New Crowdfunding Project Alert! Following the success of Bi Visibility: A Bisexual Anthology, Lifeline Comics launched a new anthology on Kickstarter Feb. 6th – Hairology. A 56-paged comic book all about hair with the creative minds of Kat Calamia (WEBTOON’s Slice of Life), Phil Falco (Slice of Life), and Jamila Rowser (Wash Day Diaries) at…
REVIEW: Space Trash Stages a Lunarpunk Rebellion
Jenn Woodall’s Space Trash is a colorful riot of individuality railing against the capitalist underpinnings of space colonization. For the students attending high school in a sealed dome in the twenty-second century, the fantasy of living on the moon is an unpleasantly gritty reality. These young women’s minor acts of rebellion against an unfair system…
REVIEW: Nine Liars by Maureen Johnson Is a New Year’s Treat
Nine Liars, Maureen Johnson’s latest mystery in the Stevie Bell series, has her sleuth traveling to England for funzies, only to be caught up in a cold case there. Both the cold case and Stevie’s life are as engaging as always in this gratifying page-turner.
COVER REVEAL AND TITLE ANNOUNCEMENT: Betty and Veronica: Friends Forever: Game On! #1
Keep reading to see our cover reveal and title announcement for Archie Comics’ Betty and Veronica: Friends Forever: Game On! #1
REVIEW: She Loves to Cook, and She Loves to Eat
Finding the relationship you need is a nourishing experience. Even more so when food is involved. A comforting slice-of-life manga, She Loves to Cook, and She Loves to Eat volume 1, is about two neighbors bonding over food and cultivating a new caring space for each other.
Cover Girl – Betsy Braddock: Captain Britain #1
Welcome to Cover Girl! For this feature, we gather a team of WWAC contributors to analyze a new or recent and notable comic book cover featuring one or more women. This month, Kat Overland, Carrie McClain, Masha Zhdanova, Nola Pfau, and Kayleigh Hearn discuss the Betsy Braddock: Captain Britain #1 variant cover by Peach Momoko.
REVIEW: Gordita: Built Like This Is a Heartfelt Flashback to Teenage Girlhood
I remember seeing a few pages on Twitter of Daisy “Draizys” Ruiz’s black and white comic titled Built Like Spongebob. It was a minicomic about a teen girl’s observations and woes about her body which left her uncomfortable and even sometimes feeling a little worthless. The work grabbed my attention and introduced me to Ruiz…
