Stephen Collins for The Guardian (and newly available as limited edition Giclee print from his shop).
Comments closedTag: Comics
Some Advice on How to Cope in These Tough Times
“What a Silly Idea”

Tom Gauld on women leads in spy fiction for The Guardian. See also, people of colour in fantasy films.
Comments closedClassic Literature with Added Science!
How To Be a Bad Writer

Tom Gauld for The Guardian, inspired by this piece on what makes bad writing bad by Toby Litt.
Comments closedELCAF 2016 Official Poster
Less Common Villains
Darwyn Cooke 1962 — 2016


I was sadden to hear that Canadian cartoonist Darwyn Cooke had died earlier this month from lung cancer, age 53. I never had the opportunity to meet Cooke in person, but I liked his adaptations of Donald Westlake’s Parker novels very much, and thought that The New Frontier, his elegant tribute to Silver Age comics, could reinvigorate a superhero genre mired in cynicism. His work — reminiscent of Will Eisner, whose The Spirit he also drew — was full of charm and joy. Cooke’s friend Nathalie Atkinson wrote his obituary for the Globe & Mail:
Although he was a proud Canadian, it was John F. Kennedy’s Camelot – with its Cold War tensions, social upheaval and cool aesthetics – that held an enduring fascination for him. His masterwork ‘DC: The New Frontier’ (2004) sets the origins of the Justice League and the characters of the DC Silver Age into a powerful narrative set in the America of that era. The six-issue comic book series, named for the JFK’s 1960 Democratic nomination acceptance speech, would win Mr. Cooke the first of his 13 Eisner Awards, the industry’s most prestigious accolade, and he won many of its others – Reubens, Harveys and several Shusters, the Canadian comics awards named for the Canadian co-creator of Superman… His dynamic illustration, panel design and thoughtful approach to writing transcended mere nostalgia, whether he was telling hard-boiled stories of anti-heroes or exploring heroism through superheroes. Although whenever it was suggested to Mr. Cooke that he was an auteur he’d reply, “I’m more like John McTiernan,” the director of Die Hard, one of his favourite movies. “That’s the kind of creator he thought he was,” his friend Michael Cho says. “An entertainer.”

Rogue Bibliophile

Tom Gauld‘s cartoon on the future for book lovers for The Guardian this weekend.
Tom also did the cover and interior illustration in this weekend’s Guardian Review for an article on plot by John Mullan.








