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Oct 2020

Ever since I joined Tapas a few months ago, I've pretty much started opening my eyes to other realms within the comics community. I would like to continue that by seeing if anyone here reads any independent comics. You can share any independent comics that you've read, whether it was self-published or distributed by Image, Dark Horse, etc. A description of the comic and an explanation as to why you enjoy it would also be advised. I look forward to seeing what you end up sharing.

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    Oct '20
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    Oct '20
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Anything by Shaun Tan! Well, ok, I haven't read everything. But I have the Arrival, and I've read a couple of others.

He just has the most gorgeous pencil work. His pieces are imaginative, and vast, but at the same time focuses on individuals and the little things. The Arrival has no dialogue or words, and it manages to convey a whole narrative and story. I highly recommend it!

Here's his website for a taste of how his art looks5

Mouse Guard bu David Peterson. I only have the first volume, the Fall, but it is among my favourites. It's a fantasy story with mice. His artstyle really fits the vibe and genre, and he manages to keep the mice as realistically mouse-like as possible while still having them be sentient/sapient and live in a medieval-ish society.

This one is from my childhood (NOT a kid's book!! I read it too early, but I loved it lol), and I'm not sure if it exists in English? Nofret by Sussi Bech, originally Danish. It's a historical fiction, set in about 1350 BC. A lot of it takes place in Egypt, some in the surrounding nations and areas.

One of my first Canvas Webtoon series caught my eye, it is called Lucid.
I liked it because this character has a very cool aura/vibe, she does not speak much too much, and carries with her a 'don't mess with me' vibe.

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I will add in a self-promotion here. This is my comic. I wanted to show the relationship between a child an adult, how they find support from others and grow.

Am I allowed to mention something not on Tapas?

There are only two purely indie comics I've ever picked up, Actually there was Gaia but I got bored.

  • Trying Human
  • I forget the title, hopefully someone knows it. It's about an undead mage man who accompanies a thief girl (has a cat tail). It was very interesting though very wordy

American comics are always too wordy

Unsounded by Ashley Cope?2

OH MY, yes thank you so much I remember the name now. In fact, I should catch up on it

(i'll butt out after this one, I just remembered these two webcomics not hosted on Tapas!)

Glass Scientists2, a retelling of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Excellent pacing and comedic timing, wonderful characters, and you can tell the creator truly knows and cares about the classic sci-fi elements they incorporate. Diverse cast, wonderful drawings!

Miriam Beach1, finished slice-of-life/gag-a-day comic strip. Wholesome group of friends and their day-to-day. Very flowy and pleasant art style, and realistic but funny dialogue.

Just for clarification, you're supposed to mention independent comic books, not webcomics. And this isn't a self-promo either.

It is not only allowed, but encouraged.

I have a big list of alternative comics that I love but I’m not sure they’d necessarily be categorized as independent!

The Magpie by Bones Mckay and Ursula Gray has my heart. Bones is the writer and Ursula's the artist. They have two other comics too, but this one's my favorite. Bones has also written a few novels- I'm in the middle of one called Honey Walls- ity's just so nice to be able to read a book with Trans representation craeted by a trans person. The Magpie's also on Tapas and is in Hiatus but the two have a YT channel where they update about there comics. They just really make me happy lol

Oh yeah, I heard about them. I actually watched a few of their videos a while back. I'll be sure to check them out. Thanks.

Damn... I disliked... I know I shouldn’t, everyone likes it, and my brother gave it to me for Christmas with raving comments, but damn I felt it was such a bore...

Lately, I’m back into Joe Sacco, currently rereading Gorazde... it’s quite amazing...

Sounds neat. I'll look into it.

Two of my favorites are actually memoirs of true stories. The Best We Could Do is the story of a vietnamese woman brought to America when she was very young escaping the Vietnam War. She goes to her parents and talks to them about their lives, how they grew up and met and about the conflict and their escape. Very good read. The other is They Called Us Enemy by George Takei about his time in the Japanese Internment Camps during World War 2. I really want to see more people great stories like these because they're so much more engaging than autobiographies or traditional memoirs and I really feel like they give you a strong sense of connection and place to the stories being told and these stories are some that more people should read.

some more i remembered:

American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang. Three separate stories that connect towards the end, exploring Chinese identity, stereotypes, and especially in relation to the Chinese diaspora and growing up Chinese American.

Fun Home by Alison Bechdel (creator of Dykes to watch out for, where the Bechdel test comes from). A memoir about her childhood, especially her relationship with her father.

And I kinda gotta mention the Sandman by Neil Gaiman. Not really sure it counts as indy, and it isn't exactly a hidden gem, but it's in my top 3. There are 75 issues of the original run, collected in 10 volumes. Morpheus, the titular Sandman, is one of the seven endless: Death, Desire, Despair, Destruction, Destiny, Delirium, and himself, Dream. There's several different disconnected stories, sometimes with an overarching plot.
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