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8 Graphic Novels You Might Not Know (and Should)

By: DThompson | in: Comics, General |

Sincity

When I was a kid they were called comic books and I was forbidden to read them. They fostered “lazy reading habits” according to my mom and were “a waste of time and money” as far as my dad was concerned. To be fair, my parents were mostly right. Comic art was merely serviceable, if not outright crude, and the story lines were usually juvenile. But, then I was in a book store and saw a copy of Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight. Things had changed in comic book land when I wasn’t looking, and very much for the better. For one thing the art had become top notch, and the stories were skewing to the more complicated.
By now everyone knows about the handful of really BIG graphic novels. The ones by Frank Miller (Sin City, 300, The Dark Knight) and Alan Moore (From Hell, Watchmen, The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen) and Neil Gaiman (Sandman). However, like every other field of endeavor the crème de la crème of graphic novels are merely the uppermost visible layer of a number of equally worthy efforts.

Johnny The Homicidal Maniac

Johnny The Homicidal Maniac by Johnen Vasquez
The world probably best knows Johnen Vasquez through his kid-friendly “Invader Zim” show, but he got his start on Slave Labor Graphics with the truly skewed Johnny the Homicidal Maniac. The “hero” was exactly what the title claimed, a serial killer who Vasquez used as a mouthpiece for his sardonic, and very funny, observances on posers, hicks, suburbanites and everyone else he didn’t like (which was mostly everyone). One of the best black and white comics ever, Johnny is now available in a collected volume and deserves a place among the top works in the field.
If You Like This You May Enjoy: Squee (Vasquez’s Johnny “sequel”, of sorts), I Luv Halloween

Bone

Bone by Jeff Smith
For a while Bone was only available in a collected edition which greed heads were charging $100 for. I paid. Then, a month later Bone was released anew for about one fifth the price. Good for you that it was because Bone’s epic story, equal parts Lord Of The Rings and Pogo is well worth your time. Following the adventures of three… well, creatures, who are sort of human… sort of… the book follows them into a dangerous exile at once deserved and unjust. There have been any number of “animal” comics but rarely are they as humanistic as Bone. More than a simple fantasy of good vs. evil, it’s about revenge, betrayal, greed and sacrifice. Weighty themes indeed for a comic book.
If You Like This You May Enjoy: Cerebus, Moonshadow

Open Me... I’m A Dog! By Art Spiegelman

Open Me… I’m A Dog! By Art Spiegelman
After wowing the comic community and most of the rest of the world with his graphic novel cum holocaust memoir Maus, Spiegelman took a break and wrote the best children’s story of a comic book I’ve ever read. This story is one of a kind, claiming not to be a book, but actually a bewitched puppy, (it even has a leash attached). As the little orange dog spins his tale the tiny book casts its own spell, pulling in even the most jaded.
If You Like This You May Enjoy: The Day I Swapped My Dad For Two Goldfish, The Wolves In The Walls

The Incal by Moebius and Jodorowski

The Incal by Moebius and Jodorowski
Yes, that Moebius, so you know the art is great, and yes that Jodorowsky, so you know the story is… totally confusing. The Incal is one of the best science fiction art films never committed to celluloid. Follow a character named John DiFool on a journey of discovery not merely life changing but transforming of the entire detailed future society in which he lives. If I had an extra skijillion dollars laying around, I’d be filming this right now.
If You Like This You May Enjoy: The Airtight Garage, The Nikopol Trilogy

gyo

Gyo by Junji Ito
One of Japan’s foremost authors of horror comics, Ito tends to concentrate on horrendous bodily transformation as a theme. Working less on scream your guts out terror than on a general and well-defined sense of creeping unstoppable dread, Ito’s stories trap their helpless protagonists in worlds literally twisted. Surrounded by the insane and the gleefully mutating, a young man named Tadashi has to contend with a world of giant reeking mutant fish – to start.
If You Like This You May Enjoy: Uzumaki, anything by Hideshi Hino

Marshal Law: Fear and Loathing

Marshal Law: Fear And Loathing by Pat Mills and Kevin O’Neill
Starting their partnership in the British comic magazine 2000A.D. by creating the sci-fi aliens versus bondage outfitted inquisition tale Nemesis: The Warlock, the team went on to create the long-out-of-print Metalzoic graphic novel about a world of bio-mechanoid dinosaurs. However, as excellent as these earlier works are the culmination of the Mills/O’Neill style is surely the Marshal Law series, of which Fear And Loathing is the first. Delving into sado-masochistic sex and satirizing the glorification of violence that remains a trend in comics, Marshal Law is a real original. The main character is a bio-enhanced “super soldier” back from some tantalizingly obscure South American conflict. Currently, Marshal Law, as he’s known, spends his days bringing other enhanced war “heroes” to justice. And, by that, I mean killing them. It’s all drawn in an unusual angular style and like Watchmen the pannels are dense with information, every background scrawl is worth reading.
If You Like This You May Enjoy: Nemesis: The Warlock, Judge Dredd: Apocalypse War

freaks.jpg

Freaks Of The Heartland by Steve Niles and Greg Ruth
Mix Frankenstein with a dash of Of Mice And Men stir in a little pre-adolescent reminiscence and you have Freaks Of The Heartland. Freaks fashions itself a horror story, and while horrible events happen, the real fear, as in the best tales of terror, lies in plumbing the blackest corners of the human heart. This story’s strength lies not in its tale of mutation and parental neglect in extremis but in its evocation of a desolate and isolated farming community. It’s not often reading a graphic novel you think you can almost feel a cold October breeze blowing across a moonlit field but Freaks Of The Heartland manages the trick quite nicely.
If You Like This You May Enjoy: Though not really the same, Freaks has a similar style of rural American horror as can be found in the first four volumes of the collected Swamp Thing, comprising Alan Moore’s “American Gothic” storyline.

The Last Christmas

The Last Christmas by Gerry Duggan and Brian Posehn
What happens to Santa after a nuclear war? What happens to Christmas when marauding bands of mutants roam the earth? What kind of a story would you get if you crossed a Rankin/Bass holiday special with The Road Warrior? Gary the singing snowman is ready to tell you all about it. If you’ve always dreamed of a hard-drinking gun-toting, curse-spewing, mutant-killing, hagard, bleary, hung over Santa; my friend, has your ship ever come in!
If You Like This You May Enjoy: Art Adams’ Gumby Christmas Special, Battle Pope


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Posted on February 17, 2008

Comments

32 Responses to “8 Graphic Novels You Might Not Know (and Should)”

  1. Maor on February 17th, 2008 6:54 am

    Nice one D!
    I’m gonna get cracking on the Last Christmas, looks good.


  2. HMTKSteve on February 17th, 2008 7:48 am

    Those are some good finds! Everyone has heard of the Watchmen but most of these (except for Bone) are unknown to me.


  3. DThompson on February 17th, 2008 1:54 pm

    Rusty - The Last Christmas is some wicked cool fun!
    HTMK Steve - Have you read Bone? What did you think of it?


  4. Arielle on February 17th, 2008 2:59 pm

    Johnny the Homicidal Maniac is amazing! Glad to see someone gave it some recognition!


  5. Scott on February 17th, 2008 3:36 pm

    I agree with the ones you’ve chosen, but I’m kind of surprised that Transmetropolitan by Warren Ellis/Darick Robertson and Ex Machina by Brian K. Vaughan/Tony Harris aren’t on this list… Transmet especially is one of my favorite graphic novels of all time!


  6. Duncan on February 17th, 2008 3:45 pm

    Whaaat no Transmet? My all time favourite so far
    Bear is good too..
    Sin City?
    V for Vendetta?


  7. DThompson on February 17th, 2008 3:57 pm

    Scott - Ex Machina was a consideration, but I didn’t want the list to get unwieldy. For the record, I love Ex Machina, it’s a great series of books.
    Scott & Duncan - I’ve known of Transmetropolitan for some time but haven’t ever gotten around to reading it. I hear good things on a consistent basis though and perhaps when my tax return comes wandering in…
    Duncan - No Sin City or V For Vendetta because those are graphic novels that I would consider to be fairly well known, I left Sandman, Preacher, Mage, Watchmen, Akira, Ronin, and Frank Miller’s Elektra books off for the same reason. However, it can’t be said enough that Sin City and one of my personal favorites, V For Vendetta are well worth reading.


  8. Itax on February 17th, 2008 4:06 pm

    I don’t see how I can resist a mutant-killing Santa and trippy thing like I know the Incal is going to be.


  9. DThompson on February 17th, 2008 4:30 pm

    You can’t resist Itax, you are growing sleepy…sleepy…


  10. DThompson on February 17th, 2008 4:43 pm

    And my apologies to HMTK Steve for screwing up his name in my response.
    You may refer to me as TDhompson in the future.


  11. Joe on February 17th, 2008 6:39 pm

    These all seem pretty good, a few of them I have heard but one[Gyo] (I have just taken a break between them) sounds similar to one of H.P. Lovecraft’s stories named Dagon. The story also seems to have that H.P. Lovecraft feel to it, a twisting/breaking at the seems world.

    Lone Wolf and Cub? I don’t think its too widely known and I remember it being badass.


  12. Laighid on February 17th, 2008 8:40 pm

    what about Kabukki? or the sin cities? or dog witch?


  13. DThompson on February 18th, 2008 2:33 am

    Laighid - Sin City is reasonably well known and since this is a list of not-well-known books, it isn’t here. But I agree, the Sin City books are great.
    I haven’t heard of Dog Witch or Kabuki, though from what I can see on Amazon.com, Kabuki seems interesting.


  14. Tibi on February 19th, 2008 9:43 am

    The comics all look great D. Great finds!


  15. DThompson on February 19th, 2008 1:01 pm

    Thanks Tibi! :)


  16. Hawkitalk on February 20th, 2008 10:22 am

    Grant morrison’s Filth?


  17. DThompson on February 20th, 2008 12:19 pm

    Ai ya, Hawkitalk! What a fantastic suggestion! I can only say that Filth was VERY much on my mind but, again, in the interest of not making the list too long I left it off. Be assured, if I ever write a follow up to this, The Filth will be on that list.


  18. Dana on February 22nd, 2008 4:22 pm

    JTHM has a following in upstate new york, I mean, I knew about Jhonen’s work before invader zim, and then to see his work on television was pretty cool.


  19. DThompson on February 23rd, 2008 2:15 am

    JTHM deserves a following in upstate New York, and everywhere else! It’s one of the best comics I’ve ever read.


  20. theo on February 24th, 2008 11:00 am

    many of those are new to me
    but have you read
    XIII

    now thats a series (the biggest selling in Europe at one time)

    yes only the first few are in english but they are abso-feckin-lootly nuts


  21. Alex on March 2nd, 2008 10:01 am

    Wow, Gyo is on there. That’s one freaky series I gotta admit. Uzumaki is the exact same thing as Gyo, just another horror story. Both have that black cover, same font, etc. I got 4 total, 2 Gyo and 2 Uzumaki.

    Not the best to read if you’re easily creeped out, but they’re pretty fun. Also Drifting Classroom is good if you like horror/suspense.


  22. R L on March 4th, 2008 10:29 am

    What about TinTin and Asterix- these are overlooked far too often


  23. Charbarred on March 4th, 2008 11:25 am

    @R L TinTin and Asterix are probably the blueprint for graphic novels. I don’t think they are overlooked.


  24. GeorgeDexter on March 4th, 2008 10:44 pm

    Thanx for including JTHM and Squee: they’re deliciously good. I’ve always been a fan of Marshal Law, too. How about some props for Grendel? It’s not well known, but definitely one of my all-time favs.


  25. dh baum on March 4th, 2008 11:26 pm

    Yes, literature and art are not often combined in ways that evoke emotions, reality, and the option to visualize more than the cell. These graphic novels grab the reader viseraly and visualy, they also require a visual imagining by the reader opening the closeted reflection of ones soul. Comic book, hell no, Arcum’s sanity of self as you tear yourself inside out! It’s not ‘the dark side,’ there just is illumination in ink.


  26. DThompson on March 5th, 2008 2:24 am

    George Dexter,
    You think Grendel isn’t well known? It was the most popular thing Matt Wagner ever did as far as I know. I thought it was VERY well known… Anyways, the Grendel book I’d have chosen would have been devil’s legacy with art by the Pander Brothers and that’s been out of print for YEARS.
    O, cruel twist of fate! O universe, godless, cold and cruel that keeps Devil’s Legacy from the reading public while making sure so many less deserving books remain in print!


  27. sir jorge on March 7th, 2008 4:20 pm

    this list is awesome, thank you so much.


  28. DThompson on March 11th, 2008 1:01 pm

    You’re more than welcome sir jorge, and thank you for your kind words! :)


  29. GeorgeDexter on March 13th, 2008 7:02 pm

    Hey D, I had no idea Grendel was so popular. I prefer the later chapters, myself. But I do have a triple signed copy (Wagner plus both Panders) of the Devil’s Legacy limited edition, leather-bound copy that I picked up for under $100 back in the day (early 1990s) ;)


  30. Kivi on March 18th, 2008 7:59 pm

    I am a sucker for lists like this. Thanks. I think I have seen these as graphic novels, so I would add Howard Chaykin’s Black Kiss and Alan Moore’s Miracleman series (for a more obscure Alan Moore story, anyway).


  31. DThompson on April 2nd, 2008 7:36 pm

    Both excellent choices, Kivi!


  32. Jonah on May 16th, 2008 2:10 pm

    No love for “Y: the Last Man”?
    Fables is great as well.


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