporary music.
News and Reviews
The Graphic Canon, Volume 1
From The Epic Of Gilgamesh To Shakespeare To Dangerous Liaisons
Collects classics from around the world in graphic novel format, including "The Iliad," "The Divine Comedy," and "Don Quixote."
News and Reviews
Building Stories
The award-winning creator of Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth presents an intricately illustrated, sprawling tale about the residents in a three-story Chicago apartment building, including a lonely single woman, a couple who are growing to despise each other and an elderly landlady.
News and Reviews
The Best American Comics 2012
The New Yorker's Francoise Mouly showcases the work of both established and up-and-coming contributors culled from graphic novels, pamphlet comics, newspapers, magazines, mini-comics and the Web.
News and Reviews
Marbles
Mania, Depression, Michelangelo, & Me
An artist describes her bipolar disorder diagnosis and her struggles with mental stability while discussing other artists and creative people throughout history who were also labeled as "crazy" — including Vincent van Gogh, Georgia O'Keeffe and Sylvia Plath.
News and Reviews
Drawn Together
The legendary cartooning duo of R. Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb describe the ups and downs of their marriage, the obstacles faced by struggling artists and the way their lives changed after the birth of their daughter, Sophie.
News and Reviews
The Underwater Welder
This new graphic novel from Jeff Lemire, the writer-artist behind popular comic series Sweet Tooth, follows Jack Joseph, an underwater welder on an oil rig and a father-to-be, who has a life-changing experience deep in the ocean.
News and Reviews
Unterzakhn
Growing up on the teeming streets of New York's Lower East Side in the early 20th century, Jewish immigrant twins Esther and Fanya experience radically different lives as a burlesque dancer in a brothel and a nurse for an obstetrician who performs illegal abortions.
News and Reviews
The Art of Daniel Clowes
Modern Cartoonist
Examines the work and accomplishments of the author of Eightball, Ghost World, and other alternative comics and graphic novels.
News and Reviews
Are You My Mother?
A Comic Drama
Depicts the author's mother as a voracious reader, music lover and passionate amateur actress who quietly suffers as the wife of a closeted gay artist and withdraws from her young daughter, who searches for answers to the separation later in life.NPR Bestseller
News and Reviews
Jim Henson's Tale of Sand
An original graphic novel adaptation of an unproduced, feature-length screenplay follows scruffy everyman Mac, who wakes up in an unfamiliar town and is chased across the desert of the American Southwest by all manner of man and beast.
News and Reviews
cover image
Bill the Boy Wonder: The Secret Co-Creator of Batman
Batman's biggest secret isn't Bruce Wayne — it's his forgotten co-creator, Bill Finger. Batman is usually credited to Bob Kane, who'd been commissioned by DC Comics to come up with a hit superhero. But Kane approached Finger for help — and it was Bill Finger who invented everything from Gotham City to Batman's tragic backstory. But he never got the credit — until recently. Illustrations by Ty Templeton.
News and Reviews
God and Science
Return of the Ti-Girls
This "director's cut" volume traces Penny Century's decades-long quest to become a genuine heroine, and other superheroic stories in Jaime Hernandez's fictional world, as originally featured in Love and Rockets: New Stories.

















