
Comedy in Tragedy: That It Should Come to This
Book
Nothing can come of nothing. The comic in Shakespeare's tragedies mockingly swings the far-seen end...

StarTalk Radio
Podcast
Science meets comedy and pop culture on StarTalk Radio! Astrophysicist and Hayden Planetarium...

Glad to Wear Glasses
Book
Comic, poet, singer, songwriter and glasses-wearer, John Hegley has captivated and devastated...

Black Rat
Book
Black Rat is the sleeper in the shadow, the wanderer in the woods. He walks between worlds and...

John Berendt recommended The Magic Christian in Books (curated)

David McK (3496 KP) rated The Death of Superman (The Death and Return of Superman, #1) in Books
Jan 30, 2019
It doesn't hold.
Back in the early 90s, I remember one comic book,in particular, that made the headlines, when DC decided to take what was then a massive risk and kill off one of their lead characters.
This was in the days, of course, before that trick became 'old hat; before the comic industry kept killing off and bringing back to life their leads.
Reading it now, even if the plot isn't that strong (who is Doomsday? Where has he come from? What does he want? Why was it the the Justice League of Americas B-team that went out to face him and got taken apart?), it's interesting to see how the medium has moved on: in particular (mostly) away for the lurid brightly coloured panels of this comic.
I have to say, as well, if you thought the devastation of Metropolis at the end of the recent(ish) 'Man of Steel' movie was bad, read this ...

Swamp Thing, Vol. 1: Saga of the Swamp Thing
Book
Before WATCHMEN, Alan Moore made his debut in the U.S. comic book industry with the revitalization...

Marble Season
Book
In his first book with Faber, Hernandez tells the untold stories of these American comics legends'...

Birthday
Book
The birth of their daughter should be one of the happiest days of Ed and Lisa's life. An NHS...
