
I’ve been going to Chicago Comics (and sometimes Graham Cracker) for almost 20 years. It’s only in the last 3 years that I’ve found enough good titles to make it worthwhile to go every Wed. I love that ritual. Hopefully the comics medium will continue to attract top-notch literary and artistic talent like Garth Ennis & Darick Robertson (The Boys), Jason Aaron & R.M. Guera (Scalped), John Layman & Rob Guillory (Chew), Nick Spencer & Joe Eisma (Morning Glories), Ed Brubaker & Sean Phillips (Incognito & Fatale), Mike Carey, Peter Gross & Vince Locke (The Unwritten), Bill Willingham & Marc Buckingham (Fables), Chris Roberson & Michael Allred (iZombie) and many more.
Pulp, Bricks and Mortar: Why Local Comics Shops Still Work in the Digital Age
One of the ironies of my personal turn towards digital comics is that I have made that move at essentially the same moment as I gained access to a local comics shop.As I noted in an earlier column, “Killing the Page: Comics’ Digital Conundrum”, for the past several years I lived in a small university town where the nearest comics store is 30 miles away. I got my comics largely via an online retailer and, had selection and platforms been more attractive, would have seriously considered shifting much of my reading, especially of monthly titles, to digital for cost and convenience (no waiting for shipments, no shipping costs). Continue…
April 2, 2026
Fester’s Lucky 13: 1986
February 27, 2026
Fester’s Lucky 13: 1976
January 30, 2026
Fester’s Lucky 13: 1966

