Total Pageviews

Tuesday, 31 March 2020

Black Tower Comics & Books: the UKs largest Independent publisher of black and white comics!

Black Tower Comics was set up in 1984 and was a Small Press set-up publishing Black Tower Adventure and Black Tower Presents (2 issues) and to back up its Small Press distribution service, Zine Zone -when it later expanded there was a title change to Zine Zone International. In 1986/1987 Black Towers Previews Comic was published showcasing new and upcoming talent with some going on to work at Fleetway, DC and Marvel Comics.

Adventure was published sporadically ending the first volume with no. 59. An accident in the late 1990s saw virtually all of the back issue stock destroyed.

In 2000 two new publications appeared: Comic Bits, looking mainly at the UK Golden and Silver Ages of comics and The World's Comic, designed to promote and interview creators from around the world.

In 2009, with the new Print On Demand system, Black Tower Comics & Books was launched with the first titles being The Bat Triumphant!Krakos: Sands of Terror and the text book, Some Things Strange & Sinister. 

Black Tower has over 100 books on its online store including anthology adventure, ghostly, science fiction-horror, action, crime and comic albums and graphic novels to the history of early hot air ballooning, Haiku, illustrated text, wildlife as well as the World Mystery Books covering everything from UFOs, Bigfoot/Sasquartch, mystery sea and lake creatures; mystery creatures on land including the Chupacabras, Barking Beast of Bath and many others.

We are the official home of British Platinum and Golden Ages characters from Dr Syntax, Ally Sloper, The Iron Warrior and many others -new comics featuring old (but NOT rebooted) characters and staying true to the motto "Comics Are Fun!"

With creators such as John Erasmus, Pierre Labatt, Joel Stransky, Ben R. Dilworth, Tom Elmes, Paul Ashley Brown, Darron Northall and others there is no stopping "The Tower of Power"!

Black Tower Comics & Books is the UKs largest Independent publisher of black and white comics!

For fun in these bleak tiomes, some (low res) scans of the BTCG "sampler" from a few years back...
                                    Enjoy!





Thursday, 26 March 2020

Notes On The Invasion Earth Trilogy


The Return of the Gods: Twilight of the Super Heroes was meant to be a "closing act" for me. A few times I'd been ill but then things got a little "iffy" so I decided to do a story that ended -seemingly- the Black Tower Universe.


There were six parts that featured as lead story in the revived Black Tower Adventure (volume 2) in 2010. At the end of the story a good few heroes had died and as far as I am concerned death in my comics means death. No reboots or whatever. A total of 197 pages but then I thought to myself that I ought to make the "trade" a lot more interesting.

This was the cover blurbed:

It began slowly.  It always does. It's a deception that everything in the world is as it should be and that never changes.

Earth’s heroes and crime-fighters are going about their daily tasks –fighting a giant robot controlled by a mad scientist’s brain, attackers both human and mystical -even alien high priests of some mysterious cult and their zombie followers and, of course, a ghost and a young genius lost in time. 

Pretty mundane. 

But psychics around the world have been sensing something.  A "something" that sends feelings of sheer terror through their psyches.

There is a huge alien Mother-ship near the Moon. Undetected by deep-space radar and other instruments, only a few on Earth have sensed it and they cannot penetrate the hull but only feel psychic screams and....worse.

And then it begins: strange orange spheres isolate and chase some of Earth’s heroes who then vanish into thin air –are they dead?  An attack by an old foe or foes -?

Black, impenetrable domes cover cities world-wide. 

Then it becomes clear to those within the domes what is going on: Alien invasion of Earth! 
A war between the Dark Old Gods and the pantheons that followed! 

Warriors from Earth’s past having to battle each day and whether they die or not they are back the next day! 

No one suspects the driving force behind the events.  One single evil guiding events.  Events that could cause destruction and chaos throughout the multiverse.

Assaulted on all fronts can Earth’s defenders succeed or will they fail...is this truly the end? 

You might -or might not- ask how 197 pages became 331? Well, the whole concept had started as 1987: Invasion Earth so when I looked at the completed art for the build up (never published) I realised that it would be easier to up-date everything. When I write "easy" I'm understating things since all of the hand lettered pages had to be computer lettered (the only thing in a comic I use the computer for) to match the 197 pages version. And there was a lot of text. In the end I relettered everything and drew bridging pages to make things gel. 
This was all a huge pain really since I never write scripts -unless it is for others- to keep a natural flow. Far less rigid. Also, despite what you may have heard anyone else saying I do not think I am a fantastic artist -I do get praise but find that embarrassing especially when it comes from other better known artists. Ben Dilworth once told me: "One day you are going to produce a comic book masterpiece, look at it and say 'yeah, its okay' and next day you'll say 'it's shit!'"

I do the work, check it and move on. I very rarely look at any of my own books unless I need a reference to keep continuity.  My lack of a big ego is what held me back in comics -that and being teetotal! 



I think that the best praise I got came from Dave Hunt (at the time editing a Fleetway football comic), Steve MacManus and Gil Page, then Managing Editor at Fleetway, who informed me that in the hey-day of British comics my speed and quality would have assured me pof regular work.

The series was originally going to be drawn by a well known comic artist who then backed out because "I can't see big money in comics any more".  Then another artist who was all over the place with enthusiasm but then said there were too many characters -"Could you cut the number down to 5-10 characters?"  Another started on pages and then told me "I never realised drawing comics involved so much more!" and then buggered off. Sadly, the one artist I really wanted on the series, Dean Willetts eventually withdrew.

As in previous cases I realised that if I needed to clear the project from my head then I would have to draw it myself. I tried drawing in the Dean Willetts style but threw that work out because if you are going to draw something draw it in your own style. In this case 331 pages.

I had a minor character, around late teens when Invasion Earth was first contemplated -Jack Flash. I have no idea how or why but he became the focal point of Return as he tried to outrace "The Many-Eyed One".  The character Ally Sloper (long story read the book!) sits in darkness at the start of the book and says:

"This is how it started.
This is how it ended.
Not with some cataclysmic  universal "Big Bang"
But with a young man running in sheer terror and desperation
-his heart and lungs burning with the effort..
This is how it started.
This is how it ended.
This is how they died"

At that point I had no idea what that meant -seriously, whatever comes into my mind goes on the page and then I pray it makes sense later. The final words of the book -according to two people who read it- gave them "chills".

As for some of the action I think that the Hornet "using a lead pipe in the garden" in a fight helped. Giant robots, Old Dark Gods, alien invasion, heroes from the past and present -as well as some unexpected cameos and characters from almost any country you can think of and even finding ...I'm giving too much away.

Yes, my art style is not that of Byrne, Kirby or any other artist you can name but I'm told it works.  Hey -331 pages gimme a break.

What I never realised is that the "Many-Eyed One" had appeared in cameo in previous work. I work on so many things that then get put out of mind. I was looking through one Black Tower book and there was the MEO...I got confused but moved on!

I have contemplated redrawing the whole thing but I do not have that many years and I have other projects to finish!

Of course my mind had other ideas and so I started getting bits of the Cross Earths Caper popping up day and night. This was to be part 2 of the Invasion Earth Trilogy. More fun and adventure with "time lost" heroes -at a time when (following Return) there was a shortage: somehad retired or been affected so badly they had withdrawn completely. Oh, and of course the amnesic "Bob" was pickled up along the way.


But the events that had begun in Return needed to be tackled. This led to The Green Skies and turned into over 500 pages. So far completed but not lettered. Considering that this all began with a suggestion in 1985 I think over 30 years is long enough. Then, if I am lucky, I can get the other projects finished. The Invasion Earth Trilogy is, quite honestly, a once-in-a-lifetime epic.

I hate the idea that I have many other things to draw but let's see how it goes.

Come On Steve and Comic Bits No. 1 OUT Now

Friday, 20 March 2020

I Am Mighty!

I sat back and realised something. I am mighty. While other mere mortals panic and break down my mind is like a ferrous fortress.

My mind is far too powerful to snap!!!!

Cover Teaser!


Thursday, 19 March 2020

So it's official Comic Bits is returning


So it's official. I cant go anywhere for 12 weeks I ain't shaving til then.

Also, as I cannot paint or do any figure conversions thanks to poor light and my old hands are crap I need something to do. Two new comic albums published yesterday and a third on Friday.

Comic Bits is returning. Concentrating mainly on the UK Platinum, Golden and Silver Ages of comics I started on volume 2 no. 1 today at 10:30 hrs and after a lot of image and text editing stopped at 2:00 hrs and am up to page 49. These will be chunky issues and I'm aiming at maybe 60pp.

Time flew while going over old interviews and going through 1940s comic albums looking for items.As the people being interviewed drew or wrote comics expect pages of art or full strips.
The sad part is that so many have passed away now -John Cooper, Mike Western, Gil Page and even Nigel Dobbyn (at 56!) and Jon Haward's career was prematurely ended. But their work lives on!
Watch this page...or the Black Tower page...

Sunday, 15 March 2020

Remember.....you forgot, didn't you?


There is a Black Tower Comics & Books Face Book page (link to the right) and I remind you all of this as I am making a lot of changes.

After a couple decades + Comic Bits Online is due to close after the San Diego Comic Con (whether that takes place or not). No one comments and I put a lot of hours into it and with more than 5 million views no one seems to want to support, advertise or get their books reviewed any more (other than some larger companies). What is the point of continuing?

The British Golden Age Comics blog was set up in 2011 and largely ignored by me until 2012 and since themn I have posted some lost gems and put a lot of work into the blog. 170+ posts and 31,000+ views. Last comment was in 2015.

I put a lot of work into this blog but 11 comments since 2010 (most of those were me chatting with a friend) despite almost 600 posts and over 45,000 views.

I truly think that blogs have had their day. So many have vanished just like You Tube comic channels.

This blog was set up to promote Black Tower Comics & Books -answer questions and so on. It achieves none of that apparently. I will decide the fate of this blog after my birthday in June but I cannot see much happening by that point.

So remember the Face Book page as it may be the only thing that survives.

Saturday, 14 March 2020

From Messrs Stransky & Labbat -Always Slicksure!




Green Skies: The Fight For Mankinds Survival And Soul Begins


If you have not yet smelt the decay of Man. If you have not yet seen the increase in terror, chaos and anarchy in the world.  If you have ignored the freakish weather and geological upheavals.  If you have not yet seen the green tinted skies.

It is too late for YOU.


ARE INDIE COMICS TAKING OVER ? Justin Richards Finger Guns Creator - Com...

Black Tower Spotlight On John Erasmus

Above: They Might (have been) Giants: Left is John Erasmus and to the right Tom Elmes along with a certain bearded comics genius (c)T. Hooper-Scharf/BTCG

The Sensational JOHN ERASMUS!

When I started up Black Tower Comics as a zine (Small Press) venture in the mid-1980s, there were two creators who seemed to pop up in almost every zine I came across. One was Ben R. Dilworth and the other was John Erasmus.

Apart from the odd one off gag cartoon and strip, John also supplied me with episodes of Denizen Ark:Unemployed Crime-fighter and then my first digest sized graphic novel –Dervish Ropey And The Maximin Sword.

Foolishly, I had only printed off 100 copies and word travelled fast and within a month all copies had sold out (I don’t have a copy!).

Always bashful, John took a lot of persuading to be interviewed . So, from the now classic Zine Zone International 13 (1990), here is that interview with one of the most under rated artists ever!

TH: John, can you give us a little background info on yourself —I believe that you just managed to leap aboard an aircraft leaving South Africa with military police in hot pursuit:a rumour?

JOHN: Well, I left school in ‘82, feeling safe behind my British passport, thought I could soak up the South African sun for a few months to recover from the education ordeal, and received an April call-up to the Navy.  I dodge the security police getting to the airport but the military were waiting! I jumped into an army jeep and tore along the airstrip, shells exploding all around me as I tried to reach the open cargo door of an aircraft.  With bullets whizzing all around I leapt for the aircraft and made it just in time! I left in March ‘82.
TH: Okay, hands up. I added the text from “the Navy” to “I left”….I’m trying to sell copies here!  Alright, when did you first get interested in comic art, and were you encouraged to draw when you started?  Most parents think it’s a waste of time.

JOHN: My dad used to buy me comics. I underwent the change from Harvey to Marvel comics aged about eleven.  My folks are both artists so they stood back and watched me wind my way along this path from about that age onward.  I was reading before that age, too, but I’d stop more often and play with my yo-yo then.

TH: You told me once that your more “cartoony” style was inked straight off –no pencils.  How do you do it?

JOHN: Lots of Process White!

TH: The more serious style you do pencil before inking, is it a style you’d like to use more?
JOHN: I use it for the colour stuff mainly because there isn’t as much room for manoeuvre with the outline then.  Black and white I prefer to do straight off in the pursuit of dynamism but when a more considered and detailed style is called for (not something I myself care very much for) then I knuckle down and work out what I’m doing first.  I always use detailed thumb-nail sketches so I’m not being all that daring in fact.  The finished artwork is effectively an enlargement of these sketches.

TH: In case anyone thinks John is exaggerating about a “lot” of Process White usage I can state here and now that Ben Dilworth, who was doing the printing for Dervish Ropey and the Maximin Sword, had picked up the artwork and phoned me to say “I can believe he really does do this work freestyle!  You ought to see the amount of whitener used and paste-ups!”  That said, Ben did admit the work still looked “gorgeous”.

Now, John, you’re interested in Amerindians aren’t you?  How did this interest develop –is it something you’d like to incorporate into future work?

JOHN: American Indians are a much-abused population with a miraculously resilient culture.  I suppose I follow their story because it’s got more than a little in common with South African black history which I’d seen too much of to really want to think about.
TH: You are my favourite colourist –you use Magic Markers, right? How easy are they to use…is there hope for me?

JOHN: Magic Markers I met in ‘87/’88 when I thought I wanted to join an ad agency and earn £50,000 a year doing storyboards.  I used to use coloured inks prior to this in much the same way as I now use the markers.  The thing that took me the longest to master was the covering large areas with flat colours.  I decided against the ad agency (which meant, unfortunately, the £50,000 as well) but I kept using the markers.

They’re not that difficult to use at all once you get used to being constantly high on the fumes (now I take a Magic Marker where-ever I go!).

TH: You’ve done book covers and postcard illustrations –can you tell me (roughly) who you have done work for?

JOHN: I’ve done 75 or more book covers for the Overcoming Common Problems series for Sheldon Press over the past six years (1985-1990).  These books are available in health food shops and self-help sections of bookshops and have titles like The Irritable Bowel Syndrome Diet Book.  My favourite book cover was for David Taylor’s Zoo Vet book called Dragon Doctor.  They did a TV series about that (pioneering veterinary work in UK zoos –TH) as well.

My greetings cards aren’t selling very well apparently.  They feature Dervish Ropey and since I said I’d like royalties for them they’re not making me any money!

TH: Am I right in assuming that your first colour comic work was for Brain Damage (now retitled The Damage) -how did you land this job?

JOHN: Yes. I don’t know.  The editor, Bill Hampton, found me (possibly through the Association of Illustrators) and visited me in person.  He picked out something he liked from my backlog of work and I developed it from there.

TH: Stonewall question: list ten words that you feel describe John Erasmus without cheating!

JOHN: I was answering these questions quite frankly up until now.  When I’m in difficulty I always try to think what I’d do if I wasn’t.  It’s the panic that really gets you.  If I could have one wishcome true it would be to always be able to stay calm and do the right thing in every situation.  Could you pick your ten words from amongst this lot?

TH: No.  But, lessee:talented, polite, friendly, a smoothy, helpful, non-egotistical, willing (!), unrecognised, intelligent, woman watcher!  Hah! I think that about covers you!

Dervish Ropey is a sort of Indiana Jones type character and the special, Dervish Ropey and the Maximin Sword, sold out within a month but through my naiivete it emptied my pockets instead of filling them!  You’ve more of this great character to come I believe?

JOHN: Sorry I dried up your resources.  The new one is 86 pages all about American Indians based on the three actual happenings in modern American Indian/White American history combined into one day in the life of a fictional traditional Indian tribe.  Paul Gravett of Escape magazine liked it and is seeing what he can do with it.  I’m very glad the card company liked Dervish Ropey, too, but wish they could shift a few of the damn things to the punters.

TH: and Denizen Ark: Unemployed Crime-Fighter –what’s happening to him?

JOHN: He’s my present spare-time-consumer. I like to be doing something I can call my own while still maintaining some sort of contact with money-earning sources.  Either he’ll eventually be a series of six comics or he won’t be.  Either way I’ll complete the work by X-Mas.  If the enterprise basks in the glow of unpublished anonymity after that it’ll be altogether in keeping with the nature of the character!
TH: Let’s hope the project succeeds –he is an excellent character.  But I understand that you’re making videos with Marek Wedler, who describes them as “hot and steamy”.  Is he lying as usual?  What are they about and is video film making something you’d like to do professionally?

JOHN: These are videos filmed almost exclusively in the nude.  However, all those appearing on the screen are at all times fully clothed.  Actually, the production team members generally cover their nudity before commencing filming, too —but of course it’s obvious to all concerned what they are really like underneath.

The films are short stories using whatever props or people are available at the time.  Movies are big time comics so, yes, the more of this I can do, the merrier I’ll be.

TH: What are your hopes for the future regarding your comics work —anything you’d really love to do?

JOHN: I’d really like to do just one Spider-Man comic.

TH: Any final comments –words for the fans, you know –the usual?

JOHN: Have you honestly read this entire interview?  See you at the next mart, Terry. Cheers!

TH: I’ll be looking forward to it.  An interview worth waiting three years for?   ANYTHING John does is worth waiting three years for!

***********************************************
End Note: Since this interview was published, John worked on Accident Man for Toxic, a comic based on Gerry Anderson’s Space Precinct and much, much more.  Sadly, blinkered Marvel Comics  never offered John a chance to work on Sipder-Man!
You can more of John’s work at:

The project with Paul Gravett may not have happened but, after a good few years, Dervish Ropey is set to return in Dervish Ropey: The Totem from Black Tower. A book I am very excited about.

Hopefully, it might convince some European publishers to put work the way of Mr. Erasmus!



158pp
A4
Black and white

PRICE NOW £12.00!!

He was the epitomy of 1980s Thatcherite Britain: Denizen Ark -Unemployed Crime-fighter. But a couple decades on it looks like someone is stalking the crime-stalker!

One of the UKs finest comic illustrators, John Erasmus brings his classic character back into the glaring limelight of 2016! 

Note preview pages are on the online store page!


And how could I ever forget Dervish Ropey!!



Black Tower Spotlight on Paul Ashley Brown


Having ignored all my best Simon Cowell "Go on, boy -I'll make you famous! (but poor)" lines, "Old Slow Hand"/"Panting Pazzer"/"Wonder Maid" (?! -I have the photo somewhere).  From his humble beginnings as a scribbler working on 1980s legendary comic, Vigilante Vulture, a few strips -including one in Coffin Blood- and some he might wish to forget like his Phantom Detective strip.  Oh, I keep it all.

But he will probably not be remembered for....

OUTLAWS OF THE URBAN FOREST-

The Series That Never Was!

Yes, Paul Ashley Brown may be better known these days for Browner Knowle but back in the day...well a few years actually back in the 1980s...he was the artist struggling with over-written scripts for a comic that attracted the attention of many top UK comic creators (no, it was not porn)...Vigilante Vulture!

There were a few forays after that but the comics industry is full of crooks as Mr Brown discovered -though he did take legal action and get his money (but not work) back off one UK publisher.

Now, unless you know him (not in the "Biblical sense") you will know that he can produce some great humour work -drawing Peter Lallys Donald Hamilton for instance.  There is, if I can ever scan it, a comic strip telling of the Southbank TV show special on my career, presented by Melvyn Bragg. And much more.

You see, when he doesn't put a lot of thought into comics designed to drive people to despair, Mr Brown has a quick cartoon style that he can turn to some very funny strips.  In that sense he has never explored the idea of turning these into a comic which is a great pity.
Mr Brown was also inspired by my classic 1983-84 mini series Outlaws Of The Urban Forest and in..2008(??) he set to work on a follow-up which, sadly, never got completed and I really did like the art/story and as everyone knows I never ever allow people to work on things I started unless I like what I see.

I have some of those pages but here is a cover mock-up -the black and white version and the vibrantly coloured version.

Great stuff and I'd like to see more of this type of thing from him.  He has the ability and style and CAN do it.

In case he reads this, he never does, I'd like to point out I've been ill so I probably never ever said anything kind about him. 

Mr Brown's work has appeared in Stripburger and he's usually at all the hip, beat-cat zine events building up his ever growing reputation. And having already been to Japan in 2014 he had to, of course, visit Finland where he was hailed as a taxi innovative comicker.

Remember this CBO item?

Bristol Artist Paul Ashley Brown In Finland Exhibit

Here is a photo of the man himself at the exhibit followed by an article from Helmet.fi
Helmet -http://www.helmet.fi/fi-FI/Kirjastot_ja_palvelut/Rikhardinkadun_kirjasto/Tapahtumat/Paul_Ashley_Brownin_sarjakuvia%2852116%29

Paul Ashley Brownin sarjakuvia
Paul Ashley Brown


Paul Ashley Brown graduated from The University of the West of England in 2001 with a First Class Honours Degree in Illustration, Since 2008 he has self-published seven issues of Browner-Knowle, his zine collection of short, poetic melancholy narrative drawings and comics, as well as other small one-off titles. His work has also been published in the pages of The Illustrated Ape, The Comix Reader, and Stripburger. He lives and works in Bristol, England.

 But, Mr Brown's Small Press offerings are much sought after, including, with some memorable full page illoes, Anon....

So It Is Writ. So It Must Be. Anon. The Return Of Paul Ashley Brown
Paul Ashley Brown
Browner Knowle Publications
8 or 16 pages
A4 or A3
£3.00 + £1.00 p&p

Ordering: contact Paul through his website at: http://www.paulashleybrown.co.uk/#home
The Bristol art leg end that is Paul Alouitiuos Makepiece Kitchener Lady Chaterley Brown -aka Ashley Simpson aka Paul Ashley Brown was bound to return. 

There may be a few who wonder why I've written "A4/A3" and "8 or 16 pages"?  Simple.  This is an un-stapled, loose-leaf offering offering double spreads so they are A3 folded to A4. There is the usual collection of eccentrics and sketches from life and do not panic -still the faint hint of depression here but all enjoyable.

However, there is ONE reason why you ought top get a copy of this latest offering. If only the story behind it were included but it is a case of "protecting the innocent".  Here is that reason:


Anon 2
Paul Ashley Brown
Browner Knowle
A4
16pp
I have no price here...?

Firstly, this is printed on a slightly tinted paper which looks nice but fecks things up on scanning. So I had to turn 'em into black and white art pages.  Does look better with the tint, though.

 I have written "16 pages" but that is not quite accurate.  This book is not stapled and that is for a very good reason: the pages open up to make four A3 posters.  My favourite of these is this one:

 
You do get the one page treats such as "Humpty On The Edge Forever" that Mr Brown calls "Mon déchirant chef-d'Å“uvre de la vie!"** And who could argue with that? I do like the use of solid black and white here which balances out the page.


Yes, no cover logo...and yet we knew it was Anon 2 because Mr Brown told us so.

Here is a comparison with Storm which I just reviewed.  This is an art style I've not seen anyone other than Mr Brown employ and it works for style of story telling -whether simply illustrative or text accompanied. I don't have any problem recommending this -simply contact Mr Brown and ask the cost!

Paul Ashley Brown
BK Books
A5
Black & white
24pp
£4.00

Now before I start, that web address I have just spent an hour trying to find. Paul Ashley Brown everywhere (mostly from old CBO postings) but no web page so I'll have to look into this.

The cover...well, this is just another Bristol street scene and walk through Bedminster any day of the week and you can spot these...tatters.  In fact, another good example is "The Walking Man" -as seen below:

erm
Nice, nice solid blacks.  Mr Brown really could become an artist you know. You know, I feel sorry for the poor utterly depressed man who stood on Perot's Bridge in the City Harbour. Looking into the murky, beckoning waters but terrified of jumping in just in case someone pulls him out and he contracts Weil's Disease.  All the time some git with a sketch pad is saying: "Yes. Like that. Keep that look of total and utter despair until I've finished!"


Let's cheer things up and take a peek at Mr Brown after he's met up with a certain Mr Northall (a rival if the truth be told!) for five minutes.

  Seven pages showing that Mr Brown CAN indeed draw sequential works or comic strips. Compliment with a slap. See what I did there?

_______________________________________________________________

Now, when I referred to making investments for the future by buying Small Press books Browner Knowle is a perfect example.  Very low print runs, around 50 copies and no reprints, a popular creator with a following who is a "name".  So if you grab copies of his zines then in ten years (rather than 40-50+ years with mainstream comics) you ought to see a reasonable return if you sold them.

If you want really -really- rare then go for Ben Dilworth 1980s zines.

But in the meantime, as the Boy from Knowle would say, "I'm off to soak up the misery"!




And in case you are asking what he's done for Black Tower well he drew The Tall Trees -found in The Independents anthology book as well "Best Mom In The World" for Tales of Terror III, drew the front and back covers for the Dr Morg trilogy as well as the cover for The Hooper Interviews.
 Above: the back cover to Journey of the Id (c)2020 P. A. Brown/BTCG

 Above: the unused wraparound cover for the 2nd part of the trilogy (c)2020 P. A. Brown/BTCG

 The full colour front cover tpo Journey of the Id (c)2020 P. A. Brown/BTCG
Above: How do you capture the magnificent good looks of a dashing comic book journalist, historian, naturalist and King of Comics? (c)2020 P. A. Brown/BTCG


I've tried plying him with excess caffeine but publishing Outlaws has eluded me.  You can catch up with Paul on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/paulashleybrown/