Zines
A sexy sci-fi comedy about the three hottest criminals in the universe.
Haze: shapeshifter/galaxy's greatest thief.
Blue Lick: catman/brawny getaway driver.
Rat: angel/bombshell hacker.
In a future where humanity was guided by an all-knowing Algorithm to leave Earth behind and colonize the depths of outer space, our three hot thieves plan heists that can't be predicted by unfeeling computer code. Always on their tail is Inspector Hundred Cold, one of the Algorithm's robot lackeys built to serve the machine-made status quo that our heroes simply can't resist toying with.
A hilarious and erotic send-up of cat-and-mouse crime capers by the cartoonist who brought you Mr. Boop! THE COLLECTED CRIMEHOT: VOL. 1 includes the series' first five chapters, packaged with a "slip" cover that can be easily removed to reveal naked drawings. We highly recommend this.
Haze: shapeshifter/galaxy's greatest thief.
Blue Lick: catman/brawny getaway driver.
Rat: angel/bombshell hacker.
In a future where humanity was guided by an all-knowing Algorithm to leave Earth behind and colonize the depths of outer space, our three hot thieves plan heists that can't be predicted by unfeeling computer code. Always on their tail is Inspector Hundred Cold, one of the Algorithm's robot lackeys built to serve the machine-made status quo that our heroes simply can't resist toying with.
A hilarious and erotic send-up of cat-and-mouse crime capers by the cartoonist who brought you Mr. Boop! THE COLLECTED CRIMEHOT: VOL. 1 includes the series' first five chapters, packaged with a "slip" cover that can be easily removed to reveal naked drawings. We highly recommend this.
In this compelling debut horror graphic novel, a newly turned vampire yearns for salvation in the arms of the priest who uncovers her secret.
New Orleans, 1922. Cora Velasquez lives with her sister and her own haunted memories in a speakeasy run by a vampire coven. Unable to bear the weight of her damned soul, she turns to Father Orville Thibodeaux, a charismatic priest and the object of her hidden desires. Their veiled courtship becomes deadly serious when he discovers her nature, and proposes a way to both slake her thirst and save her soul. So begins the charged dance between an all-powerful but unsure young woman, and the mortal man who claims to hold her fate in his hand.
A gothic story of adoration, power, and manipulation, lushly told in Art Nouveau-inspired illustration.
New Orleans, 1922. Cora Velasquez lives with her sister and her own haunted memories in a speakeasy run by a vampire coven. Unable to bear the weight of her damned soul, she turns to Father Orville Thibodeaux, a charismatic priest and the object of her hidden desires. Their veiled courtship becomes deadly serious when he discovers her nature, and proposes a way to both slake her thirst and save her soul. So begins the charged dance between an all-powerful but unsure young woman, and the mortal man who claims to hold her fate in his hand.
A gothic story of adoration, power, and manipulation, lushly told in Art Nouveau-inspired illustration.
"It's all about the tasty, clever twists each of Alex's comics take; those unexpected turns only the funniest kind of sicko could come up with!" - Lisa Hanawalt, Tuca & Bertie
Meet Alex: an internet-addicted raccoon and his misadventures in the big bad city. Each day reveals a new wonder of modern living, from the highs of creating art to the lows of paying rent, captured forever in a four-panel comic. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll like/share/subscribe.
Loud & Smart & In Color collects more than 80 brand-new, weird, wonderful Loud & Smart comics by Alex Krokus in color for the first time.
Meet Alex: an internet-addicted raccoon and his misadventures in the big bad city. Each day reveals a new wonder of modern living, from the highs of creating art to the lows of paying rent, captured forever in a four-panel comic. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll like/share/subscribe.
Loud & Smart & In Color collects more than 80 brand-new, weird, wonderful Loud & Smart comics by Alex Krokus in color for the first time.
Michael Sweater's cult hit Please Destroy My Enemies is back, now inappropriately gorgeous in stunning full color. Catching hints of Gary Larson's The Far Side subversive cute animal absurdism, Matt Groening's Life in Hell bone-dry deadpan, and bits of Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes pre-adult philosophical inquiry, get ready for the relatable weirdness described by Boing Boing as "darlingly ironic and awful."