Jim Aparo: Brave & Bold Artist by Eric Nolen-Weathington and Jim Amash (book review).
Jim Aparo (1932โ2005) was to Batman what Curt Swan was to Superman: always there, reliably turning out pages for a
โThe Sign Of Theย Fourโ is the second and one of the most well known of the Sherlock Holmes series adapted
Read MoreOriginally released in 2010, โA Study In Scarletโ is the first of four original Sherlock Holmes stories has been transformed
Read MoreThe HBO adaptation of โAmerican Godsโ, based on Neil Gaimanโs sprawling and epic novel about a world in which the
Read MoreThe work of German-born and British-bred minimalist composer Max Richter has always lent itself to the cinema. His debut album,
Read MoreIf Bob Kane deserves his place in comicbook history for creating Batman then Jerry Robinson is equally deserving of his
Read MoreThe difficulty with time travel stories is that itโs very easy to tie yourself in knots whilst trying to make
Read MoreThis collection purports to be the best of British Science Fiction from 2016. Reading โInterzoneโ many years ago has left
Read MoreAnother book I found in Jane Frankโs book โScience Fiction And Fantasy Artists Of The Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionaryโ
Read MoreBack in 9-11 June 2000, Joe Petrilak ran the โAll Time Classic New York Comic Book Conventionโ, where he had
Read MoreโThe Word Is Murderโ in the new book by Anthony Horowitz and features in a supporting role, Anthony Horowitz! In
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