Marvel Fan-Fiction and Scottish Indies.


Cover for All-New, All-Different Avengers Annual #1. Illustrated by Alex Ross. Photo courtesy of Marvel Comics.

Cover for All-New, All-Different Avengers Annual #1. Illustrated by Alex Ross. Photo courtesy of Marvel Comics.

‘Annual’ releases exist in a strange place in the comic world. Created as a way to tell a different story in a series without interrupting the main plotline or numbering, some see annuals as a marketing gimmick. But, as evidenced by All-New, All-Different Avengers Annual #1, they can be a bold chance to think outside the box. This issue sees everyone’s favorite teen from Jersey City, Ms. Marvel, logging onto her favorite fan-fiction website to write some stories about her fellow heroes. Once logged on, she sees that other people have written stories about her and her friends, and she’s shocked but compelled to read on. The rest of this comic, then, are those fan-fiction stories of Marvel heroes. Layered, and with plenty of goofiness and a variety of styles, this annual does exactly what it should: it tells weird stories the regular comics certainly couldn’t.

Cover for Harrow County #15. Cover illustrated by Tyler Cook. Photo courtesy of Dark Horse Comics.

Cover for Harrow County #15. Cover illustrated by Tyler Cook. Photo courtesy of Dark Horse Comics.

This horror-centric comic is on its way to television as a new show on Syfy, and it’ll be a work of art if it captures even a slice of the mood, tone, and tenor of the books. Harrow County’s a creepy little town where monsters and strange things prowl around the edges. Emmy, a resident of the town, finds she’s connected deeply to the supernatural roots and history of Harrow. This issue sees Emmy trying to reconcile her place in the world, and the comic drips with a low, thumping dread. This is horror with something to say, a spooky comic that doesn’t pander to its readers.

Treehouse

Cover for Treehouse Volume 8. Cover design by Rebecca Horner. Photo via Treehouse Comics Collective.

The Dundee, Scotland-based Treehouse Comics Collective is a showcase for fantastic up-and-coming Scottish creators. This volume of comics ranges in style and tone from Kathryn Briggs’ lighthearted (but beautifully illustrated) comic about cats in outer space, to a sparse mini-comic about velociraptors. Full of off-center wit and an array of sketching styles, Treehouse Volume 8 is a great, breezy read for adventurous readers interested in raw talent.

You can see and read more at The Creator’s Project. I’m looking forward to these!

Comments

  1. blf says

    Sighs… No, no, no, not skulls. Babies. And puppies. Roasted skull (long pig or other) not only doesn’t have much meat, it isn’t very tasty. And, if you didn’t choose your long pig correctly, the skull is probably empty

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