Results for: drawn to comics
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Drawn to Comics: Is Anyone Doing Trans Women’s Representation Better Than Image Comics?
Image titles like The Wicked + The Divine, Rat Queens, Trees, and Shutter are showing that trans characters just make great comics even greater.
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A-Camp All Stars Recommend Their Favorite Comics!
Knowing that these A-Camp All-Stars live parts of their lives off the mountain and reading comics, I decided to ask some of them what their very favorite comics are.
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Drawn to Comics: I’m a Peggy Carter Girl in a Peggy Carter World
Every single person should go watch “Agent Carter” on ABC and read “Operation S.I.N.” from Marvel Comics right freaking now.
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Drawn to Comics: Twelve Things I’m Hoping for In Comics in 2015
All I want this year is more representation, better representation, the return of some of my faves and about nine other things.
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Drawn to Comics: Check Out the College-Age Magical Girls of “Agents of the Realm”
A bunch of college-age girls (many of them girls of color) being friends, wearing sweet outfits and saving the day together? Count me in!
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Drawn to Comics: Lumberjanes #9 Has Spookiness to the Max!
If you were on the fence about buying it, the credits page calls the issue “a flippin’ sweet Susan B. Anth-ology.”
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“My Favorite Thing Is Monsters” and the Queerness of Horror
Emil Ferris’s debut graphic novel, about a ten-year-old half-Mexican tomboy who is obsessed with horror films and detective comics, explores the intersection between gender, sexuality, race and class.
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Drawn to Comics: My Top 12+ Favorite Single Issues of 2014
You guys, I tried to make this a “Top Ten” list, I really did. There were just too many great comics.
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Drawn to Comics: Sera From Marvel’s “Angela: Asgard’s Assassin” is the Closest to a Trans Superhero We’ve Got So Far
Not only is Angela a super awesome, super powerful lady warrior, but her best friend and traveling partner is a sweet trans woman of color mage.
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Drawn to Comics: Witchy is Your New Favorite Webcomic About Teen Witches of Color
It’s about girls of color, it has queer characters (including a trans girl of color), it has witches, it’s got a super original premise, it’s got great art, great writing and a greatly compelling story.
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Drawn to Comics: Ranking The 40 Coolest Women in Superhero Comic Book Movies
I was really glad I was able to find this many women in superhero comic book movies that I liked.
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Drawn to Comics: We Need to Talk About the Rape in Batwoman
A lot of Batwoman fans (and to be honest, a lot of comic fans overall) were worried when the creative team of W. Haden Blackman and J.H. Williams III left the book after DC refused to allow them to have Kate Kane (Batwoman) marry her longtime girlfriend, police detective Maggie Sawyer. Now, it looks like those fears were completely justified.
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14 Comics That Celebrate Female Friendship For Galentine’s Day
These comics and graphic novels make women’s friendships the focus.
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Drawn to Comics: 25 Queer and Trans Women Comic Creators to Support this Holigay Season!
Only YOU can make sure queer and trans women are able to keep making comics.
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Drawn to Comics: Lumberjanes’ Epic Friendtastic First Run Finale is Here!
As we come upon the final issue of the first run of Lumberjanes, let’s reflect on just how freaking lucky we are to be alive in a world where this comic exists.
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Drawn to Comics: Lumberjanes’ Penultimate Issue! (Just For the First Storyline)
The issue that answers all your burning questions! Or at least, like, three-fourths of them!
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Drawn to Comics: Laura Ķeniņš’ “She Wants to Tell Me” is Soft, Subtle and Full of Melancholy
Latvian comic book writer and artist Laura Ķeniņš’ book “She Wants to Tell Me” is a gently told tale of exploration, love and sadness between two women who meet when they find a severed ear in a public park.
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Drawn to Comics Classics: “Gotham Central: In The Line of Duty” Brings Renee Montoya to the Forefront
Hey girl, I heard you’re into Renee Montoya.
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Drawn to Comics: Lumberjanes #5 May Be the Best One Yet!
“Dinosaurs! Yessssss!”
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Drawn to Comics: Jillian and Mariko Tamaki’s “This One Summer” is Evocative, Emotional
If you want to reminisce about your teenage summers, enjoy a good book or just a good cry, This One Summer is the book for you.