• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

SC Art Books, Sketchbooks, Comic Magazines, Scarcely Seen Independents, TPBs

115 posts in this topic

THE HOUSE OF HAMMER v.2 #2, (U.K. United Kingdom, British, 1977)

RAQUEL WELCH. "ONE MILLION YEARS B.C." CAVEWOMAN

 

THE FULL FILM TOLD IN COMICS - 15 PAGES OF ART BY JOHN BOLTON

(The art looks like a cross between Frank Frazetta & Bernie Wrightson)

 

Lots of horror & sci-fi articles & photos, too.

 

$10.00

 

INDY5004.jpg

 

 

Back cover

 

INDY5005.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rascals in Paradise #1, VF

 

Rascals in Paradise was a comic book limited series created in 1994 by writer/artist Jim Silke and published by Dark Horse Comics. It was labeled "for mature adults only", and illustrated in a "deco sci-fi" style.

 

In the year 2362, a duplicate of Earth is created, ostensibly as a planet-sized vacation resort. However, due to an error or miscalculation, the machine intelligence that was supposed to create the world instead created a planet called Trash-9, a world covered by hostile jungles, wilderness and deserts, and populated by dangerous natives.

 

$5.00

 

INDY5008.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rascals in Paradise #2, VF

 

Rascals in Paradise was a comic book limited series created in 1994 by writer/artist Jim Silke and published by Dark Horse Comics. It was labeled "for mature adults only", and illustrated in a "deco sci-fi" style.

 

In the year 2362, a duplicate of Earth is created, ostensibly as a planet-sized vacation resort. However, due to an error or miscalculation, the machine intelligence that was supposed to create the world instead created a planet called Trash-9, a world covered by hostile jungles, wilderness and deserts, and populated by dangerous natives.

 

$5.00

 

INDY5009.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Rascals in Paradise #3, VF

 

Rascals in Paradise was a comic book limited series created in 1994 by writer/artist Jim Silke and published by Dark Horse Comics. It was labeled "for mature adults only", and illustrated in a "deco sci-fi" style.

 

In the year 2362, a duplicate of Earth is created, ostensibly as a planet-sized vacation resort. However, due to an error or miscalculation, the machine intelligence that was supposed to create the world instead created a planet called Trash-9, a world covered by hostile jungles, wilderness and deserts, and populated by dangerous natives.

 

$5.00

 

INDY5010.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HARD BOILED #1, NM, Dark Horse, 1990

 

Hard Boiled is a three-issue comic book mini-series written by Frank Miller and drawn by Geof Darrow, and published by Dark Horse Comics in 1990.

 

In it, Carl Seltz, an insurance investigator, discovers he is also a homicidal cyborg tax collector who happens to be the last hope of an enslaved robot race.

 

In 2001, Variety reported that Warner Brothers was in negotiations with Miller and Darrow to adapt the comic book into a feature film, David Fincher set to direct and Nicolas Cage to star. The website comics2film stated that Cage informed Cinescape magazine that he was working to produce the film under his company, Saturn Films. Most recently, Miller himself stated that he will be directing the latest version to hit Hollywood.

 

$7.50

 

INDY5023.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HARD BOILED #2, NM, Dark Horse, 1990

 

Hard Boiled is a three-issue comic book mini-series written by Frank Miller and drawn by Geof Darrow, and published by Dark Horse Comics in 1990.

 

In it, Carl Seltz, an insurance investigator, discovers he is also a homicidal cyborg tax collector who happens to be the last hope of an enslaved robot race.

 

In 2001, Variety reported that Warner Brothers was in negotiations with Miller and Darrow to adapt the comic book into a feature film, David Fincher set to direct and Nicolas Cage to star. The website comics2film stated that Cage informed Cinescape magazine that he was working to produce the film under his company, Saturn Films. Most recently, Miller himself stated that he will be directing the latest version to hit Hollywood.

 

$7.50

 

INDY5024.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HARD BOILED #3, NM, Dark Horse, 1992

 

Hard Boiled is a three-issue comic book mini-series written by Frank Miller and drawn by Geof Darrow, and published by Dark Horse Comics in 1990.

 

In it, Carl Seltz, an insurance investigator, discovers he is also a homicidal cyborg tax collector who happens to be the last hope of an enslaved robot race.

 

In 2001, Variety reported that Warner Brothers was in negotiations with Miller and Darrow to adapt the comic book into a feature film, David Fincher set to direct and Nicolas Cage to star. The website comics2film stated that Cage informed Cinescape magazine that he was working to produce the film under his company, Saturn Films. Most recently, Miller himself stated that he will be directing the latest version to hit Hollywood.

 

$7.50

 

INDY5025.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

POTENTIAL (Unit One: The Cell) #1, NM (SLG, 1998) Slave Labor Graphics

 

Ariel Schrag (born December 29, 1979 in Berkeley, California) is an American cartoonist who has achieved critical recognition at an unusually early age for her autobiographical comics.

 

While attending high school in Berkeley, California, Schrag self-published her first comic series, Awkward, depicting events from her freshman year, originally selling copies to friends and family. Slave Labor Graphics subsequently reprinted Awkward as a graphic novel, followed by three more books based on her next three years of school: Definition (ISBN 0-943151-14-7), Potential (ISBN 0-943151-04-X), and Likewise (to be released by Simon & Schuster in April 2009). These books told stories of family life, going to concerts, experimentation with drugs, high school crushes, and coming out as bisexual and later as lesbian. Rose Troche will direct a movie adaptation of Potential; Schrag has written the screenplay.

 

Schrag graduated Berkeley High School in 1998. She graduated from Columbia University with a bachelors degree in English in 2003, and has continued to work as a cartoonist.

 

The documentary "Confession: A Film About Ariel Schrag" was released in 2004. It explores then-23-year-old Ariel Schrag's world in which she "negotiates fame, obsesses about disease, and discusses the way she sees as a dyke comic book artist."

 

Schrag is also a contributor to the ongoing queer comics anthology Juicy Mother, edited by Jennifer Camper, and released in 2005 and 2007.

 

Schrag was a writer for the Showtime lesbian-focused series The L Word for seasons 3 and 4.

 

$33.33 (or best offer)

 

INDY5012.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

POTENTIAL (Unit Five: Animals - Form and Function) #5, NM (SLG, 1998) Slave Labor Graphics

 

Ariel Schrag (born December 29, 1979 in Berkeley, California) is an American cartoonist who has achieved critical recognition at an unusually early age for her autobiographical comics.

 

While attending high school in Berkeley, California, Schrag self-published her first comic series, Awkward, depicting events from her freshman year, originally selling copies to friends and family. Slave Labor Graphics subsequently reprinted Awkward as a graphic novel, followed by three more books based on her next three years of school: Definition (ISBN 0-943151-14-7), Potential (ISBN 0-943151-04-X), and Likewise (to be released by Simon & Schuster in April 2009). These books told stories of family life, going to concerts, experimentation with drugs, high school crushes, and coming out as bisexual and later as lesbian. Rose Troche will direct a movie adaptation of Potential; Schrag has written the screenplay.

 

Schrag graduated Berkeley High School in 1998. She graduated from Columbia University with a bachelors degree in English in 2003, and has continued to work as a cartoonist.

 

The documentary "Confession: A Film About Ariel Schrag" was released in 2004. It explores then-23-year-old Ariel Schrag's world in which she "negotiates fame, obsesses about disease, and discusses the way she sees as a dyke comic book artist."

 

Schrag is also a contributor to the ongoing queer comics anthology Juicy Mother, edited by Jennifer Camper, and released in 2005 and 2007.

 

Schrag was a writer for the Showtime lesbian-focused series The L Word for seasons 3 and 4.

 

$33.33 (or best offer)

 

INDY5013.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites