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Review: Disorder #1-3
How about a collection of body horror comics in pure raw feelings manifesting exposed vulnerability, capturing mental health and dysphoria in black and white sketch twisted art in a style that impacts like the product of M.C Escher, Junji Ito, H.R…
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Review: A Spatchcock Mystery; The Final Curtain
How about a "murder" mystery with a gluttonous filling of cake puns and laugh out loud comedy with the endearing nature of a daytime tv detective show in disarmingly charming black and white art? Then wipe away the crumbs of confusion with A…
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Review: Burn With Me by Steven Ingram
How about some unsettling modern folk horror about the dynamic structure of toxic friendships, misguided beliefs, the power of ritual and how true it is that if you play with fire, you're gonna get burned, or at least someone will. Well, Steven…
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Review: Essential Judge Anderson: Shamballa
Essential Judge Anderson: Shamballa releases this month and serves as the opening volume in the Essential Judge Anderson lineup. Shamballa collects four stories featuring Judge Cassandra Anderson - Triad, The Witch? Report, Judge Corey: Leviathan's…
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Review: Diary of the Astro-Nudes
Diary of the Astro-Nudes is Ahmed Raafat's first comic writing project and is something of a passion project. Ahmed is a casual nudist and wanted to explore the topic in comic form. And as a fan of 60s comics, he wanted to play into that…
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Review: Bigger, by Mike Armstrong
Have you ever wanted to just look at the beautiful artwork in a comic and not bother with all the words? Love black and white art? Maybe you just want to appreciate that someone decided to make a comic with the added challenge of purely letting the…
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Review: Downlands by Norm Konyu
Downlands is the latest book from Norm Konyu, and if you've read any of his previous work, then you know that what you're going to get is going to blow you away. With Downlands, the book is being funded via Kickstarter and Crowdfundr. It explores…
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Je Ne Sais Quoi: The Adventures of a French Woman in London, Review
Je Ne Sais Quoi: The Adventures of a French Woman in London is a charming and heartwarming graphic memoir by Lucie Arnoux. Arnoux tells the story of her life as a young French woman who moves to London to pursue her dream of becoming a comics…