Continuing Fantagraphics’ master plan to separate comics fans from their life savings, the company announced two new archival projects at Comic-Con last week: The Complete Zap Comix and “The EC Comics ...
When the first issue of Zap Comix premiered in San Francisco in 1968, sold out of a baby carriage and emblazoned with the advisory panel “Fair Warning: For Adult Intellectuals Only," not many believed ...
Culturally, physically, scatologically — it’s hard to overstate “The Complete Zap Comix.” Let’s start with the thing itself: If I threw it at your head, and landed a solid strike, I might end you. It ...
Alex Dueben at Comic Book Resources has reported on my interview with Fantagraphics editors Gary Groth, Eric Reynolds, and Kristy Valenti at Emerald City Comicon over the weekend. (My piece about ...
It has been forty years and two generations since Robert Crumb published Zap Comix #1 in 1968, the first major event in the underground comix movement. Marking this anniversary, Patrick Rosenkranz’s ...
An iconic anthology bows out in a long-unpublished final issue featuring all of its premier artists, showcasing the differing styles that made each creator famous. Crumb's self-reflective comics ...
17 volumes : illustrations. Began with no. 0 (October 1967). Ceased with no. 16 (November 2014). Early issues were published by Apex Novelties and later reprinted by Last Gasp. Publisher became Print ...
Culturally, physically, scatologically — it’s hard to overstate “The Complete Zap Comix.” Let’s start with the thing itself: If I threw it at your head, and landed a solid strike, I might end you. It ...
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