
Drawn & Quarterly’s series of newly-translated gekiga offers some elegaic comics by Oji Suzuki.
…also: What on earth is happening in this panel?!

Drawn & Quarterly’s series of newly-translated gekiga offers some elegaic comics by Oji Suzuki.
…also: What on earth is happening in this panel?!
Rob concludes his look at Drawn & Quarterly’s reprints of classic comic books and strips with Doug Wright’s Nipper (1963-1964).
I love that Drawn & Quarterly will occasionally remind its readers that it is still a fundamentally Canadian comics publisher. …
In the second of a three-part series on classic comic books and strips released by Drawn & Quarterly, Rob looks at Tubby, written and drawn by John Stanley, with additional art by Lloyd White.
Rob reviews the second volume of Nancy, from Drawn & Quarterly’s John Stanley Library.
The latest edition of the John Stanley-written (he also did breakdowns) Nancy goes from strength to strength in terms of its use of character formulas, …
Rob reviews the new comic from Adrian Tomine, Scenes From An Impending Marriage (Drawn & Quarterly).
Halfway through reading Adrian Tomine’s new release, Scenes From An Impending Marriage, I was baffled. This comic was certainly funny and strangely sweet in …
Rob reviews Berlin #17, the first issue of the last segment of Jason Lutes’ long-running series and the last comic discussed in a three-part series about comics from Drawn & Quarterly.
Rob reviews the English debut of Argentinian cartoonist Pablo Holmberg, Eden (Drawn & Quarterly).
Pablo Holmberg, better known in Argentina under his pen name of Kioskerman, makes comics that elude easy description. They’re about gaps, in-between places and events going …
There’s something about Davis’ casual storytelling voice that makes readers feel like they’re an old friend, and she’s simply filling you in on some details from her life.
Clough reviews the long-awaited fourth volume of Drawn & Quarterly’s reprint of Frank King’s classic Gasoline Alley, Walt & Skeezix.
Rob reviews the second volume of Melvin Monster, by John Stanley (Drawn & Quarterly).