While a website, the collected editions focus on high-contrast political satire. Black and white forces the cartoonist to rely on symbolism and facial expression, making the political points sharper.
Set in 1970s Seattle, this plague-horror story uses high-contrast Ben-Day dot patterns (reminiscent of Archie comics) to tell a disturbing story of STDs and mutation. Burns’ art is sterile, cold, and deeply unsettling.
: Paul Chadwick’s thoughtful story about a man whose mind is trapped in a massive, stone-like body. (B&W Editions)
The Window That Wouldn’t Close Absurdist strip: a stubborn window opens to improbable places each time it’s shut. Great escalation across a few panels with expressive line energy.
While a website, the collected editions focus on high-contrast political satire. Black and white forces the cartoonist to rely on symbolism and facial expression, making the political points sharper.
Set in 1970s Seattle, this plague-horror story uses high-contrast Ben-Day dot patterns (reminiscent of Archie comics) to tell a disturbing story of STDs and mutation. Burns’ art is sterile, cold, and deeply unsettling. blacknwhitecomics 20 comics best
: Paul Chadwick’s thoughtful story about a man whose mind is trapped in a massive, stone-like body. (B&W Editions) While a website, the collected editions focus on
The Window That Wouldn’t Close Absurdist strip: a stubborn window opens to improbable places each time it’s shut. Great escalation across a few panels with expressive line energy. While a website
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