Bibliographies by the artists themselves

I’ve broken the bibliographies into 4 parts because the listing is somewhat long:

  1. Bibliographies by Michael Karpas (and now Peter Karpas)
  2. Bibliographies by Richard Arndt
  3. Other bibliographies by fans
  4. Bibliographies by the artists themselves

 

Bibliographies by the Artists Themselves

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Neil Gaiman has his own bibliography.  It’s not as extensive as the one here, but covers non-comic book writings so is worth checking out (as is Neil’s whole site, which is great).  You can find it at his site.

Scott McCloud, author of Understanding Comics, Zot!, 12 issues of Superman Adventures, etc. has a really cool time-line of his work.  Very extensive and very nice.  For a handsome biography page that leads to this time-line, click here instead.

Warren Ellis, writer for Planetary, Transmetropolitan, and The Authority, has an abridged bibliography (abridged? bah!) on his site.

 

Listed Alphabetically

Neal Adams, artist for a ton of stuff, has a pretty cool site which includes a checklist.

Kevin J. Anderson, whose comics output is mostly Star Wars: Tales of the Jedi, keeps a biblio here.

John Cassaday, the artist for Planetary as well as a bunch of other DC, Marvel, etc. comics, also keeps his own bibliography.

Max Allan Collins, who wrote some Batman in the latter half of the 80’s, keeps his own bibliography as well.  You can also go to his main home page here.

Rich Corben (who’s been doing comics since 1969) has his own website with a checklist (bottom link in the navigation).

Here is Jamie Delano‘s, of Hellblazer, Animal Man, and Outlaw Nation fame.

Chuck Dixon’s official site, www.dixonverse.com, has a checklist here.  Be sure to look at the bottom, where it lists a bunch of unpublished stories he wrote but doesn’t think will ever be published because of continuity reasons.

Warren Ellis, writer for Planetary, Transmetropolitan, and The Authority, has an abridged bibliography (abridged? bah!) on his site.

Glenn Fabry, cover artist for The Preacher (among other things), keeps his own bibliography.

Neil Gaiman has his own bibliography.  It’s not as extensive as the one here, but covers non-comic book writings so is worth checking out (as is Neil’s whole site, which is great).  You can find it at his site.

Nat Gertler, who’s written Yogi Bear, Flintstones, Elf Quest, Jetsons, etc. keeps his resume on-line.

Christopher Golden keeps not one but two bibliographies on his site — one for comics (where he’s written Buffy, Angel, Batman, Wolverine, etc.) and one for everything else (which includes comics-based novelizations).

Here’s Stuart Immonen, illustrator for a variety of miscellaneous stuff (mostly for DC).  His list isn’t great — few issue numbers, for example — but it seems relatively complete.

Casey Jones did 10 issues of Excalibur art.

The Krigstein Archives covers pre-code comics artist Bernard Krigstein (1919-1990) on a site dedicated to preserving his art.

Joe R. Lansdale keeps an extensive bibliography on his site, including his comics work.  As Wheeler Hall said to me, “well worth checking out.”

Scott McCloud, author of Understanding Comics, Zot!, 12 issues of Superman Adventures, etc. has a really cool time-line of his work.  Very extensive and very nice.  For a handsome biography page that leads to this time-line, click here instead.

Don McGregor, who since 1974 has done work for Marvel, Topps, Eclipse, Warren, Image, and DC, keeps his own bibliography.

Bill Mumy, who played Will Robinson in “Lost in Space” and Lennier in “Babylon 5”, is also a comic book writer.  He has a solid bibliography with cover scans at his site.  I found it interesting that his “The Comic Man” had pencils by Kelley Jones (of Batman fame) and covers by Bill Sienkiewicz.

Here’s where the bibliography for Ariel Olivetti, who has done some miscellaneous Daredevil, Avengers, JLA, and Lobo illustrations, used to be.  The site seems to be down (as of 30 Oct 02), but I’ll leave the link here since there’s something on the home page.

…and Ken Penders, who has both written and pencilled lots of Star Trek and Sonic the Hedgehog.

Dave Stevens, most famous for The Rocketeer, doesn’t have a bibliography on his site per se, but does have images (many zoomable) of everything he’s ever done.  Worth a look.  [Please note that some of the pages contain artistic nudity, and are not intended for access or viewing by minors.]

Finally, here’s Mike Zeck, who for the last 25 years has a done a ton of art for Marvel and DC comics.