Comic books

If anyone out there is a fellow comic book fan – I don’t mean web comics or things like that – what do you read these days? Even if they are back issues or reprints, although there’s a lot of new stuff out there.

Comments

  • Calvin and Hobbes, Asterix, Dan Dare .... I must get out more .....
  • EigonEigon Shipmate
    I got the latest in the Grandville series by Bryan Talbot just before Christmas. Grandville is the story of Inspector LeBrock, a badger who is an Inspector at Scotland Yard, in a Steampunk alternate history with anthropomorphic animals, where Napoleon conquered the British Isles. This is the story of LeBrock's mentor, an eagle called Stamford Hawksmoor, all done in sepia style, like a Sherlock Holmes story. It's very good!
  • LydaLyda Shipmate
    Uh...Mad Magazine?
  • Doonesbury has always been revered around here, assuring us that we are not alone.
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    Just read The Magic Fish for our graphic novel book club. I recommend it. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Magic_Fish
  • The 4. year old grandson has been introduced to Asterix
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    I love Asterix. I have many volumes at home in French or English. My grandparents introduced me to them when I was a wee tyke.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    Now I want wild boar for dinner.
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    First, bring me a menhir.
  • DafydDafyd Hell Host
    Caissa wrote: »
    I love Asterix. I have many volumes at home in French or English.
    US English or UK English? I am told that they are different translations. AIUI the US translation was fairly faithful and literal, whereas the UK translators when they came across an awful pun that wouldn't translate replaced it with an even worse pun.

  • Amusingly my knowledge of the history of Asterix comes via the pages of British Archaeology who are fond enough of it that they included the translator Anthea Bell (sister of Martin) in their roundup of notable people in archaeology who had died that year.

    As I understand it, they initially appeared in some UK comics in the 1960s as Little Fred & Big Ed, & Beric the Bold - set in Roman Britain, and in fairly stolid translations, before Bell & Hockridge got their hands on them and reintroduced the sparkle. The puns are certainly appalling!
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    I am going to assume I have a mix of US and UK English. I think the ones I received more than 50 years ago probably originated from the UK, David.
  • For Better Or For Worse - about a dozen collections.

    Dylan Dog and some other collections of works by Tiziano Sclavi. They are also useful for maintaining the little Italian I know.
  • CaissaCaissa Shipmate
    My wife owns all of the collected Peanuts and most of For Better or Worse.
  • For Better Or For Worse - about a dozen collections.

    Dylan Dog and some other collections of works by Tiziano Sclavi. They are also useful for maintaining the little Italian I know.

    I've never read Dylan Dog, but I do have the Batman crossover miniseries on my list of things to check out eventually.

    https://www.dc.com/graphic-novels/batman/dylan-dog-2024/batman/dylan-dog
  • ChastMastr wrote: »
    – I don’t mean web comics or things like that –

    I know you said no web comics, but your thread reminded me to look at Existential Comics (on the web) again - and they really are good.
  • ChastMastr wrote: »
    – I don’t mean web comics or things like that –

    I know you said no web comics, but your thread reminded me to look at Existential Comics (on the web) again - and they really are good.

    Reading the last couple of them, they are very funny and I’m going to have to add this to my list of things to read; hello the only web comics I’ve been following for some time now have been Doonesbury, Scandinavia and the world, Oglaf, Tom the dancing bug, and this modern world. There’s also one involving a benevolent mind flayer named Cthu taking a girl under his wing and teaching her magic that I don’t remember the name of that I need to catch up on. Oh and one by Greg Fox called Kyle’s B and B. And Tomics. And…
  • We were surprised to find that Asterix is still being written.
  • In the “2026 TV and Streaming” thread, @ChastMastr and I had this exchange. I figured any continuation of is better suited to this thread.
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    As is probably the case with most couples, there are things that my wife and I both like to watch, things she likes to watch but I don’t, and things I like to watch but she doesn’t. That last category includes anything with blood or violence, as well as fantasy and superhero movies and shows.

    I guess because of Life and Obligations, as well as maybe some reluctance based on not wanting to be disappointed (like I was with the 2023 movie), I never watched or got into “The Flash” when it was on from 2014–23, which is a bit surprising since the Flash was my favorite superhero when I was a kid. (I loved Superman and Batman, and Robin, but I wanted to be the Flash.) So, over the last however long, I’ve been watching all 184 episodes (plus crossovers with other Arrowverse shows) when I had a chance for the tv to myself. (Ah, retirement!)

    I confess to being surprised at just how much I liked it, even in later seasons when the plots maybe went off the rails a little. Even more surprising was just how much it affected me, tapping into young me in an almost therapeutic way—not what I expect from a tv show. It’s something I’m still processing, and may be for a while.
    Which Flash did you grow up with--Barry Allen or Wally West? (I mean, who was the main Flash in the comic series, since there are others, especially Jay Garrick.)
    I grew up with Barry Allen. (I was born in the early 60s.) Wally West—Iris’s nephew, rather than her brother as in the tv show—was Kid Flash
    Cool! I was born in 1967, so I also grew up with Barry Allen, but Wally became Flash for decades starting in 1985/6 after Crisis, and I think he was developed very well over the decades--and now they're both Flashes, plus Jay Garrick of course, and others, which I think is awesome. We really got to see Wally go from a younger kid to an older teen and then take on the legacy, and mature over time, and get married and have kids, and though he was gone due to Flashpoint in the New 52 (ick), he's back now and I'm very glad. Latest Flash issue is out today, in fact! And after this, Ryan North takes over the book, which will also be very good, in my view. Love Mark Waid too of course.
    I was born in ‘61, so I was 5 when the Adam West–Burt Ward Batman premiered, and that was the best thing on tv as far as my friends and I were concerned. My Batman bank was on my office shelf for decades.

    My avid comic reading days waned in the mid-to-late 70s, before Wally West became the Flash. From my 20s on, my comic book consumption came mostly in the form of movies and tv. I was generally aware of what was going on with DC comics (I never really liked or paid attention to Marvel), and from time to time I’d pick up a comic or two, or a collection—I have Flashpoint, The Dark Knight Returns, A Death in the Family, Superman: Earth One and some others. Some years there've been a comic or two in my stocking at Christmas.

    And I do still have pretty much all the comics I had as a kid.


  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    In the “2026 TV and Streaming” thread, @ChastMastr and I had this exchange. I figured any continuation of is better suited to this thread.
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    As is probably the case with most couples, there are things that my wife and I both like to watch, things she likes to watch but I don’t, and things I like to watch but she doesn’t. That last category includes anything with blood or violence, as well as fantasy and superhero movies and shows.

    I guess because of Life and Obligations, as well as maybe some reluctance based on not wanting to be disappointed (like I was with the 2023 movie), I never watched or got into “The Flash” when it was on from 2014–23, which is a bit surprising since the Flash was my favorite superhero when I was a kid. (I loved Superman and Batman, and Robin, but I wanted to be the Flash.) So, over the last however long, I’ve been watching all 184 episodes (plus crossovers with other Arrowverse shows) when I had a chance for the tv to myself. (Ah, retirement!)

    I confess to being surprised at just how much I liked it, even in later seasons when the plots maybe went off the rails a little. Even more surprising was just how much it affected me, tapping into young me in an almost therapeutic way—not what I expect from a tv show. It’s something I’m still processing, and may be for a while.
    Which Flash did you grow up with--Barry Allen or Wally West? (I mean, who was the main Flash in the comic series, since there are others, especially Jay Garrick.)
    I grew up with Barry Allen. (I was born in the early 60s.) Wally West—Iris’s nephew, rather than her brother as in the tv show—was Kid Flash
    Cool! I was born in 1967, so I also grew up with Barry Allen, but Wally became Flash for decades starting in 1985/6 after Crisis, and I think he was developed very well over the decades--and now they're both Flashes, plus Jay Garrick of course, and others, which I think is awesome. We really got to see Wally go from a younger kid to an older teen and then take on the legacy, and mature over time, and get married and have kids, and though he was gone due to Flashpoint in the New 52 (ick), he's back now and I'm very glad. Latest Flash issue is out today, in fact! And after this, Ryan North takes over the book, which will also be very good, in my view. Love Mark Waid too of course.
    I was born in ‘61, so I was 5 when the Adam West–Burt Ward Batman premiered, and that was the best thing on tv as far as my friends and I were concerned. My Batman bank was on my office shelf for decades.

    My avid comic reading days waned in the mid-to-late 70s, before Wally West became the Flash. From my 20s on, my comic book consumption came mostly in the form of movies and tv. I was generally aware of what was going on with DC comics (I never really liked or paid attention to Marvel), and from time to time I’d pick up a comic or two, or a collection—I have Flashpoint, The Dark Knight Returns, A Death in the Family, Superman: Earth One and some others. Some years there've been a comic or two in my stocking at Christmas.

    And I do still have pretty much all the comics I had as a kid.

    I can recommend Grant Morrison's excellent All-Star Superman!
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