It's
Dark In London
(Edited by Oscar Zarate)
THE CONTRIBUTORS:
Stella Duffy &
Melinda Gebbie
Neil Gaiman & Warren Pleece
Graeme Gordon & Dix
Stewart Home & Jonathan Edwards
Ilya
Alan Moore & Oscar Zarate
Christopher Petit & Garry
Marshall
Woodrow Phoenix
Ian Sinclair & Dave McKean
Yana Stajno & Chris Hogg
Carol Swain
Chris Webster & Carl Flint
The First Graphic
Book From Serpent's Tail!
(Out on 2nd Dec)
Writing back to Rome in 36 AD from
Londinium, the illustrator Malus Maximus wrote:
"Depravity, plague, and licentious debauchery seem to bring
out the best in the rude, blunt, thick-skinned Saxon people. There is no shortage of
subjects for me to depict."
Comics have thrived in London over the centuries with Gilray,
Hogarth, the first edition of 'Comick Magazine' in 1796, Thomas
Rowlandson's 'Doctor Syntax' in 1809 and the first edition of Punch
in 1841. In this century, there have been attempts to reserve comics for kids with the
growth of magazines like Dandy and Beano. But the comic strip is too rich an art form to be just for kids -
in recent years, a new generation of British artists has developed a rich synthesis of the
Continental graphic novel and American comic strips. In It's Dark in London
the work of some of these artists is featured - Alan Moore, Ilya, Neil
Gaiman, David McKean, Carol Swain, Dix - in tandem with the
stories of London writers like Iain Sinclair, Graeme Gordon, Christopher
Petit and Stella Duffy. This fusion produces a portrait of
London that captures the city's fundamental essence as exquisite mixture of lofty towers
and gutter sleaze, of suburban gentiltiy and urban depravity, of private vices and public
philanthropy.
It is a book that is as graphic as it is visionary.
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