Critters (comics)

Critters was a funny animal anthology comic book published by Fantagraphics Books from 1985 to 1990 under the editorship of Kim Thompson.

Critters #1 featuring the feature characters of the strips, "Usagi Yojimbo", "Birthright" and "Cutey Bunny".

Prior to Furrlough and Genus, this was the longest running funny animal anthology comic book series. The title lasted for 50 issues. Furthermore, it served as the flagship title of Fantagraphics' line of funny animal series in the 1980s.

The last 12 issues were switched to revolving features of issue-long stories, rather than the anthology format. Declining sales, due in part to the 1980s black-and-white comics market overload (many titles of which were funny-animal comics aiming for the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles market) led to this title's cancellation.

Alan Moore released a single "March of the Sinister Ducks" as a flexi disc in the comic issue 23.[1]

Series

The series included in the book were:

  • "Birthright" by Steve Gallacci – dystopian science fiction story set a few generations after his "Erma Felna: EDF" series in Albedo Anthropomorphics.
  • "Fission Chicken" by J.P. Morgan – the adventures of an ill-tempered chicken superhero.
  • "Gnuff" by Freddy Milton – a translation of Danish comics about a family of dragons written and drawn much in the style of Carl Barks.
  • "Usagi Yojimbo" by Stan Sakai – the adventures of the rabbit ronin before the strip got its own book.
  • "Lionheart" by Tom Stazer – in which the title character (a journalist cat) relates the bizarre stories he investigates.
  • "Duck 'Bill' Platypus" by Kyle Rothweiler – an antic, knockabout humor strip about the eponymous character and his strange friends, set allegedly in Tasmania.
  • "Lizards" by J. Holland (story) and Ron Wilber (art) – this series depicted the day-to-day life of Dweezil, a teenage anthropomorphic lizard, his family and friends, set on an alternate (future?) world.
  • "Creepy Crawlies" by Mathson Manger – this series goes through the life of five different creepy crawlies and all the troubles they go through.
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References

  1. Alan Moore: Conversations – Page xxii Alan Moore, Eric L. Berlatsky – 2011 "Moore and his band, the Sinister Ducks, release the single “March of the Sinister Ducks,” b/w “Old Gangsters Never Die” in 1983. Moore uses the pseudonym Translucia Baboon for the recording. Saga of the Swamp Thing (with Steve Bissette ..."


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