Thursday, December 18, 2025
Comic Cuts — 18 December 2025
This was a bit of an experiment, the first time I've shot the video on my phone rather than on the laptop, and using the new bluetooth microphone. I think it has worked out OK after a bit of tweaking. Maybe one day I'll get a proper camera and some lighting, but until then...
Merry Christmas to you all and I hope you have a Happy New Year! I'll be back in 2026!
Commando 5915-5918
The next set of Commando issues, 5915-5918, go on sale from today, Thursday, 18th December 2025.
5915: Crocker’s Crew
Out of the chaos of World War Two, Captain Matt Crocker of the British Commandos and his crack team had carved themselves a niche as the best of the best when it came to sabotage. It was with a grim confidence, then, that he accepted their next mission — infiltrate and destroy a Nazi-occupied power plant in the Norwegian mountains.
However, the SOE’s mysterious Captain Berry insisted on accompanying, and Crocker began to worry what his ulterior motives might be. A commando’s life is never an easy one!
Story: Brent Towns
Art: Paolo Ongaro
Cover: Simon Pritchard
5916: Mighty Maguire
Tom Maguire had collected things all his life. Butterflies, antique weapons, foreign stamps... there wasn’t a corner of his bedroom that didn’t hold some unusual trophy.
Then war came and Tom was sent to Burma, but he still found time for his collecting... although now it was the fierce Kachin tribesmen he was interested in. He collected a whole army of them — the fightingest bunch of men the Japanese had ever been up against!
Story: Richardson
Art: Franch
Cover: Ian Kennedy
First published 1971 as No. 593
5917: Union Jack Jackson: Kamikaze Ken
Union Jack Jackson and his pals were on a mission to steal an experimental radar receiver from the Japanese when they hit a hurdle. The USS Red Bank, the destroyer they were going to sail away on, was sunk by Japanese suicide pilots… men who would self-sacrifice their lives to sink their enemies.
So then, why was one of the pilots — Kamikaze Ken — floating, alive, in the water beside Union Jack Jackson?
Story: Dominic Teague
Art: Esteve Polls
Cover: Graeme Neil Reid
5918: The Short and The Tall
Private Danny Miller was just a little bloke, but that didn’t mean he couldn’t take care of himself. No, he was a tough customer who could cope with just about anything.
What he couldn’t put up with was his mate Brian who was determined to pay the little fellow back for saving his life. Because Brian’s schemes always ended up getting Danny into more trouble — not less!
Story: Motton
Art: Gordon C Livingstone
Cover: Philpott
First published 1984 as No. 1848
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
Rebellion Releases — 17 December 2025
Get ready to have your halls decked with a blast of pure Thrill-power – the bumper Christmas issue of 2000 AD is out on 17 December!
Featuring over 100 pages of the finest comics excitement imaginable, the Galaxy’s Greatest Comic marks the end of another year with the traditional festive blowout – including these stunning stories:
Judge Dredd: MikMak’s Big Mega-City Adventure by Ken Niemand & Stref
Azimuth: Better the Devil You Know by Dan Abnett & Tazio Bettin
Hawk the Slayer: The Call by Alec Worley & Staz Johnson
Strontium Dog: The Necks Case by Karl Stock & Colin MacNeil
Rogue Trooper: Ghost Patrol by Alex De Campi & Neil Edwards
Herne & Shuck series 2 by David Barnett & Lee Milmore
Young Death: Dog Eat Dog by Kek-W & Clint Langley
But that’s not all! In addition to these all-new Thrills, the Christmas Mega-Special will also include the start of brand new series 'The Discarded' by Peter Milligan & Kieran McKeown!
All this, and a festive cover from Greg Staples? Grud bless us, every one!
The 2000 AD Christmas mega-spectacular is out on the 17 December. If you already have a 2000 AD subscription, you will save yourself the sleigh ride and have it delivered straight to your door at no additional charge – blessings be!
And so to this week's releases...
2000AD Prog 2463
Cover: Greg Staples
JUDGE DREDD // MIK-MAK'S BIG MEGA-CITY ADVENTURE by Ken Niemand (w) Stref (a) Fin Cramb (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
HERNE & SHUCK // POWER TRIP by David Barnett (w) Lee Milmore (a) Gary Caldwell (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
AZIMUTH // BETTER THE DEVIL YOU KNOW by Dan Abnett (w) Tazio Bettin (a) Matt Soffe (c) Jim Campell (l)
THE DISCARDED by Peter Milligan (w) Kieran McKeown (a) Jim Boswell (c) Simon Bowland (l)
YOUNG DEATH // DOG EAT DOG by Kek-W (w) Clint Langley (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
HAWK THE SLAYER // THE CALL by Alec Worley (w) Staz Johnson (a) John Charles (c) Rob Steen (l)
ROGUE TROOPER // GHOST PATROL by Alex de Campi (w) Neil Edwards (a) Matt Soffe (c) Jim Campbell (l)
STRONTIUM DOG // THE NECKS CASE by Karl Stock (w) Colin MacNeil (a) Dylan Teague (c) Rob Steen (l)
Judge Dredd Megazine #487
Cover: Cliff Robinson, with Dylan Teague.
JUDGE DREDD // THE SURVIVOR by Ken Niemand (w) Anthony Williams (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
MEGATROPOLIS II by Ken Niemand (w) Dave Taylor (a) Jim Campbell (l)
ARMITAGE // DROKK THE RIPPER by Liam Johnson (w) Staz Johnson (a) Quinton Winter (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
ANDERSON, PSI-DIV by Alec Worley (w) Ben Willsher (a) Simon Bowland (l)
ROK THE GOD by John Wagner & Alan Grant (w) Dan Cornwell (a) Jim Boswell (c) Jim Campbell (l)
DREADNOUGHTS // QUALIFIED IMMUNITY by Mike Carroll (w) John Higgins (a) Sally Hurst (c) Simon Bowland (l)
Definitive Editions: Slaine Volume 2 by Pat Mills (w) Massimo Belardinelli, Glenn Fabry, David Pugh, Bryan Talbot, Garry Leach, Nik Williams, Una Fricker (a)
Rebellion ISBN, 17 December 2025, 272pp, £29.99. Available via Amazon.
The adventures of Sláine Mac Roth continue in the second volume of the Definitive series. With character-defining arcs such as The Time Killer and The Tomb of Terror, this volume sees the exiled barbarian facing new trials and tribulations - including a trip through time which will have dangerous repercussions for everyone on Earth!
Showcasing Pat Mills’s epic storytelling alongside the art of Glenn Fabry (Hellblazer, Swamp Thing), Bryan Talbot (The Adventures of Luther Arkwright), and David Pugh (Dan Dare), this is another unmissable entry for fans and new readers alike.
Friday, December 12, 2025
Comic Cuts — 12 December 2025
This will be short and sweet as I'm still trying to finish off the ACTION book and I still have some writing to do. I think I'm on the final chapter, unless there's some sort of envoi needed. I have the checklists for the weekly, the summer/holiday specials and the annuals all written, but there's a creators index still to do. And then I have to design the whole book. And there's Christmas and New Year in between now and the anniversary in February.
Wish me luck!
There are other distractions, too. For instance, I met up with John Chisnall and George Coates and took a trip down to our local pub. Long-time readers will know they are both Bear Alley authors, as I wrote and published John's book about his days as a motorcycle racer (AND THE WHEELS WENT ROUND) and designed George's book (A Laverda Journey) about his trip by motorcycle around the world. I was involved with this because John (my uncle) was looking for someone to publish his book and the price asked for by vanity presses was enormous. Stupidly, I said I could do it for half the price... and both he and George took me up on it!
Something I learned from our get together is that there's apparently a reel-to-reel tape recording of me reciting Humpty Dumpty at a very young age and mispronouncing "all the klings horses and all the klings men". I'm guessing it was recorded about sixty years ago... so how come I'm hearing about it for the first time now?
We also took an evening off to wander around the village and look at the lights and, as always, there are some magnificent displays, and some a little less magnificent, and a few that look a bit weedy and wouldn't be spotted by a reindeer at 5 feet. There's one house that is just wonderful, with an "ooohh" and "aaaahh" factor that's off the top end of the scale. They light up the street every year and collect money for charity, so hopefully they'll do well again this year.
It's back to the "uh ho" and "AAARGH!" for me. I'm hoping to have the text finished by next week and to have read through it. If there aren't too many tweaks needed, I might be able to get started with designing the book this side of Christmas. Fingers crossed.
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Rebellion Releases — 10 December 2025
Looking for an education in The Law? There’s 50% off key Judge Dredd collections in the 2000 AD webshop.
Often one of the most misunderstood characters, for almost half a century Judge Dredd comics have ruminated on the themes of justice, law, authoritarianism, and freedom. From groundbreaking stories to award-winning non-fiction, there’s no better time to read selected collections to give yourself chapter and verse in Britain’s greatest comic book character!
Check out the titles below and enjoy a whopping HALF off!
And now, this week's releases...
2000AD Prog 2462
Cover: Nick Percival.
JUDGE DREDD // MESSENGERS by Ken Niemand (w) Nick Percival (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
DEAD TOWN by David Barnett (w) Luke Horsman (a) Simon Bowland (l)
THARG'S FUTURE SHOCKS // THE HAPPINESS MEME by James Lovegrove (w) Toby Willsmer (a) Simon Bowland (l)
ROGUE TROOPER // GHOST PATROL by Alex de Campi (w) Neil Edwards (a) Matt Soffe (c) Jim Campbell (l)
Silver: Unearthed by Mike Carroll & Joe Currie
Rebellion ISBN, 10 December 2025, 112pp, £16.99. Available via Amazon.
Earth, the year 2001. A group of armed survivors sought out the resting place of a five-hundred-year-old vampire, who may just help them against the alien Sepsis, who invaded the planet a few decades earlier. The vamp, called Baroness DeSilva, soon proves to be a powerful ally , as she fights to defend her food source from the extra-terrestrial enemy!
An all-new Thrill from the award-winning writer Mike Carroll (Dreadnoughts) and artist Joe Currie (Judge Dredd) crashes genre into unpredictable genre. Acclaimed on release, the supernaturally charged Silver crashes the past into the far future for a fast-paced adventure which will blow your mind!
Friday, December 05, 2025
Comic Cuts — 5 December 2025
It's starting to feel a lot like Christmas. The tree is up, we've received a couple of cards, I've been given a 2026 calendar, and we had the Bear Alley Books Xmas Party on Wednesday.
The latter was basically dragging Mel and my Mum down to the pub for lunch, which we haven't had a chance to do since August — coordinating everyone can be tricky at times — when we took a trip out to Maldon. It was a beautiful sunny day and we were well fed and watered at the Horse and Groom; we then had a relaxing afternoon and evening and it was lovely just to have some time off.
I'm planning to do the same thing next week with two of Bear Alley's authors, John Chisnall and George Coates, whose books—AND THE WHEELS WENT ROUND and A LAVERDA JOURNEY—I designed.
On the days I didn't take off, I've managed to crack on with the ACTION book and I'm heading towards the point where it merged with BATTLE. Another push and I might have it almost done by the end of next week, depending on how much I drink down the pub and what other distractions come along. Hopefully it'll be good news next week.
I'm reading—or, rather, re-reading—Dave Hutchinson's EUROPE IN AUTUMN, a fantastic SF/spy story set in a fractured Europe, split by a deadly pandemic (and various economic crises (this was published in 2014) and now broken down into little republics, polities and nations who no longer trust the internet; information, artefacts and even people are smuggled across borders by couriers trained in spy tradecraft.
I read the first book back in 2019 on a tablet that had all four of the books on it (a fifth was subsequently published). Then my tablet went belly-up and I never got to read the other three. I saw a mention of the series recently and decided to get the physical books. Four were easily available second-hand. The fourth (EUROPE AT DAWN) has been trickier to source. I have a copy on order.
Having a lousy memory, I've been enjoying the book afresh. At one or two points in the plot I've had a flash forward of what is about to happen, but it's really like I'm reading it for the first time... and I'm really enjoying it all over again.
Talking of memory, I was trying to remember what books I'd read over the past few months. I'm picking up the pace a little. I used to be able to read a book in a day when I was much younger and just discovering SF. When I was in work I often had a bus or train ride to fill, but nowadays I do more reading for whatever I'm working on than for pleasure. And books these days are often twice or three times the size of books I used to read. For many years I've been taking months to finish a book, a situation I'm now trying to resolve by making sure I read a chapter or two every evening before bed.
I dug out the last few books I've read: a ratio of 5:3 SF over crime. I love the Mick Herron Slough House books and have heard them all as audiobooks, but I'm reading physical copies ahead of each new series of the TV show. I was inspired to read TATIANA by the death of Martin Cruz Smith and the realisation that I had fallen behind on reading his Arkady Renko novels. I still have three to go. THE FLIGHT OF THE HORSE I re-read half of as it contained Niven's delightful Svetz fantasy stories and I was planning to read his RAINBOW MARS novel, which was a late addition to the series. But then they announced the coming release of the fifth season of SLOW HORSES, so Svetz is on hold.
I picked up THE STARDROPPERS while I was wandering around ahead of Invasion Colchester and started reading it on the bus home. I have to say that it's minor Brunner, but I have shelves full of books I've never read, so I want to try and get through at least some in the hope of finding a gem. I will re-read books that I remember enjoying, so that will mean more Brunner at some point (THE SHEEP LOOK UP, THE JAGGED ORBIT, STAND ON ZANZIBAR, THE SHOCKWAVE RIDER... there are plenty!).
I'd had PROJECT HAIL MARY on the shelf for some while, but thought I'd treat myself after finishing the writing on the AIR ACE book. I loved THE MARTIAN and I think ARTEMIS was an OK follow-up. This was even better, if a little long; every time it jumped back in time I found myself wishing those bits were over so we could get back to the interaction between human and alien (I'm trying not to spoiler the book).
Talking of slow-moving... WORLDS. I may be imagining this, but I get the feeling that this and its sequel (WORLDS APART) were meant to be one book, with a slow build to something explosive happening at the halfway mark. Then someone said, "Why not turn it into two books, Joe?" and that left the first book as a travelogue and me sat there wishing that something would happen, which it did, eventually, right at the end. Now that the thing has happened, hopefully book two will pick up the pace.
I love Murderbot, but this wasn't quite up to the scratch of earlier novellas and novel. Too many characters and a plot that would have made a sprightly novella rather than a slightly disappointing novel. Maybe, just maybe, part of my frustration was down to Tor forcing me to buy a hardback as, after two years in print, there is still no sign of a paperback. There's a new Murderbot novel out next year which I'm excited about because you shouldn't let one dip in quality ruin a whole series for you. SYSTEM COLLAPSE was still very readable.
I've rambled on for too long. Better get some work done.
Thursday, December 04, 2025
Commando 5911-5914
The next set of Commando issues go on sale from today, Thursday, 4th December 2025, featuring tales of heroism on the home front and abroad, and the return of a Lord Peter Flint, Codename: Warlord!
5911: Fear of Fire
The Heinkel 111 bombers laid a blanket of fire across Bristol. The blazes spread across the city and infernos raged inside houses and factories alike. Inside one, the wood burned and embers flew into Police Sergeant Eric Roe’s eyes. The foul, black smoke clawed at his lungs and the swirling flames licked at his face, singeing the flesh.
Fear bubbled in his throat like bile, but clutching the young child to his chest, he had to get out – he had to survive!
Story: Colin Maxwell
Art: Mike Collins
Cover: Neil Roberts
5912: Torpedo Strike
They said Bob Kernot could pilot his Beaufort back to base from any point of the compass in even the worst weather. He just seemed to sniff the air and hey presto, he and his crew were heading straight for home.
Bob had Roma blood in his veins. He could even see into the future and foretell what was going to happen, good or bad. And to know there’s deadly danger ahead and still fly on to meet it without flinching - that takes nerves of steel and real guts.
Like Bob had...
Story: Brunt
Art: John Ridgeway
Cover: Ian Kennedy
First published 1971 as No. 594
5913: Codename Warlord: Stormcaster
The Libyan desert is experiencing some funny weather! Mysterious, sudden rainstorms are turning the hot sands to boggy quagmires that are beaching British tanks! But not only that, a Nazi officer has disguised himself as an Arab tribesman to sow discontent, and a German scientist has attempted to defect - something very strange is going on.
Enter Lord Peter Flint – Codename: Warlord - Britain’s best secret agent, to investigate the weird happenings. A storm is brewing, and he can sense the hand of his old nemesis, Professor Kranz, is behind it all!
Story: Dominic Teague
Art: Paolo Ongaro
Cover: Neil Roberts
5914: The Cat, The Rat, and The Cobra
A cat and a rat wouldn’t normally stand a chance against a deadly cobra, would they? But when The Cat was a brilliant British agent, The Rat a cunning French thief, and The Cobra a ruthless Gestapo officer, who could tell what would happen?
For the sake of the Resistance men the Nazis were intent on killing, the snake had to lose…
Story: CG Walker
Art: Gordon C Livingstone
Cover: Jeff Bevan
First published 1984 as No. 1831
Wednesday, December 03, 2025
Rebellion Releases — 3 December 2025
One of the most popular and influential British comic books of all time is to get its first new chapter in more than 40 years!
Created by writer Mike Butterworth and artist Don Lawrence, and running for almost two decades in the pages of Ranger and Look and Learn, The Trigan Empire has influenced generations of storytellers, including renowned film-maker Duncan Jones (Moon, Rogue Trooper).
Drawing heavily on ancient history and mythology, the series detailed the long-past events of an empire on the distant planet of Elekton. But it was Lawrence’s stunning painted artwork that made the series a groundbreaking hit, changing the face of the comic book medium and immersing readers in new worlds of imagination.
And now, for the first time since 1982 – the Trigan Empire will rise once again!
From the award-winning creative team of Michael Carroll (Judge Dredd, Dreadnoughts), and Tom Foster (Judge Dredd), New Adventures from the Trigan Empire picks up the torch to continue Butterworth and Lawrence’s classic comics story.This brand new original graphic novel will be published May 2026 in a luxurious hardcover edition, with a special signed and numbered webshop edition available also exclusively from the 2000 AD and Treasury of British webshops.
While the original series detailed the rise of the mighty Trigan Empire, this new graphic novel depicts its fall. Decades have passed since the empire reached its zenith and an ageing Emperor Trigo has started to think about who his successor may be. His right-hand man and nephew, Janno, is perceived as the natural successor – but Trigo’s abandoned son, Nikko, has long harboured a grudge against his father and now, having built his own Empire whilst in exile, he’s in perfect position to take revenge on his family and seize the Empire he believes is rightfully his….
Will the Trigan Empire rise… or fall? Don’t miss the beginning of an incredible new saga!
Since 2020, collected editions of the classic The Rise and Fall of The Trigan Empire have been a major sales hit for Rebellion, which now cares for the largest archive of English language comic books in the world. Measuring 20.96cm by 27.62cm, these editions present Lawrence’s artwork as it was meant to be seen and introducing its thrilling and entrancing storytelling to a whole new audience
And now, this week's releases..
2000AD Prog 2461
Cover: Alex Ronald.
JUDGE DREDD // MESSENGERS by Ken Niemand (w) Nick Percival (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
DEAD TOWN by David Barnett (w) Luke Horsman (a) Simon Bowland (l)
BRASS SUN // PAVANE by Ian Edginton (w) INJ Culbard (a) Simon Bowland (l)
ROGUE TROOPER // GHOST PATROL by Alex de Campi (w) Neil Edwards (a) Matt Soffe (c) Jim Campbell (l)
The Spider's Syndicate of Crime vs. Spider-Boy by Jerry Siegel (w) Reg Bunn, John Burns (a)
Rebellion ISBN 978-183786560-4, 3 December 2025, 112pp, £16.99. Available via Amazon.
ALONG CAME A SPIDER-BOY!
The Spider is a sensational adventurer who operates on both sides of the law, using a whole host of hi-tech equipment to stay one step ahead of his enemies.
When gangleader, 'Turk' Dobbs crossed Criminal scientist, Sylvester Jenkins, the evil genius had Dobbs killed and framed the Spider for the murder. Not long after, a new enemy - 'Spider-boy', emerged from the shadows, seemingly intent on causing trouble for the 'King of Crooks'. With access to his own super equipment and an unparalleled hatred for the web-master, the Spider has never encountered a foe like this before!
Monday, December 01, 2025
- 10 Dec. John Freeman shines a spotlight on Dr Who artist Stanley Freeman. "It was Stanley Freeman, who actually designed and completed the finished art for both the first “Dr Who” (Doctor Who) annual front and back covers published in 1965, whilst employed by World Distributors Limited, who published the Doctor Who annuals under licence from the BBC."
- 5 Dec. Rich Johnston speculates that Mark Millar may have a role to play in the future of DC Comics, based on the (possibly coincidental) announcements of (a) Netflix to buy Warner Bros. (which includes DC Comics) in a deal worth $82.7bn, and (b) Millar quitting social media. Three days later, Paramount/Skydance made a bid for Warners
- 25 Nov. The Metropolitan Review gazes upon 'the Majesty of Alan Moore'. "Where once his days were dotted with phone calls, voices on the other end of Steve Moore, or the late Kevin O’Neill, or Dave Gibbons when they were speaking, they’re characterized now by the work performed alone, in haunted Northampton quiet."
- 21 Nov. Mark Millar has teased a major SF/Millarworld crossover series coming to Netflix in 2026. Rich Johnston has some ideas.
- 19 Nov. Off Panel interviews Grant Morrison on his career in comics and Batman/Deadpool. "Morrison discusses the rekindled flame of writing comics, how they approach writing, the importance of new experiences, making yourself a laboratory, pushing the medium thinking visually, learning from collaborators, doing what feels right, why Batman/Deadpool was the move, how it came together, preferred flavors of themself, Dan Mora's greatness, the freedom of that project, the power of constraints, their approach to continuity, the joy of Batman/Deadpool, having a late career renaissance, deciding what's next, changing as the comic landscape does, the future of comics, and more." (video, 1h 5m)
- ... more from Grant Morrison. "I have some new comics coming out next year, including a collaboration with comic book writer/director Etienne Kubwabo, a new Sebastian O story with Steve Yeowell and a couple of horror one-shots. I'm sure you'll hear more about them nearer the time."
- 14 Nov. There's a new Dan Dare project underway from B7 who are launching a Kickstarter for Dan Dare: First Contact by Alex de Campi and Marc Laming. “Alex and I are huge fans of Dan Dare from Frank Hampson and Frank Bellamy’s original stories of the 1950s and 60s, through to 2000AD’s more anarchic take on the character in late 70s. We are both extremely excited to bring Colonel Dare to a new audience.”
- 12 Nov. Freak Sugar has an interview with Rob Williams in which he discusses Hellboy and the B.P.R.D.: The Ghost Ships of Labrador. "I’ve been writing a fair bit of Judge Dredd of late. Myself and the amazing RM Guera (Scalped) have a Dredd GN out in February: Rend and Tear With Tooth & Claw. That contains two long-form Judge Dredd stories we did in the last couple of years. He’s a real master of an artist. And then in June next year another Judge Dredd GN is released by myself and Henry Flint And To The Sea Return which is a nautical horror that I suspect Hellboy fans would enjoy a lot."
- 10 Nov. Talking of V For Vendetta (below), HBO has announced a TV adaptation to be writen by Pete Jackson (Somewhere Boy, The Death of Bunny Munro). James Gunn and Peter Safran (the executive producers of the recent Superman and other projects) will produce for DC Comics and Ben Stephenson and Leanne Klein for Warner Bros' Wall to Wall Media.
- 5 Nov. The movie adaptation of Alan Moore and David Lloyd's V For Vendetta will be re-released to celebrate its 20th anniversary on 5 November 2026. "V For Vendetta is one of the best-loved comics adaptations of all time, and the rare R-rated comic book movie that got solid reviews and a strong box office."
- 4 Nov. Andreas Butzbach weilds a Big-Ass Sword at Rebellion. "Where I’m from, art was not perceived as something you can make a living from. When you are a kid it is fine, but later, people started to question the urge I had, and still have. The working class is not supposed to thrive in art and media. We are supposed to work in factories, workshops, or behind the counter."
- 1 Nov. John Freeman recalls Dan Dare's 'Mission to the Stars'. "The strip was the work of writer William Patterson, perhaps best known for his stories for Sydney Jordan’s “Jeff Hawke” strip, published in the Daily Express, and drawn by Don Harley, one of the great “Dan Dare” artists."
- 29 Oct. The return of Vertigo will also see the return of Grant Morrison's Sebastian O, re-teaming with Steve Yeowell. “I thought I’d take a swing at one of those late career renaissances I hear about!”
- 28 Oct. Ian Edginton on the long-awaited return of 'Brass Sun'... and writers' blocks. "In a not so small nutshell, at the heart of the story is The Orrery, a fully functioning, life-sized clockwork solar system. A clutch of planets, moons and asteroids orbiting a vast, life-giving brass sun via immense metal spars. This once unified collection of worlds fell into war and has regressed into eccentric fiefdoms and petty baronies. Millenia later the sun is now winding down and the outer worlds are giving in to entropy and icing over with the rest to inevitably follow."
- 27 Oct. An interview with Al Davison, author of The Spiral Cage and his recent work, Muscle Memory. "The book covers some of the same ground as The Spiral Cage, but also addresses my surviving systematic physical/ritualistic childhood abuse at the hands of my father, which I couldn’t write about when my parents were still alive. It also looks at disability hate crime, something I continue to have to deal with on a daily basis, and the political landscape that has lead to a huge escalation in these crimes."
- 23 Oct. “Basically, I’m hoping to please both nostalgia fans and those who enjoy pop culture critique!” – Paul Cornell on the Bronze Age Avengers, his first Commando comic, and new publishing venture Cosmic Lighthouse.
- 17 Oct. More Grant Morrison as they were involved in an "ask me anything" session on Reddit to promote the Batman/Deadpool crossover. Asked (for instance) about what their plans were for an Arkham Asylum sequel, Grant answers "I may still write it, so no details yet." One exchange worth highlighting (and Rich Johnston did just that) concerned Zenith and 2000AD: "I'd have preferred if they'd left Zenith alone, but they can't help themselves. Due to their own administrative error, I didn't sign away my rights to the series, but they've been unwilling to acknowledge my position or offer me even a minimal cut while doing everything they can to sneak Zenith stuff in behind my back. If they'd been smarter, I might have come back for a new Zenith story. I'm sure Rob Williams will do a decent job and I have no beef with him, but I find the whole thing a bit distasteful and prefer to have nothing to do with it…. There are legal issues with Zenith that make any return unlikely."
Friday, November 28, 2025
Comic Cuts — 28 November 2025
My self-imposed deadline of finishing the writing on the new book by the end of the month has come and will go over the weekend. I forgot how much I still need to re-read and the fact that the re-tooled Action ran for fifty issues, so that's 150 pages of tiny printed text for all of the longer-running strips (Spinball, Hellman, Lefty, Dredger, Hook Jaw). I have a suggestion for Rebellion, who are planning to reprint the first ten issues next year: Make 'em Apex Edition size so that old geezers like me can read the darn thing.
Other than not finishing it, I'm pleased with the way the book is coming together. Over the past few days I've had to take a look at everything from the history of punk rock to the plot of Lord of the Flies; eagle-eyed David Roach has also just added the name of another artist who contributed to the paper, one I recognise from his having worked with F. Solano Lopez's studio and as an assistant to Hugo Pratt.
Various disruptions (some welcome, some not so) have kept me busy in other areas than what I'm meant to be doing. Vistors on Saturday; a problem with storage on Sunday that involved a whole morning shuffling files between external hard drives; another morning spent researching the aforementioned Tibor Horvath (there isn't anything about him in English); an afternoon experimenting with AI text-to-sound programmes to help a friend "read" a book that he wouldn't otherwise be able to read; lugging a box of envelopes down to the post office to return them to a new supplier... they were meant to be like the envelopes that I send out my books, but these were incredibly flimsy and no better than a standard A4 envelope (the card was that flexible!). I've just put in an order with my previous supplier, and damn the expense.
Tuesday saw the funeral of my friend David Slinn. I learned a few things about David's background (he was a fiercely private man) and his love for—and career in—comics was a big part of the wonderful humanist ceremony his family organised. When something I had written about him was read out by the celebrant, some dust must have got in my eye as I'm usually pretty stoic. Unfortunately, I'm of an age where there will be more and more family funerals in my future.
Let's not end on a sad note. There's a good chance that I will be going to Glasgow in March for what's known as the Commando and British Comics Swapmeet, to be held at Cameron Halls, 147 Mossgiel Road G43 2BY. These swapmeets have been held in Stoke, Glasgow and Colchester for a couple of years now, and I've attended four (three in Colchester, one in Stoke) and I've always managed to do OK. So the offer of a ride to Glasgow seems too good to turn down. Hopefully it'll get some of my books in front of a new audience who might not have seen them before.
I'd love to do more shows, but frankly the costs are too high. A table at most shows is five times (or more) the price and transport for me (I don't drive) is always going to be a problem; when I took books up to the London Paperback & Pulp Bookfare in March last year I knackered my arm and, eighteen months on, it's still less mobile and more painful to this day, but nowhere near as bad as it was last year.
OK, so I've just spent most of the afternoon looking into the work of Tibor Horvath and it looks like he was Solano Lopez's assistant on over 50 episodes of 'El Eternauta' in 1958-59. Amazing! Even after forty years of digging around in comics, I'm still stunned by how much there's still to learn.
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Rebellion Releases — 26 November 2025
Keith Burns is one of the best aviation artists around, a member of the Guild of Aviation Artists, who’s been exhibited at the RAF Club in London, and won Aviation Painting of the year.
But comics run in his blood, particularly 2000 AD. His first published work came in 2006’s Strip Search volume organised by Hunt Emerson and John McCrea. Since then, he’s been busy, busy busy in comics, contributing to Garth Ennis and McCrea’s The Boys: Herogasm and other Boys-related comics, making a hell of a lot of Commando covers, and, of course, Keith and Garth have been working together to tell the definitive saga of classic Brit war hero Johnny Red over the years – with the final Johnny Red tale, A Couple of Heroes, out in January.
His wrapround Megazine cover is one that gives him a chance to really show off all that he’s great at. And it doesn’t stop there, as Keith’s doing the art for the Garth Ennis-written Judge Dredd strip this month, something playing to their love of all things war comics and aviation, in Judge Dredd: Rhinemann Seven. It’s Keith’s very first Megazine cover and his very first time doing Dredd, in a tale of a Messerschmitt pilot taking a very wrong turn and ending up in Mega-City One. It’s a follow-up to the one-off Dredd from Prog 446 in 1985, The Squadron That Time Forgot by Alan Grant, John Wagner, and Ron Smith, under a cover by Ian Kennedy, another great of war and aviation artwork…
... And you can continue reading about how the cover came to be in an interview with Keith by Richard Bruton & Pete Wells at the 2000AD website.
And now, this week's releases...
2000AD Prog 2460
Cover: Nick Percival.
JUDGE DREDD // MESSENGERS by Ken Niemand (w) Nick Percival (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
RED DRAGON by Rob Williams (w) Steve Yeowell & Patrick Goddard (a) Dylan Teague (c) Simon Bowland (l)
BRASS SUN // PAVANE by Ian Edginton (w) INJ Culbard (a) Simon Bowland (l)
ROGUE TROOPER // GHOST PATROL by Alex de Campi (w) Neil Edwards (a) Matt Soffe (c) Jim Campbell (l)
Judge Dredd by Carlos Ezquerra Apex Edition
Rebellion ISBN, 26 November 2025, 128pp, £95.00.
Carlos Ezquerra was one of 2000 AD’s great pioneers. He co-created Judge Dredd, cementing the look of one the most enduring characters in the history of comics. This collection presents his work to the reader in its true size, newly scanned from the original artwork, showcasing the work of a master in all its glory.
This Apex volume contains seven complete stories in colour (‘Behold the Beast’, ‘The Big Itch’, ‘It’s Happening on Line 9’, ‘The Other Slab Tynan’, ‘The Big Bang Theory’, ‘Tarantula’, and ‘John Brown’s Body’) from the Judge Dredd Annuals published in the 1980s, when Ezquerra was at the peak of his powers, and more Judge Dredd classics, as well as several of his early Strontium Dog pages.
Friday, November 21, 2025
Comic Cuts — 21 November 2025
I've had a somewhat chaotic week processing orders—thankfully there are lots of names I remember from previous orders, which makes me think the first three books must have been OK; there's nothing quite like a returning customer to gladden the heart!
I'm also trying to get on with the next one, as I have a deadline to hit. I finished writing notes on some of the latter-day stories and I'm now re-reading the whole thing from the beginning so that I can try to match the tone of the early parts, the level of detail, make sure I'm not repeating myself, filling in a couple of places where I'd left myself notes, etc., etc. I need to do this because some of the book was written five years ago, when I was looking at the 45th anniversary. Then my money ran out.
In a way that has worked to the book's advantage, as I'm now aiming for the 50th anniversary, which means—working backwards—I need to be getting proofs in January, designing the book in December and finishing the writing in November. So things are a little tight, especially as I like to take a few days off around Christmas.
I don't want to sound smug, but I'm going to... I have all my Christmas presents and cards sorted out already, as I was ordering things in such a way that I benefited from free postage each time. It also helps that everyone gets books from me (not written by me, I hasten to add), so I find it quite easy to shop for people. I find that "What book do you want" helps focus people who might need to think forever if the question is "What do you want".
I, too, like to receive books. I'll sometimes pick a reference book that I might not otherwise buy, but my wants list this year has been all fiction. I won't say what. I'll save that for my new TikTok channel and my latest #bookhaul video. See, I can talk like the young people.
One of the reasons I go for books is that if I need something, it often can't wait, so I go out and buy it. So my new toy this week is a wireless microphone. During the recording of my last couple of videos, I noticed that my old microphone was recording very poorly on one of the stereo channels, and doing the microphone equivalent of "turning it off and on again"—i.e. taking the wire out of the microphone and then putting it back in—didn't improve matters. It's an old microphone that I bought twenty years ago second hand, so I have no idea how old it actually is.
The new microphone is small, you clip it onto your clothing, it connects up to a receiver and that plugs into my laptop; I then record using my usual audio programme, GoldWave. I've only tried it once, but it seemed to work OK.
I had hoped to be able to use it out of the office, but have run into a technical problem... my phone is too old. And not too smart, I'll add. It doesn't have the right kind of socket for me to plug in the receiver. Curses! My plans are foiled again by my natural thriftiness and sticking to outdated technology until it stops working.
Too late to ask for a new phone for Christmas. Maybe next year.
Thursday, November 20, 2025
Commando 5907-5910
The next set of Commando issues 5907-5910 go on sale from today, Thursday, 20th November 2025 — action abundant with tanks, rifles, historic swords and the return of Cadman The Fighting Coward!
5907: Charlie’s Tank
Corporal Charlie Shaw was in the thick of it when tanks rolled into battle during the First World War. As one of the drivers of a Mark IV Male tank, he was certain nothing could stop them taking Bourlon Ridge!
But the tanks weren’t invulnerable — and soon Charlie found himself and his tank captured by the Germans!
Well, Sergeant Joe Shaw wasn’t about to stand around and let them capture his younger brother and his tank — even if it meant deserting his trench and rushing headlong at the Germans to stop them!
Story: Julian Michael Carver
Art: Jaume Forns
Cover: Neil Roberts
5908: The Rifleman
Danny Willis was the best shot in the regiment. In fact, the NCOs who had trained him said he was the best shot in the entire British Army.
When he got to the front and found himself with fighting men at last, he was all ready to show them just what he could do. But he soon discovered there was a heck of a difference between a rifle range in England and a trench in the front line in Italy.
Story: E. Hebden
Art: V. Fuente
Cover: Penalva
First published 1971 as No. 592
5909: Cadman: Born to Lead
Lieutenant Gerald Cadman, the fighting coward, once again finds himself precisely where he does not want to be — on the front lines! The arrival of the heroic and aristocratic Captain Blickley-Phipps, however, gives Cadman an idea for how to improve his station.
But for Private Tom Smith, something doesn’t seem right about Blickley-Phipps. Ruthless in his quest for glory, the captain will gladly sacrifice his own men for victory. Even Scruff the dog can smell an impending disaster, but Cadman may be too distracted to find a way out this time!
Story: Andrew Knighton
Art: Mike Dorey
Cover: Mike Dorey
5910: Two of The Bravest
These were two swords with a history. One belonged to a fearless Arab leader, the other to a heroic Foreign Legion officer. Many years ago, they had clashed as their owners fought a respected foe.
Now, as the desert wastes were engulfed by the Second World War, these two fine blades were destined to clash again.
Story: CG Walker
Art: Carrion
Cover: Ian Kennedy
First published 1984 as No. 1834
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
Rebellion Releases — 19 November 2025
Rebellion's new trilogy of Definitive Editions concludes next year, as they celebrate one of 2000 AD’s most enduring and loved characters – Sláine!
Sláine Mac Roth of the Sessair tribe is known as the Warped Warrior – a mighty barbarian who can master the ‘warp-spasm’, harnessing the power of the Earth to transform into a monstrous creature. Accompanied by his dwarf sidekick, Ukko, and wielding his legendary axe Brain-biter, he travels Tir-Nan-Og, a land marred by warring tribes and ruled by merciless gods.
Tir-Nan-Og (the ‘Land of the Young’) is a violent world, home to warring tribes who worship gods both benign and malevolent. One such tribe is the Sessair, brave warriors of enormous skill and the best of them is a young barbarian named Sláine Mac Roth. Sláine is, among other things, a master of the ‘warp-spasm’ channelling the mystical power of the Earth through his body to become a mighty, monstrous berserker!
Created by Pat Mills and Angie Kincaid, Sláine: The Definitive Edition collects the complete series in order, and includes original covers from the full run. This reimagining of Celtic mythology mixed with sword-and-sorcery tropes stood out in the predominantly science fiction anthology 2000 AD, and it proved to be a testing ground for many acclaimed artists.
In this third volume, the Celtic hero continues his arduous journey across Tir-Nan-Og, accompanied by his sidekick Ukko, and faces a slew of mighty warriors, vengeful gods, and legendary beasts in his quest to return to his tribe and claim his rightful place as king.
This seminal epic by Pat Mills features the artwork of David Lloyd (V for Vendetta), Glenn Fabry (Hellblazer, Preacher), and Mike Collins (American Gothic) as the barbarian ascends to the throne he was deemed unworthy of ever claiming! With the publication of this third volume, readers can now collect every Sláine story up in new hardback editions right up to the classic The Horned God storyline!
Available in standard paperback or as a limited embossed hardcover edition, volume 3 of the trilogy will be available from the 2000 AD webshop and comic shops through Diamond and Lunar.
The Definitive Sláine Volume 3 is available for pre-order now, and will be on shelves May 2026!
And now, this week's releases..
2000AD Prog 2459
Cover: Cliff Robinson, with Dylan Teague.
JUDGE DREDD // AND TO THE SEA RETURN by Rob Williams (w) Henry Flint (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
RED DRAGON by Rob Williams (w) Steve Yeowell & Patrick Goddard (a) Dylan Teague (c) Simon Bowland (l)
VOID RUNNERS // BOOK TWO by David Hine (w) Boo Cook (a) Annie Parkhouse (l)
BRASS SUN // PAVANE by Ian Edginton (w) INJ Culbard (a) Simon Bowland (l)
ROGUE TROOPER // GHOST PATROL by Alex de Campi (w) Neil Edwards (a) Matt Soffe (c) Jim Campbell (l)
Judge Dredd Megazine #486
Cover: Keith Burns.
JUDGE DREDD // RHINEMANN SEVEN by Garth Ennis (w) Keith Burns (a) Jason Wordie (c) Rob Steen (l)
MEGATROPOLIS II by Ken Niemand (w) Dave Taylor (a) Jim Campbell (l)
ARMITAGE // DROKK THE RIPPER by Liam Johnson (w) Staz Johnson (a) Quinton Winter (c) Annie Parkhouse (l)
ANDERSON, PSI-DIV by Alec Worley (w) Ben Willsher (a) Simon Bowland (l)
ROK THE GOD by John Wagner & Alan Grant (w) Dan Cornwell (a) Jim Boswell (c) Jim Campbell (l)
DREADNOUGHTS // QUALIFIED IMMUNITY by Mike Carroll (w) John Higgins (a) Sally Hurst (c) Simon Bowland (l)
The 2000AD Art of Sean Phillips
Rebellion ISBN 978-183786529-1, 19 November 2025, 272pp, £34.99. Available via Amazon.
In a career that has so far spanned more than 30 years, Sean Phillips has received awards and acclaim at every turn. But before his stand-out career in the US, Sean did some of his earliest work for 2000 AD - The Galaxy's Greatest Comic and its sister publication the Judge Dredd Megazine.
This collection forms a retrospective of Phillips' work for 2000 AD and shows how his art evolved from the fully painted work and collage of the early 1990s, to the familiar style he employs on hit books today.
2000AD Definitive Edition: Nemesis the Warlock Volume 4 by Pat Mills (w), David Roach, John Hicklenton, Carl Critchlow (a)
Rebellion ISBN 978-183786565-9, 19 November 2025, 192pp, £24.99. Available via Amazon.
In the penultimate volume in the Definitive Nemesis the Warlock series, the cosmic conflict between Nemesis and Torquemada continues to unfold across the history of time and space. Chasing after the dangerous Thoth, Nemesis, Purity and Torquemada race backwards through time to try and claim him first. But time-travel has consequences for the whole of reality, and Thoth's presence causes ruptures which threaten existence itself!
Written by Pat Mills, this mind-bending volume of Definitive Nemesis features art by John Hicklenton (Heavy Metal Dredd), Carl Critchlow (Batman/Judge Dredd), and David Roach (Star Wars, Aliens).














































