New York Review Comics

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PREMIUM

Distant Ruptures

CF’s (Gymnasium) sparse, highly expressive illustration, experimental approach to page and panel layout, and narrative pacing challenge traditional perceptions of how a comic can be read and experienced. A sometimes enigmatic but ultimately deeply engaging collection from an expert of the form.

Blurry

This novel in intricately crafted interconnected stories represents by far the most emotionally affecting and thematically rich entry in Shaw’s already-impressive body of work. Not to be missed.
PREMIUM

Ninja Sarutobi Sasuke

Shigeru’s sense of design and bold use of collage and montage effects result in an enjoyably silly and absurd masterpiece of early psychedelic art.
PREMIUM

Spiral and Other Stories

Koch considers whether humans can understand and protect nature, and her multi-form characters call readers to recognize them, to empathize and preserve. A good volume for ecology collections; also important for students of graphic narrative.

Masters of the Nefarious: Mollusk Rampage

Parisian cartoonist La Police’s English-language debut pokes fun at tropes drawn from the pulpier genres, with a thrillingly unique blend of deadpan humor and surreal silliness that is both uproarious and evocative of a fascinating, singular vision.

Poor Helpless Comics!: The Cartoons (and More) of Ed Subitzky

Subitzky’s uninhibited imagination and penchant for absurd humor create a thrillingly revelatory collection, with contributions by cartoonist Mark Newgarden.

Social Fiction

Montellier emerges as a true visionary of the graphic-novel medium and the science-fiction genre in these captivating tales of human beings struggling to retain their dignity under repressive regimes.
PREMIUM

The Ruling Clawss: The Socialist Cartoons of Syd Hoff

A smart purchase where New Yorker cartoons are popular, as these put a new spin on the bourgeois genre.

Bungleton Green and the Mystic Commandos

Featuring page after page of non-stop action and pulpy melodrama imbued with Jackson’s perspective as a Black American in the 1940s, this is a work of immense historical value that’s also very fun to read.
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