Sunday, November 26, 2023

STOCKING STUFFERS

FORGOTTEN TREASURES AND STOCKING STUFFERS
By Alex Ness
NOVEMBER 27, 2023


This isn't a guarantee, but these are suggested items for your family or friend who is a fan of comics and genres of books featuring adventure, action and heroics. They fit in Christmas stockings or whatever holiday one follows. Meaning this, these aren't necessarily the one great present or item, but for minor selections these are amazing.

(Click to enlarge each image)

PROSE FOR THE SUPERHERO FAN 

PULPS FOR THE ACTION, ADVENTURE, CRIME & MORE


COMICS... alternative one shot or mini series versions of Batman, all done well.



FINALLY...  I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.


My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
Bluesky
X/Twitter

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.

Single issues of fun comics are good extra gifts too!

Wednesday, November 22, 2023

Thankful

A Brief Note
By Alex Ness
Thanksgiving 2023


I wanted, after two years of a difficult journey, to give thanks for the people who have helped me endure, inspired me to keep creating, and to give thanks for those who might otherwise not be publicly appreciated.

I am thankful for my Family:

My wife Beth, my son Jonathan, my brother Nate, and all of my cousins, my two cats Katya and Sophia, and my grandkitten rogue terrorist cat of my son, Isabella. I also am thankful for my DNA family, in addition to Nate, and the people in my life, like my doctor who have kept me alive with their hope and kindness. Their love and kindness, and efforts to get me to seek treatment to the fullest extent when I wanted to quit, has kept me alive.


I am thankful for my four best friends:

Joe Monks, Rich Chapell, Steve Olle,
and Russell Stewart. I've many other wonderful friends, but it if I began listing all, I'd never stop. These are the people in my life who lifted me when I could as easily quit. Rich was my technical advisor who explained a great deal, very very much helpful to my fight against health issues. Steve Oh Holy Olle made me smile and cry, kept me afloat emotionally. Russ is, and has been my best man since 1983. His presence alone is comfort. And Joe Monks, who passed tragically in August of 2023, is fully responsible for giving me the fighting spirit it takes to deal with diagnoses of late stage cancer, of false diagnoses, of getting my energy up when one doctor said this isn't a real problem, it is all in your head, which was also false. Although Joe was blind, he said we should visit that doctor and kick him in the gonads, and tell him the pain from our assault was all in HIS mind.


For my colleagues and comrades in arms:


My world includes different areas of creative work. I have my poetry, my comic book scripts and prose anthologies along with journalistic coverage of comics, poetry, prose, games, interviews and more, as well as work outside of normal definitions, and non creative works of organization and team building. There are many here, but I'll name those who are more associates due to shared world of interest. Along with those mentioned below, my site has benefitted from the time and products for review from many publishers. Peter Bergting, Brian Haberlin, Chris Staros from Top Shelf Productions, and many others helped me in my oft times lonely quest to cover comics, books, music and games.

So, in no order of preference...

Erik Larsen: Artist Writer of Savage Dragon, a great independent comic book. He helped me find my path when the oncologist first said I was late 3rd stage and/or early 4th stage of cancer. He chatted me, gave me hope and said the most true thing anyone said or did, you can always get a bad diagnosis, or even, you might have a miracle. (Both happened)

Michael Baron: For about 22 years Mike Baron has been a mentor, friend, grumpy old fart telling me how to make my work better, and more. He also gave me hope and advice when the news was bad, telling me, focus on the good, until you are dead you are still alive and have a chance.

Bryan JL Glass: A writer of some enormous talent, he is someone who has given me real life hope, and he gave me spiritual hope, and he spoke with me and allowed me to vent, share and discuss matters of a cosmic nature, that seemed increasingly to be revealed to me, soon. Fortunately, that did not happen... yet.

Mike Grell: Artist Writer Mike Grell was one of the most enthusiastic, helpful mentors, who did 3 pages of my first book, A LIFE OF RAVENS. He believed in me, and has called me, his pain in the ass little brother.  He periodically sent messages of hope, message of iron and resolve, and said things that I won't share, because they were spoken in our private conversation. But they made me cry, and often. When I had my second diagnoses of Late 3rd/Early 4th, he sent me a letter that said, his greatest hope was that his pain in the ass little brother would live to keep being a pain in the ass. (The name is an affectionate one, coming from the days when we'd write often and he'd give me advice and when I didn't do it immediately he'd say, hey Asshole, just do it.) I love Mike very much.

Nate Barlow: Nate is a fine documentarian, who well knows his way about film making, acting, directing, and the history of Hollywood. He has never been anything but kind and generous in his time. But he has gone out of his way to give the greatest interviews as far as depth is concerned, and is a person of infinitely kind actions. And more than once, he propped me up when I was ready to collapse mentally, and a kind inquiry here or comment there, made me appreciate him greatly.

Frank Beddor: I love Frank, we've been friends since he called me, on my cell, when only 20 people or less had my number. We chatted long and enriching, and we spoke many times. Most importantly for me as a reviewer and interviewer, I really enjoyed his works, both prose and graphic novels. When I thought I was about to die, I asked him if he'd resend his library for review, so that I could leave my readers, with my final entry, with the books I thought best exemplified fun, well crafted stories, and the creation of new imaginative works from great older roots. He then sent many things. It blew me away in so many ways. He sent me a note, Alex, I think of you daily in your struggle and can't wait to hear that you've beat the enemy, cancer. When I did find out it wasn't what two oncologists had said, he like me, celebrated the news. It made me cry how kind he was and has been for over 20 years.

Alan Dean Foster: He's been going through his own life issues, including Disney trying to hose him on royalties, and health issues. But he took the time to send me kind words, thoughts about what he learned in his own health battles, and most of all, was a friend who listened to me, at a time when I was sinking. I've been in contact with him since 1983, and he is a great writer, kind person, and oft times mentor. He has been a gem in the world of stones.


Lastly, and not at all Leastly...  I am thankful for these artists who I have not created with, nor worked with: The Swallows, J. Briozo, Dissident Creatures, and The Sleeper Pins.

No, that isn't four distinctly different bands. It is a gathering of enormously talented musicians, who have bands that express their different styles, outlooks, and grooves. I've interviewed each of them, and I have been amazed to know how deeply intelligent each is, along with their musical talents.

Brett Hanson
Jeff Crandall
Aaron Kerr
Tyson Allison
Mike Norby

More than anything, while I am moved by the minds and talent of this group of humans, I am also comforted, and intellectually inspired by them.  Each one is a different being, but somehow when they play together, they create a masterful work of beauty and power.


FINAL THOUGHTS

I am very thankful to the Rockford Veterinary Clinic for saving both of my beloved senior cats. They've allowed me to breathe again, I was in deep fear of their loss. They performed, in my eyes, amazing miracles.

Thank you readers too. I've appreciated how many write to me personally, and ask me questions about the worlds I've found myself a part of.

LASTLY

CONTACTING ME FOR REVIEWS OR OTHERWISE

I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.


My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
Bluesky
X/Twitter

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.

Sunday, November 19, 2023

MY BOOKS

BOOKS I'VE DONE
By Alex Ness
November 20, 2023

REASONS

I've been nearly banned from FACEBOOK and, since I absolutely believe it is wrong to do what they've done, I'm removing all my content from the site. I've been told that they believe I am a right winger, and other such labels. Since I don't post politics, and do not post obscenity they are removing my posts in fear, rather than for reality.  If it must be known, in my presidential votes since 1984, I've voted for 3rd parties more than Democrats or Republicans, and more Democrats than Republicans. The math does not work for their campaign of hate against me.

Also, after much consideration, while I appreciate every person who has made this site better for their own work upon it, I realize that at this point, it is my site. Rather than say what I've said in the past, that this site is mostly my doing, but others have been just as important, I'd suggest it was my site, and it was open to the many writing here for a time, but are now gone. This isn't the site where I"m endeavoring to promote my work, but I get asked so many times where to find my published works, I've decided to just go forward and accept reality. I'd like to say, there are at least five works I did not display, since they were published using my work, but not giving me credit by name. I ghost write articles for websites, for money and for Non Profit Organizations that do good works, therefore I'm volunteering. The refusal to post the covers of books I've written but received no credit nor payment is not about my experiences and work ghost writing or NPO works. It is about theft where the reward was so small to sue or to move forward would be pointless.

NOTES UPON THE BOOKS

Some notes... since Covid in May my memory is almost non existent. As a result my posting these books is in a semblance of order of appearance, but not exactly so. I could look up the indicia or the Amazon info, but I just am not worried enough, or energetic enough to make that happen. Also, not every book has my name upon the cover, but every book shown below has my work inside its covers. I do not claim anything that is not directly true, and I do not claim credit where it is not accurate.

I get asked which books I sold the most of. This is not exact, but when selling Sasquatch, it has sold well over 150 copies. I have sold well over 200 copies of my book Cthulhu: Catastrophic Discoveries. Its predecessor was only slightly less successful. Many other works I cannot tell you how many sold, because in one case a publisher was a cheat, in other cases it wasn't my business as I was paid in product, and did not receive royalties. No, you do not have to ask me who cheated me, I won't say. I will say this, without the internet and Amazon I'd not have blogged, obviously, become a full time writer, less obviously, and for this I am grateful for both. From a distance you might feel the world never rewards you, but being a stay at home father, using blogs and websites of my own, and writing for other people, all served to allow me to publish, be published, and publish anthologies where other people are published.

If you have a desire to order something, check with me first? Amazon purchases end up with me making 2 dollars or less. I can give you a better price than Amazon, and make more on my end, if you buy directly from me. Not all works are still in print, and, in fact, many will go out of print soon. I am not, in any way shape or form complaining, after all, the decision regarding these is my own to make. Amazon has been a fair, but not altogether generous publisher, and I am moving to my next stage of work. News to come, when I have it. Contact me at AlexanderNess63@gmail.com for prices, available stock, and possible deals

THE BOOKS (Presented in no order whatsoever, no order of publication, no order of preference)






























CONTACTING ME FOR REVIEWS OR OTHERWISE


I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.


My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
Bluesky
X/Twitter
Facebook

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.

Sunday, November 12, 2023

A Whole Lot of Rich Koslowski

RICH KOSLOWSKI
By Alex Ness
November 13, 2023

FIRST A REVIEW

F.A.R.M. System
By Rich Koslowski
Softcover, $19.99
208 Pages, full color
Top Shelf Productions

It would be fair to say that Rich Koslowski doesn't write and illustrate stories like other creative talents. His art is distinct from other artists, but his writing is what gives the reader a different perspective and quality story. He is bright and able but more than just that, he has an outlook that draws upon the inner workings of a person of fame, and asks questions that any normal person would ask.

In his book The King he asked what the power of celebrity could lead to, and in particular, should a talent seem to be Elvis returned in the flesh, would he be treated as a celebrity, or with apt caution, assume it is a person performing in character, but by no means the impersonated celebrity. His work Three Fingers asks if Mickey Mouse could find himself depressed, unemployable, and drinking to forget what his celebrity caused him to do.

In F.A.R.M. System Rich asks important specific questions... if superheroes were real, how would they behave, how would they become famous, how might they use their fame for gain, or for others. In this work, the consequences of talents and heroism don't always lead to being a successful superhero. The idea might have been approached before, as to real world consequences and practices of a world with superheroes, but Rich makes the story an entertaining ride, with quirks and admirable efforts to make this work unique, intelligently done and worth the money. 

I didn't find any notable flaws, the art was nice to look at, and the story was well done. Review grade B+/A-

NEXT A KICKSTARTER

MERCY by Rich Koslowski


"Hello everyone! It's your old pal, Rich Koslowski here! I have a brand spankin' new project I'm really excited about. Listen, I love MONSTERS! I love Horror movies and horror novels and horror comics! I also love creating and self-publishing. Therefore, I have written and illustrated my very own Illustrated Horror Novel and have decided to launch this baby on Kickstarter! 

Now, let's dive right in here with a brief description of the story and all the other pertinents...

THE BOOK (as seen below being read by the Zealot):

In a universe of monsters, a hospital and its monstrous staff finds themselves swept up in a crime investigation after multiple staff members are found murdered eighteen years after a human may or may not have suddenly entered their world through a portal.

Detectives Rozanski (a Fire Demon) and Carl Woodrow (a Sasquatch) are hot on the trail of this serial killer and the insane possibility that a mythical "human" may be their culprit! Will they find the murderer before he escapes through the portal and destroys both the monster's and the human's worlds? 

Mercy is a  244 page Illustrated Horror Novel, filled with 71 full-color and B&W illustrations. Mercy is filled with Horror,  Intrigue, Mystery, Murder and a healthy dose of Humor!

'A spooky and fun story that reminds audiences of Halloweentown layered on top of a complex and mature crime thriller reminiscent of NCIS or The Exorcist III, this novel successfully embraces its inventive premise while offering up an ensemble of monstrous characters that appeal to a wide range of readers.'  

––Jon Knecht, World Builder Entertainment"

KNOWING RICH


I met Rich at a convention in Minnesota in 2006 and interviewed him shortly thereafter. We became friends, which led to his being one of the artists who worked on my first book with my name on the cover, A LIFE OF RAVENS. He did a wonderful piece, and his presence on the book helped it in many ways. Shortly thereafter we were tabled next to each other at Oconocon, a smaller con at a nice venue in Southern Wisconsin. It was fun to chat with him. While he escaped to California with his wife and child, he has since returned. Perhaps I'll get a chance to interview him, but more than that, I wanted to say, whenever I see his name on a project, I know it means it will be good.

Find Rich at his website.

CONTACTING ME FOR REVIEWS OR OTHERWISE

I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.


My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
Bluesky
X/Twitter

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.


Tuesday, November 7, 2023

IF YOU MISSED THEM

COMICS YOU MIGHT HAVE MISSED
By Alex and my best friend, Rich Chapell
November 8, 2023


I wanted to create a regular feature wherein I consider works that didn't linger long enough on the shelves to inspire a collected version, or as a limited series it didn't have sales that suggested a TPB would have additionally good sales. My first few attempts led to no responses. But this time and a previous time, a number of my comic book loving friends said let's do it. I'll begin with my choices, and follow with choices of my friend Rich Chapell. The only rules were, the comics considered critically or popularly, needing better sales, critically appreciated works that no one saw or heard of, and could do well now, or works that just lingered upon the outer reaches of success, but never quite broke through. It isn't a contest, and it is a matter of taste that we are sharing, but you might find a work that inspires you.

THE ORIGINAL ASTRO BOY by NOW COMICS

During the run of the original Astro Boy in Japan, it was a fun, well written and drawn work, that Americans might have had a slight knowledge of. But Now Comics utilized the newsstand market versus the direct market, and Astro Boy was a robot, a happy looking creation, and the stories appealed to both children and adult comic readers. I truly enjoyed it, bought it for less than a 25¢ each, and read them all, upon the end thinking, I really wanted more. The writing captured the original flavor, the art was both modern, but still reminiscent of the original.

AIR FIGHTERS CLASSICS by ECLIPSE

Airboy by Chuck Dixon, Thom Yeates and Timothy Truman was a rebirth of a World War II work, that featured a boy and a unique aircraft, and villains that were deliciously dark, and the whole work felt adventurous and worth the rebirth. But, for most readers, the universe it existed in was alien and unfamiliar. It was well written and illustrated, the editorial guidance obvious and steady, but the Air Fighters Classics was an attempt to create a mini series that reprinted stories that helped ground Airboy in the world his adventures took place in. It was truly a work that the readers needed, but it was troubled by stereotyped art, black and white pages, and a relatively high price. But I enjoyed it.

JUDGE DREDD by DC

Allowing Mike Oeming and Andy Helfer to tell stories in the Judge Dredd universe, for me, was a brilliant choice by the license owner, and the original publisher. Judge Dredd's world is dark and dangerous, a dystopia with little hope. Helfer's work on the Shadow pissed off many. Oeming had been working on many independent comics and had excellent skills and talents, but was relatively unknown to many. All I could think of was the freedom to tell a story with the audience being new to the world. But it seems the newness of the approach alone angered many. The art was great, the stories were quirky, and original.  I thought it should be collected.

RACE OF SCORPIONS by DARK HORSE

Leo Durañona told a story in a way that was epic, and in a world that was dystopic, it was powerful and demonstrated a people in grave crisis. The devastated world considered was part Dune, part Arzach, or straight Moebius, or Nausicaa, this work is about people who suffer after a climactic disaster, where water is as good as gold. Art was wonderful, the story, if familiar, wonderful to read, if also depressing too.



Rich Chapell's Choices, and Commentary

Demon Hunter (Atlas, 1975)

Demon Hunter, by Rich Buckler with writer David Anthony Kraft, was hands-down the best book produced by Martin Goodman’s short-lived Atlas/Seaboard comics. Sadly, it appeared at the tail end of that venture’s existence, and lasted only a single issue before the entire company folded. Buckler and Kraft later revived the character as Devil Slayer at Marvel, but the iron was no longer hot.

To my eye, the look of the character invokes Ditko. Both his early Dr. Strange and his contemporaneous Stalker come to mind. On the other hand, the storytelling, panel composition and narrative structure remind me of Goodman and Simonson’s groundbreaking Manhunter series.

Gideon Cross is a mercenary; a bodyguard/enforcer for hire, but he’s also a mystic warrior for a mysterious cult, the Harvesters of Night. In addition to his combat skills he is a telepath with powers of illusion and a has mystic cloak that enables him to teleport or banish foes to distant dimensions and also serves as a cache for weapons both mystic and mundane. He begins to question the motives of the Harvesters, but sensing this they send a demon to destroy him.

Created at the tail end of the Monster Comics fad that gave us Ghost Rider, Moon Knight and Blade the Vampire Hunter, Demon Hunter provides a good glimpse of the post-Viet Nam aimlessness that characterized the period. Cross joined the Harvesters because they gave him direction. It could have been the Hare Krishnas or the Peoples’ Temple. Or Disco. He emerges from his fog to learn that the Harvesters intend to bring about Xenogenesis, the rebirth of the demon race and their domination over the Earthly realm. “From now on,” he thinks, “I believe in myself.”  

He declares war on the Harvesters of Night, but they’re at least one step ahead of him, and already have him under surveillance.  With that, the issue ends, and we never find out what happens.


Hotspur (Eclipse, 1987)

1987 was a good year to be John Ostrander. His Grim Jack was defining the Grim & Gritty style of the era, DC was publishing his short-lived but innovative horror anthology Wasteland, and he’d just created the revamped Suicide Squad. On top of this, he found time to write the fun, campy swashbuckler Hotspur, a three-issue miniseries for Tim Truman’s 4Winds Productions, published by Eclipse.

Madcap actor Josef Quist is summoned by a wizard to an alternate world and tasked with stealing the talisman of the sex goddess. As is always the case on a good quest, he makes friends and enemies along the way, including a gay barbarian, the high priestess of the sex goddess, and a pair of Hollywood ghosts who invoke both Thin Man and Topper. Buckles are swashed, tongue never leaves cheek, and after three issues of madcap hijinx and clever repartee, good (albeit naughty) triumphs over evil and order (though admittedly somewhat messy) is restored. Big, stupid fun!

This first issue was beautifully drawn by Karl Waller, but he unfortunately took ill and much of the remaining two were done by Ben Dunn. While he tries to adapt his style to suit the material, he’s not playing to his strengths. Still, he’s a skilled sequential storyteller, and gets the job done.

Hotspur is (or has been) available as a trade paperback from Comicmix.


Cartoon History of the Universe (Rip Off Press, 1978)

Founded in the ‘60s, Rip Off Press published Underground comix. That means you couldn’t find their books at the news stand or even in the specialty comics shops that were starting to appear by the late ‘70s. To find their books, you had to go to a… Head Shop! There, among the glassware, healing crystals and Grateful Dead tapestries, you might find a small spinner rack of books you couldn’t find anywhere else. Zap Comix! Dr. Atomic! Checkered Demon! The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers! And almost as an afterthought, Cartoon History of the Universe.

Cartoon History stood out from the other books because it wasn’t focused on sex, drugs or deviant behavior. It was genuinely informative, interesting and very funny. It wasn’t long before I’d bought all seven issues extant at the time. The first issue takes us from the Big Bang through the rise of the primates. The second guides us through human evolution, use of tools and the development of agriculture. Subsequent issues focus on the Babylonians, Egyptians, Hebrews and finally the Greeks. Years later I discovered that two more issues had been published, covering ancient India and China. I thought these were a bit weaker than earlier issues. They seemed rushed, and showed less affection for the subject matter.

Writer/Artist Larry Gonick approaches history as a story, with many characters, themes and motifs occurring and recurring. While there’s sex, drugs and depravity along the way, there is also wisdom, empathy and insight. Everything is carefully researched, with references cited. Gonick interrupts his broad sweeps with illustrative, and often hilarious anecdotes, illustrating the conflicts between slave and master, culture and culture, or individual and society. The art style is as realistic or cartoonish as necessary to make the point and/or the joke.

Nine issues were published by Rip Off Press between 1978 and 1992. They have been reprinted in trade paperbacks by Doubleday along with additional material bringing us up to the end of the 20th century.  All are still available in five volumes, with the last two titled The Cartoon History of the Modern World. I didn’t know these existed until I began research for this article, but they’ve been moved to the top of my Amazon wish list.


Pervert Club (A.M. Works, 1995)

This faux-manga by Will Allison is both a faithful translation of Japanese manga conventions and a satyric send-up of absurd manga tropes. It falls securely into the High School Club genre, which really is a genuine genre in Japan, with stories running hundreds of episodes about chess club, tennis club or drama club.  But this is Pervert club, not officially sanctioned by the school.

When Malcolm Davis is caught by his sister stealing her panties, she retaliates by telling the entire school. This attracts the attention of April, president of the underground Pervert Club. When, Inspired by his platonic friend April, he decides to come out as a crossdresser. Julia is ecstatic, and recruits him into the club, which includes an infantilist, a voyeur and a dom/sub lesbian couple.  Teen drama ensues.

The kink never rises above a PG rating, because that’s not really the point. It’s not about the kink, it’s about people’s reaction to the kink. Malcolm’s mom takes it in stride, while his sister is mortified. His classmates react as the genre dictates. Various tropes make themselves known, such as the Interloper, the power struggles within the club, unrequited crushes, and the opposition of adults who Just Don’t Understand. Other tropes are raised only to be mocked.  When Julia channels Team Rocket to rant about taking over the school via Fetish Power, the others just laugh.

Despite the overall satiric tone, a certain amount of insight is displayed as well. In a scene that would doubtless be condemned by Moms for Liberty if they ever became aware of it, Malcolm’s mom defies the school principal to come up with a single reason he can’t wear women’s clothes to school. April assumes that being a crossdresser means Malcolm is gay, which never even occurred to him. A bisexual student is rejected from Pervert club because that doesn’t even count as a kink (And also because he’s handsome and popular, and thus a threat to Julia’s power.)

The art is unpolished but adequate. The writing is spot-on. Pervert club runs a full twelve issues and reaches a satisfying conclusion. I commend Allison for completing a series that probably barely covered his printing costs.  I wish the series had done better and he’d gone on to produce more books.

The first few issues of Pervert club are available in trade paperback from Radio Comix. The rest you’ll have to track down on your own. They won’t be expensive, but they’ll be hard to find. The book only sold a few thousand copies per issue. I understand there is also an unrelated manga with the same title now. I know nothing about it other than the fact that it exists.

CONTACTING ME FOR REVIEWS OR OTHERWISE

I can be found on Facebook, Twitter or through email Alexanderness63@gmail.com. I accept hard copies, so when you inquire at any of these places, I'll follow through by telling you my street address.If you send hard copies for review I will try to always review them, but if you prefer to send pdf or ebooks to my email, I will review these at my discretion. I don't share my pdf/ebooks, so you can avoid worry that I'd dispense them for free to others.


My Creative Blogs:

5k poem blog         AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com


Published works   AlexNessPoetry.Blogspot.Com/2007/01/My-Work.html


Social Media:
Bluesky
X/Twitter

All images are copyright © their respective owner
s, use is simply as fair use and no ownership rights asserted.