Alan Mitchell (comics)

Alan Mitchell (born 1960 in London, England) was a writer. He died on 22 June 2016.[1]

Alan Mitchell
Born1960
London, England
DiedJune 2016
NationalityBritish
Area(s)Writer
Notable works
Third World War

Biography

When Mitchell was working as a shop manager for Acme Comics in Coldharbour Lane in Brixton, South London,[2] in 1988, he met Pat Mills. The two became writing partners.

In Crisis, a political comic from Fleetway, Mitchell worked on Books 2 and 3 of Third World War. The story covered issues including matriarchy, police racism, no-go areas, private police forces, class war, and black resistance.[3] Mitchell also wrote the Amnesty International story "Prisoner of Justice" with artist Glenn Fabry. Mitchell partnered Mills in the first ABC Warriors novel The Medusa War for Black Library based on elements changed or removed from the scripts. According to Mills:

Parts [of the novel] are dramatisations of the comic strip. Notably the Biohazard troopers because they originally had excellent funky black dialogue contributed by my black co-writer on the novel, Alan Mitchell. This was altered at the time by 2000AD editorial without my knowledge and in an inappropriate and uncool way. It made my toes curl it was so wrong. So I thought it was important to put it back the way it should be. I think the text version is much better.[4]

Bibliography

Comics

  • Third World War (with co-author Pat Mills):
    • Book II:
      • "Here be dragons" (with art by Angela Kincaid (1) and John Hicklenton (2), in Crisis #15-16, 1989)
      • "Back in Babylon" (with art by Carlos Ezquerra, in Crisis #17, 1989)
      • Untitled (with art by Carlos Ezquerra, in Crisis #18, 1989)
      • "Liats law" (with art by Duncan Fegredo, in Crisis #19, 1989)
      • "All about Eve" (with art by Carlos Ezquerra, in Crisis #20-21, 1989)
      • "Symphony of splintered wood" (with art by Sean Phillips, in Crisis #22-23, 1989)
      • "Remembering Zion" (with art by Sean Phillips, in Crisis #24, 1989)
      • "The world according to Ryan" (with art by John Hicklenton, in Crisis #25, 1989)
      • "Liats law II" (with art by Duncan Fegredo, in Crisis #26, 1989)
      • "Book of Babylon" (with art by Sean Phillips, in Crisis #27, 1989)
      • "The Dark other" (with art by John Hicklenton, in Crisis #29, 1989)
      • "The rhythm of resistance" (with art by John Hicklenton, in Crisis #30, 1989)
      • "The calling" (with art by Sean Phillips, in Crisis #31, 1989)
      • "The man with the child in his eyes" (with art by Sean Phillips, in Crisis #33-34, 1989)
      • "Black man's burden" (with art by John Hicklenton, in Crisis #35, 1990)
      • "Ivan's story: Why me?" (with art by Steve Pugh, in Crisis, #36, 1990)
    • Book III:
      • "Killing Me Softly" (with art by Glyn Dillon, in Crisis, #43-44, 1990)
      • "Anchorman" (with art by Steve Pugh, in Crisis, #50, 1990)
  • "Prisoner of Justice" (with Glenn Fabry, in Crisis #52, 1990)
  • Coffin (with co-author Pat Mills and art by Morak Oguntade, in Toxic! #13-23, June–August 1991)

Novels

  • ABC Warriors: The Medusa War (with co-author Pat Mills, Black Library, 2004, ISBN 1-84416-109-9)

Notes

  1. (June 29, 2016), "Can You Help With The Funeral Costs For Comics Writer Alan Mitchell," Bleeding Cool. Retrieved December 20, 2016
  2. Brooks, Brad! "International Spotlight: Frank Bellamy: Dan Dare Artist Exhibited at South London Gallery," The Comics Journal #131 (Sept. 1989), pp. 13–14.
  3. Newsinger, John (1990-10-01). "Crisis: the comic revolution?". Race & Class, Volume 32, issue 2, pages 82-88. Retrieved 2020-07-15.
  4. Clements, Richmond (August 21, 2004). "Pat Mills Interview". 2000AD Review. Archived from the original on May 15, 2013. Retrieved March 26, 2010.
gollark: Elections: people are broadly unsatisfied with the results somehowFreedom of citizens: constitution is blatantly ignored half the timeRight to bear arms: kind of decreasing over timeRight to free speech: in practice, probably notRight to assemble: right now, you don't have that, which I feel is justified, but stillRight to privacy: HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAAHAAGHASHFHASGFAHsf
gollark: The right to privacy isn't a constitutional thing. I think it's important, though.
gollark: I mean, those things aren't quite as meaningful as one would hope nowadays, but it's more than North Korea.
gollark: Much more freedom of information going in/out, too.
gollark: You can leave the US, you at least... can say bad things about the government a bit, you can... have weapons, you're less likely to be randomly imprisoned, sort of thing.

References

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