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Review: Adventures Into the Unknown, the Pre-Horror Anthology
The esteemed author/editor Paul Buhle generously provides an insightful review on comics that recently arrived in his mailbox unbidden.

Adventures Into the Unknown: The Pre-Code Horror Anthology, Issues 1-4 (aka Adventures Into the Unknown! Archives Volume 1)
Adventures Into the Unknown, the Pre-Horror Anthology, Issues 1-4. Foreword by Bruce Jones. Milwaukie, OR: Dark Horse Books. 217pp, $49.99. And Volume II, Issues 5-8, 215pp, also $49.99.
The slowdown of Superhero comic sales after the Second World War prompted a rethinking of how to reach the lucrative adolescent and post-adolescent audience. A breakdown of censorship rules and practices during the War, from animation (it became more “sexy”) to films (more grimly realistic and cynical, anticipating the genre of “noir” films), undoubtedly encouraged comics publishers to take chances.
Horror comics, ultimately stirring the Congressional hearings of 1953 and the coming of the censorious “Comics Code,” can be seen more broadly as a narrative hook covering a number of related genres. Bruce Jones, introducing this republished 1947-50 series, acutely makes the point that comics of Science Fiction and sex-heavy (implied sex, mostly by “headlight” sweaters on dames, as well as their “loose” and reckless behavior) Crime Comics had a horror affect. These comics, as cartoonist Jules Feiffer once observed, enticed kids with their glorification of crime and depravity—exactly what readers liked about them! Jones does not add that more than a few of these horror-tinged genres also overlapped oddly with romance comics: a young, good looking couple goes through an unbelievable adventure, and surviving, falls into each other arms (doubtless toward happy and chaste marriage) in the last panel. Not every relationship could survive a bout with ghosts and prehistoric monsters, but these seemed to thrive on terror. He adds in the introduction to the second volume a good reason for this narrative addition, however. After Crime Does Not Pay, with its million per month sales, and just before Horror comics, came Romance Comics, whose mostly female readers earned a niche they would not enjoy again until Manga at the end of the twentieth century.
Adventures Into the Unknown has all these elements and more. The ghost story, as is well known, entered popular literature through the ghostly setting of an English castle, as described most effectively by Horace Walpole‘s <em>Castle of Otronto</em>in the last third of the eighteenth century. Historical ghosts sometimes merely terrorized the populace, but at least sometimes, they wrought revenge against bad people, like the nouveau riche who treated ordinary folks with contempt and sometimes murdered them for personal gain. Some of these ghosts are encountered in the Old World, England or Ireland (ghosts like castles), some are good solid Americans, related to the notorious witches of Salem, Massachusetts, or persist in an old house or on a mountain almost anywhere in the US. Variations like werewolves, vampires and such follow pretty much the same trajectory: they reveal themselves, kill a few humans, threaten a young woman and are stopped, destroyed or at least driven back to their lairs to threaten some future guests.
The best adventures, however, are tinged with something else, something approaching a social critique. EC’s Science Fiction series, a high achievement in comic art (and thus far above the Unknown artists’ work) and sometimes adapted from Ray Bradbury’s short stories, caught the fearful spirit of the late 1940s and early 1950s. Many a first class comic story showed a future world with a population struggling to come back from the ravages of an atomic war generations or centuries earlier.
The horrors of the Second World War, many of them reaching a public denied details during the conflict, emerged in the most intriguing of the Unknown. “Giants of the Unknown” (1949) features an expedition to Egypt that unwontedly turns up a Pharaoh still alive, remnant of a people gone for 50,000 years, with a message for the present. In the prehistoric tale he unravels, one great leader turns against another, urging total destruction of the enemy (a one-panel surrealistic drawing of a weird ancient/modern cityscape offers momentary delight). Our protagonist observes that their warfare wiped out the race; his girlfriend adds, “Let that be an object lesson for us. We’re lucky we don’t have weapons like this,” making an indirect reference, of course, to the atomic bombing of Japan. By 1950 and the onset of the Korean War, this sentiment was practically subversive.
The plots are melodramatic, the drawing is often lame and yet…it’s a long way from Superman and Batman.
Paul Buhle, formerly Senior Lecturer at Brown University, has written and edited many books, including Marxism in America: A History of the American Left and the graphic novel The Beats: A Graphic History, and is the coeditor, most recently, of It Started in Wisconsin: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Labor Protest. With Mari Jo Buhle, he is the coeditor of the Encyclopedia of the American Left. He lives in Madison.
New Comics for New Readers – February 20, 2013
Want to try reading comics? Don’t know where to start? Want to try something different?
Wednesday is New Comics Day! Each week, The Comics Observer spotlights up to three brand new releases worthy of your consideration. All of these have been carefully selected as best bets for someone who has never read comic books, graphic novels or manga before. They each highlight the variety and creativity being produced today. These are also great for those that haven’t read comics in awhile or regular readers looking to try something new.
While we can’t guarantee you’ll like what we’ve picked, we truly believe there’s a comic for everyone. If you like the images and descriptions below, click the links to see previews and learn more about them. You can often buy straight from the publishers or creators. If not, head over to your local comic book store, check out online retailers like Things From Another World and Amazon, or download a copy at comiXology, or the comics and graphic novels sections of the Kindle Store or NOOK store. Let us know what you think in the comments below or on Facebook.
For a full list of this week’s new releases, see comiXology and ComicList.com.
(Please note these aren’t reviews. Recommendations are based on pre-release buzz, previews, and The Comics Observer‘s patented crystal ball. Product descriptions provided by publisher.)
Mermin Book One: Out of Water
Written and illustrated by Joey Weiser
Published by Oni Press
Genre: Humor
Ages: 6+
152 pages
$19.99
“MERMIN the MERMAN from MER!?” That’s the question Pete and his friends ask after finding the fish-boy washed up on the beach!
Mermin just escaped the undersea kingdom of Mer, and is ready to have some fun on dry land! But why would this aquatic kid be afraid to swim? Perhaps it has something to do with the fishy pursuers who have followed him from the depths below!
Resident Alien Volume 1: Welcome to Earth!
Written by Peter Hogan
Illustrated by Steve Parkhouse
Published by Dark Horse Comics
Genre: Science-fiction, Crime
Ages: 12+
96 pages
$14.99
A stranded alien seeks refuge in the small town of Patience, USA, where he hides undercover as a retired doctor. All the alien wants is to be left alone until he’s rescued. However, when the town’s real doctor dies, “Dr. Harry” is pulled into medical service—and finds himself smack dab in the middle of a murder mystery!
* From the writer of Tom Strong and the artist for Alan Moore’s The Bojeffries Saga!
“A pitch-perfect narrative from two of my favourite creators.” – Alan Moore
Tales from Beyond Science
Written by Mark Millar, Alan McKenzie, and John Smith
Illustrated by Rian Hughes
Published by Image Comics
Genre: Humor
Ages: 16+
88 pages
$16.99
Follow your host Hilary Tremayne on eight surreal journeys into the unknown.
Discover the truth behind the mysteries of spontaneous human combustion, the Bermuda Triangle, the lost 13th month, and the real reason men have nipples.
Drawn by Rian Hughes and written by a Rogue’s Gallery of Britain’s finest comic writers that includes Mark Millar (Kick Ass, Wanted), Alan McKenzie (The Harrison Ford Story) and John Smith (Devin Waugh), this volume collects the complete series.
Honorable mentions for two new soft cover editions of two favorites:
Little Mouse Gets Ready
Written and illustrated by Jeff Smith
Published by TOON Books
Genre: Humor, Education
Ages: 4+
32 pages
$4.99
A Theodor Seuss Geisel Honor Book
There’s lots to do before Little Mouse is ready to go visit the barn. Will he master all the intricacies of getting dressed, from snaps and buttons to Velcro and tail holes?
Eisner Award-winning cartoonist Jeff Smith and his determined Little Mouse reveal all the smallest pleasures of this daily task.
Ayako
Written and illustrated by Osamu Tezuka
Translated by Mari Morimoto
Published by Vertical, Inc.
Genre: Historical Drama
Ages: 18+
702 pages
$24.95
Opening a few years after the end of World War II and covering almost a quarter-century, here is comics master Osamu Tezuka’s most direct and sustained critique of Japan’s fate in the aftermath of total defeat. Unusually devoid of cartoon premises yet shot through with dark voyeuristic humor, Ayako looms as a pinnacle of Naturalist literature in Japan with few peers even in prose, the striking heroine a potent emblem of things left unseen following the war.
The year is 1949. Crushed by the Allied Powers, occupied by General MacArthur’s armies, Japan has been experiencing massive change. Agricultural reform is dissolving large estates and redistributing plots to tenant farmers—terrible news, if you’re landowners like the archconservative Tenge family. For patriarch Sakuemon, the chagrin of one of his sons coming home alive from a P.O.W. camp instead of having died for the Emperor is topped only by the revelation that another of his is consorting with “the reds.” What solace does he have but his youngest Ayako, apple of his eye, at once daughter and granddaughter?
Delving into some of the period’s true mysteries, which remain murky to this day, Tezuka’s Zolaesque tapestry delivers thrill and satisfaction in spades. Another page-turning classic from an irreplaceable artist who was as astute an admirer of the Russian masters and Nordic playwrights as of Walt Disney, Ayako is a must-read for comics connoisseurs and curious literati.
New Comics for New Readers – January 16, 2013
Want to try reading comics? Don’t know where to start? Want to try something different?
Wednesday is New Comics Day! Each week, The Comics Observer spotlights up to three brand new releases worthy of your consideration. All of these have been carefully selected as best bets for someone who has never read comic books, graphic novels or manga before. They each highlight the variety and creativity being produced today. These are also great for those that haven’t read comics in awhile or regular readers looking to try something new.
While we can’t guarantee you’ll like what we’ve picked, we truly believe there’s a comic for everyone. If you like the images and descriptions below, click the links to see previews and learn more about them. You can often buy straight from the publishers or creators. If not, head over to your local comic book store, check out online retailers like Things From Another World and Amazon, or download a copy at comiXology, or the comics and graphic novels sections of the Kindle Store or NOOK store. Let us know what you think in the comments below or on Facebook.
For a full list of this week’s new releases, see comiXology and ComicList.com.
(Please note these aren’t reviews. Recommendations are based on pre-release buzz, previews, and The Comics Observer‘s patented crystal ball. Product descriptions provided by publisher.)
Chu’s Day
Written by Neil Gaiman
Illustrated by Adam Rex
Published by HarperCollins
Genre: Comedy
Ages: 4+
32 pages
$17.99
Chu is a little panda with a big sneeze.
When Chu sneezes, bad things happen.
Will Chu sneeze today?
A winning new picture book about an unforgettable panda, and the first collaboration between New York Times-bestselling author Neil Gaiman and Adam Rex.
Chu is a little panda with a big sneeze. His mother takes him to the library, where it’s awfully dusty. His father takes him to lunch at the diner, where there’s pepper in the air. Will Chu sneeze today? And what will happen if he does?
Beloved storyteller Neil Gaiman has written his youngest picture book yet with this delightful, humorous story of how the smallest child’s actions can be very powerful. Engagingly and vibrantly illustrated by acclaimed artist Adam Rex, this is the perfect book to read aloud and share.
The Black Beetle: No Way Out #1
Written and illustrated by Francesco Francavilla
Published by Dark Horse Comics
Genre: Action/Adventure, Superhero, Pulp
Ages: 13+
32 pages
$3.99
A new pulp sensation from the mind of 2012 Eisner Award winner Francesco Francavilla (Batman: The Black Mirror).
Black Beetle’s investigation of two local mob bosses is interrupted when a mysterious explosion murders them and a pub full of gangsters—taking out most of Colt City’s organized crime in one fell swoop. Who could pull off such a coup, and what danger might that murderous bomber do to Colt City and Black Beetle?
“Francavilla delivers the pulp noir that suits his style perfectly.”—Comic Book Resources
“One of our favorite artists… is unleashing one of his own creations on the unsuspecting criminals of Colt City in an all new Black Beetle serial.”—iFanboy
The One Trick Rip-Off + Deep Cuts
Written and illustrated by Paul Pope
Published by Image Comics
Genre: Action/Adventure, Crime
Ages: 18+
288 pages
$29.99
Young lovers Tubby and Vim want to escape – escape the mistakes they’ve made, the lives they’ve lived, and the dirty city weighing them down. Their plan is simple – all they have to do is rip-off Tubby’s pals, the One Tricks – the toughest street gang in LA.
If they pull it off, they’re set for life. If not, their lives won’t matter much anyway.
What was going to be a smooth, straight-forward heist becomes a fast-paced battle to the death.
From Eisner Award-winning writer/artist Paul Pope (Batman: Year 100, THB, Heavy Liquid, 100%) and presented for the first time in color by Jamie Grant (All-Star Superman). One Trip Rip-Off/Deep-Cuts is 288 pages of raw power, of which over 150 pages are comprised of new, rare, and never before seen stories created during Pope’s time traveling the world in the ’90s.
Included in the “Deep Cuts” section is a bounty of unpublished and rare work Pope did in the ’90s, including the legendary “Supertrouble” manga, created for Kodansha in Japan, appearing here in print for the first time.
It’s a tour de force of pure, kinetic storytelling that will keep your eyes peeled until the very last page.
New Comics for New Readers – January 9, 2013
Wednesday is New Comics Day! Each week, The Comics Observer spotlights up to three brand new releases worthy of your consideration. These should be suitable for someone who has never read comic books, graphic novels or manga before.
These are out today! If you like what you see here, click the links to see previews and learn more about them. Then head to your local comic book store, or check out online retailers like Things From Another World and Amazon. Let us know what you think in the comments below or on Facebook.
For a full list of this week’s new releases, see comiXology and ComicList.com.
(Please note these aren’t reviews. Recommendations are based on pre-release buzz, previews, and The Comics Observer‘s patented crystal ball. Product descriptions provided by publisher.)
Cherubs!
Written by Bryan Talbot
Illustrated by Mark Stafford
Published by Dark Horse Comics
Genre: Humor, Adventure
Ages: 16+
192 pages
$19.99
Falsely accused of heaven’s first homicide, five churlish cherubim escape to New York in pursuit of the renegade archangel Abbadon on the eve of the Apocalypse! Befriended by exotic-dancer Mary and chased by unstoppable Seraphim terminators, the Cherubs alone stand against hell’s hordes as Satan prepares to make war, not love!
From Eisner Award winner Bryan Talbot and Hades-hot indie artist Mark Stafford, Cherubs! is an outrageous, irreverent, supernatural comedy-adventure that’s heaven sent and hell bent! Featuring four previously unpublished issues of the Cherubs! comic-book series.
Beta Testing the Apocalypse
Written and illustrated by Tom Kaczynski
Published by Fantagraphics Books
Genre: Fiction, Short Stories, Anthology
Ages: 16+
136 pages
$19.99
A heady conflation of philosophy, fiction & comics.
It would be easy to call Tom Kaczynski the J.G. Ballard of comics. Like Ballard, Kaczynski’s comics riff on dystopian modernity, bleak man-made landscapes and the psychological effects of technological, social or environmental developments. Yet while Kaczynski shares many of Ballard’s obsessions, he processes them in unique ways. His visual storytelling adds an architectural dimension that the written word alone lacks.
Kaczynski takes abstract ideas — capitalism, communism, or utopianism — and makes them tangible. He depicts and meditates on the immense political and technological structures and spaces we inhabit that subtly affect and define the limits of who we are and the freedom we as Americans presume to enjoy. Society and the individual, in perpetual tension. Once you’ve read Kaczynski’s comics, it should come as no surprise to learn that he studied architecture before embarking on a career as a cartoonist.
Beta Testing includes approximately 10 short stories, most notably “The New,” a brand new story created expressly for this book. It’s Kaczynski’s longest story to date. “The New” is set in an unnamed third-world megalopolis. It could be Dhaka, Lagos or Mumbai. The city creaks under the pressure of explosive growth. Whole districts are built in a week. The story follows an internationally renowned starchitect as he struggles to impose his vision on the metropolis. A vision threatened by the massive dispossessed slum-proletariat inhabiting the slums and favelas on the edges of the city. From the fetid ferment of garbage dumps and shanties emerges a new feral architecture.
Jack Jackson’s American History: Los Tejanos and Lost Cause
Written and illustrated by Jack Jackson
Published by Fantagraphics Books
Genre: Non-Fiction, History
Ages: 16+
320 pages
$35.00
Two landmark works of graphic nonfiction under one cover.
Jack Jackson loved American history and creating comics. He combined these into a single vocation and created a legacy of historical graphic novels that has never been equaled.
Jackson is credited with creating what many consider the first underground comic, God Nose, in 1964. He co-founded Rip Off Press in 1969, and made some of the most scathing satirical comics about contemporary America ever seen. But, Jackson was a Texan, and in the 1970s he returned to his roots and began writing and drawing short historical comics about Texas history. He then went on to produce six graphic novels chronicling 19th century Western history focusing on his beloved Texas and the Plains Indians. Fantagraphics is proud to bring his graphic histories back into print in a series of three volumes, each reprinting two of his long narratives.
The first volume features Los Tejanos, which Fantagraphics published as a solo book in 1981, and Lost Cause (1998) — chronicling Texas history before and after the Civil War.
Los Tejanos is the story of the Texas-Mexican conflict between 1835 and 1875 as seen through the eyes of tejano (literally Texan of Mexican, as distinct from anglo, heritage) Juan Seguín. It is through Seguín, a pivotal and tragic figure, that Jackson humanizes Texas’ fight for independence and provides a human scale for this vast and complex story.
Lost Cause documents the violent reaction to Reconstruction by Texans. As Jackson wrote, “Texas reaped a bitter harvest from the War Between the States. Part of this dark legacy was the great unrest that plagued the beaten but unbowed populace.” The tensions caused by Reconstruction are told through the Taylor-Sutton feud, which raged across South Texas, embracing two generations and causing untold grief, and the gunslinger John Wesley Hardin, who swept across Texas killing Carpetbaggers, Federal soldiers, and Indians.
Jackson’s work is as known for its rigorous research — he became as good an historian as he was a cartoonist — as well as its chiseled, raw-boned visual approach, reproducing the time and place with an uncanny verisimilitude.
This edition includes an essay by and interview with Jackson about the controversy Lost Cause generated, and an introduction by the novelist Ron Hansen.
New Comics for New Readers – September 12, 2012
Wednesday is New Comics Day! Each week, The Comics Observer picks brand new releases worth checking out that should be suitable for someone who has never read comic books, graphic novels or manga before.
These are out today! If you like what you see here, click the links to see previews and learn more about them. Then head to your local comic book store, or check out online retailers like Things From Another World and Amazon. Let us know what you think in the comments below or on Facebook.
For a full list of this week’s new releases, see comiXology and ComicList.com.
(Disclaimer: These aren’t reviews. Recommendations are based on pre-release press, previews, and The Comics Observer‘s patented crystal ball. Product descriptions provided by publisher.)
Hugo Tate
Written and illustrated by Nick Abadzis
Published by Blank Slate Books
Genre: Humor
Ages: 16+
192 pages
$19.99
The long-awaited collection of Nick Abadzis’ first magnum opus, from the pages of Deadline magazine.
Eighteen years after Hugo Tate drew to a close within the pages of Deadline, the comic’s entire six-year run is finally being collected in a single volume by Blank Slate.
Beginning life in 1988 as an acerbic humor strip featuring an eponymous stick man protagonist living in a figuratively-drawn world, Hugo Tate evolved into an intelligent look into the lives of a complex web of characters stretching from London to New York and beyond.
Described by The Comics Journal as “Britain’s Love and Rockets“, this collection includes the critically-acclaimed final story arc O, America!, in which Hugo finds himself on a drug-fueled road trip across the nightmarish underbelly of the United States. Featuring a gallery of rare extras, all-new commentary from Abadzis and Deadline editor Frank Wynne, as well as a special introduction by Garth Ennis, there’s never been a better time to read – or revisit – this genuine modern classic.
Bucko
Written by Jeff Parker
Illustrated by Erika Moen
Published by Dark Horse Comics
Genre: Humor; Mystery
Ages: 16+
136 pages
$19.99
After discovering a dead body in an office bathroom, hungover job interviewee Rich “Bucko” Richardson becomes suspected of the murder. What he thinks is a quest to find the real killer turns into a weeklong romp through the wilds of Portland, Oregon, complete with bike-mounted cover bands, steampunk Makers, Juggalos, SuicideGirls, meth heads, so much absinthe, and an entire city made of books. After taking the Internet by storm, Jeff Parker and Erika Moen’s dirty, funny murder mystery is now the most hilarious book in comic shops!
*Includes brand-new strips, commentary, and info on the real-life inspirations for Bucko!
*Best new webcomic of 2011!
Is That All There Is?
Written and illustrated by Joost Swarte
Published by Fantagraphics Books
Genre: Anthology
Ages: 16+
144 pages
$25.00
By appropriating and subverting Tintin creator Hergé’s classic “clear line” style, Joost Swarte revitalized European alternative comics in the 1970s with a series of satirical, musically elegant, supremely beautifully drawn short stories — often featuring his innocent, magnificently-quiffed Jopo de Pojo, or his orotund scientist character, Anton Makassar.
Under Swarte’s own exacting supervision, Is That All There Is? collects virtually all of his alternative comics work from 1972 to date, including the RAW magazine stories that brought him fame among American comics aficionados in the 1980s. Especially great pains have been taken to match Swarte’s superb coloring, which includes stories executed in watercolor, comics printed in retro duotones, fiendishly clever use of Zip-a-Tone screens, and much more. (There’s even a story about how to color comics art using those screens, with Makassar as the teacher.)
Other noteworthy stories include Swarte’s take on an episode from Hergé’s early days, a Fats Domino story, a tribute to the legendary “Upside-Downs” strip, and a story titled simply “Modern Art.”
“I’ve loved Joost Swarte’s perfect cartoons, drawings and designs for decades and it’s nothing short of ridiculous that a comprehensive edition of this brilliant artist’s work has never been available in America until now. Swarte is considered a national treasure in his native Holland, and if you open this book, you’ll understand why.” — Chris Ware
3 New Comics for New Readers – July 4, 2012
Wednesday is New Comics Day! Yes, even today on the 4th of July! Each week, The Comics Observer picks brand new releases worth checking out that should be suitable for someone who has never read comic books, graphic novels or manga before.
These are out today! If you like what you see here, click the links to see previews and learn more about them. Then head to your local comic book store, or check out online retailers like Things From Another World and Amazon. Let us know what you think in the comments below or on Facebook.
For a full list of this week’s new releases, see comiXology and ComicList.com.
Battlepug Volume 1
Written and illustrated by Mike Norton
Published by Dark Horse Comics
Genre: Humor, Fantasy, Action/Adventure
Ages: 14+
72 pages
$14.99
It’s a pugly job, but someone’s gotta do it!
The epic tale of blood and drool begins here! Join Molly and her dogs Mingo and Colfax, as she recounts the legend of “The Warrior and the Battlepug” — a tale of a fearless barbarian, his trusty and freakishly large pug, and evil baby harp seals. This volume collects the first year of Mike Norton’s Battlepug — the perfect opportunity to get in on the ground floor of the fan-favorite webcomic by Mike Norton, Allen Passalaqua, and Crank!
* Includes extras not seen on the website!
Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me
Written by Harvey Pekar
Illustrated by JT Waldman
Published by Hill and Wang
Genre: Non-Fiction, Memoir
Ages: 18+
176 pages
$24.95
Harvey Pekar’s mother was a Zionist by way of politics. His father was a Zionist by way of faith. Whether Harvey was going to daily Hebrew classes or attending Zionist picnics, he grew up a staunch supporter of the Jewish state. But soon he found himself questioning the very beliefs and ideals of his parents.
In Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me, the final graphic memoir from the man who defined the genre, Pekar explores what it means to be Jewish and what Israel means to the Jews. Over the course of a single day in his hometown of Cleveland, Ohio, Pekar and the illustrator JT Waldman wrestle with the mythologies and realities surrounding the Jewish homeland. Pekar interweaves his increasing disillusionment with the modern state of Israel with a comprehensive history of the Jewish people from biblical times to the present, and the result is a personal and historical odyssey of uncommon power. Plainspoken and empathetic, Pekar had no patience for injustice and prejudice in any form, and though he comes to understand the roots of his parents’ unquestioning love for Israel, he arrives at the firm belief that all peoples should be held to the same universal standards of decency, fairness, and democracy.
With an epilogue written by Joyce Brabner, Not the Israel My Parents Promised Me is an essential book for fans of Harvey Pekar and anyone interested in the past and future of the Jewish state. It is bound to create important discussions and debates for years to come.
Wizzywig: Portrait of a Serial Hacker
Written and illustrated by Ed Piskor
Published by Top Shelf Productions
Genre: Historic Fiction
Age: 16+
288 pages
$19.95
They say What You See Is What You Get… but Kevin “Boingthump” Phenicle could always see more than most people. In the world of phone phreaks, hackers, and scammers, he’s a legend. His exploits are hotly debated: could he really get free long-distance calls by whistling into a pay phone? Did his video-game piracy scheme accidentally trigger the first computer virus? And did he really dodge the FBI by using their own wiretapping software against them? Is he even a real person? And if he’s ever caught, what would happen to a geek like him in federal prison?
Inspired by the incredible stories of real-life hackers, Wizzywig is the thrilling tale of a master manipulator — his journey from precocious child scammer to federally-wanted fugitive, and beyond. In a world transformed by social networks, data leaks, and digital uprisings, Ed Piskor’s debut graphic novel reminds us how much power can rest in the hands of an audacious kid with a keyboard.









































