It is one of the many things I love about her work. This makes her a very fun and, at times, odd person to read. The reader gets the impression she hides nothing, even if the truth is cringeworthy. Thrash is always painfully honest in her work. If that isn't provocative enough for you, I don't know what is. In this webcomic, she recounts a play by play of her experience meeting and then dating Eileen Miles in the blissful era before the 2016 election. Maggie Thrash is an autobio cartoonist I've been watching for a while. It has everything: action, jokes, and more gay romantic tension than you know what to do with.
It's about a happy-go-lucky werewolf named Henrietta (Hank) who has been inadvertently "sired" by a reluctant tsundere vampire named Ada. One of my favorites is a great will-they-or-won't-they webcomic called The Night Belongs to Us.
If you don't dig it too, search deep within yourself and start working on your inherent and obvious character flaws. Let me start off by saying I am a shameless proponent of supernatural romance, especially when I'm feeling blue. possible alien life forms infiltrating their ranks! (Insert eerie music here.) Though Howard Cruse left us late last year (RIP dear Howard), this book above all his others will live on, a must-read.Ī delightfully imaginative and stylistically varied but accessible YA trilogy about a group of high school kids of varying races and backgrounds navigating high school life, romance (both queer and otherwise), and. Stuck Rubber Baby, a stone-cold classic, is a loosely autobiographical tale detailing the coming-of-age and coming-of-queerness of Toland Polk, its flawed but engaging hero, against the backdrop of the battle over segregation in early-1960s Alabama. Rob KirbyĪ writer and comics creator, Kirby’s most recent book is The Shirley Jackson Project, a comics anthology. Drawing from the rich traditions of queer graphic memoir, he has set the bar high for those who will come next. No one has managed to illustrate a non-binary life quite like Kobabe has in this engaging and ultimately uplifting first book by a monumental new talent. This anthology by an up-and-coming comics superstar, which centers queer and trans South Asian narratives, is precisely what we need right now. Som has created a collection of short stories that dance between genres and identities, moving from incisive descriptions of modern social realities to poetic ruminations on the future.