Comics
Does Climate Change Affect Leaves' Fall Colors? And More Questions From Our Readers
You’ve got questions. We’ve got experts
Meet a Dozen Lesser-Known Christmas Characters, From Mr. Jingeling to Uncle Mistletoe
Created as department store marketing tools, many of these seasonal figures became beloved holiday traditions
How Zines Brought Power to Those on the Margins of Culture
A new exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum examines zines' role in art history and community building
'New Yorker' Cartoon About a Dog on the Internet Breaks Auction Records
The iconic 1993 image by Peter Steiner just became the most valuable single-panel comic ever sold
Bookstore in Hungary Will Fight Fine for Selling 'Heartstopper,' a Popular LGBTQ Graphic Novel
Officials say the bookseller broke the law by promoting the novel to minors and failing to wrap it in plastic foil
A New Graphic Novel Takes Readers Inside the Fight of the Century
The pages highlight the dramatic, racially charged match between Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries
To Spider-Man, With Love
A new exhibition features letters children sent to the superhero’s address in Queens, where a real-life Parker family lived for decades
This Congressman Was Sworn Into Office With Rare Superman Comic
California’s Robert Garcia says the superhero embodies values like truth and justice
Hand-Colored 'Calvin and Hobbes' Strip Sells for $480,000
The cheeky panel, created by Bill Watterson, was a gift to his longtime editor Lee Salem
The Mesoamerican Influences Behind Namor From 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever'
The sequel to the 2018 Marvel blockbuster features a Maya-inspired antihero played by Mexican actor Tenoch Huerta
At 21,450 Pages, the Longest Book in the World Is Impossible to Read
Ilan Manouach’s conceptual art project weighs 37.5 pounds and measures 31.5 inches long
The Holocaust-Era Comic That Brought Americans Into the Nazi Gas Chambers
In early 1945, a six-panel comic in a U.S. pamphlet offered a visceral depiction of the Third Reich's killing machine
Why So Many Superheroes Are Orphans
A new exhibition at London's Foundling Museum explores how growing up without birth parents shapes comic book characters
Before the Riddler, Batman's Archenemy Was Hitler
A Smithsonian collection of vintage Golden Age comic books tells a story of WWII propaganda, patriotism and support of the war effort
Belgium's New Passport Spotlights Classic Comic Characters
The design features boy reporter Tintin, the Smurfs and other beloved pop culture figures
Drawing on Their Escapes From the Nazis, These Artists Became Celebrated Cartoonists
A groundbreaking female comic book artist, a MAD magazine star and a counterfeiter-turned-illustrator share the floor in an exhibit in New York City
How 'Wonder Woman 1984' Was Filmed at the Smithsonian
The blockbuster saw the superhero working as a museum anthropologist. But how accurate was its depiction of the Institution at the time?
Tintin Drawing Sold for €3.2 Million Is the World's Most Expensive Comic Book Art
The original cover design for Hergé's "The Blue Lotus" spent decades tucked away in a drawer
How Black Panther Changed Comic Books (and Wakanda) Forever
The Marvel superhero pounced on the scene in the '60s and never looked back
During the Covid-19 Pandemic, Avid Collectors Find Joy in Their Prized Possessions
At home with their collectibles, many people are expanding, shrinking or reorganizing their treasure troves
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