The Combined Best Comics & Graphic Novels of 2025!

Since October 2025 there have been many, many websites with “Best of 2025” lists concerning comic books, manga, webcomics and graphic novels. If you’ve looked at a few, you may have noticed some of the same books on different lists and seen some unique to only that list.

I went through 284 different URLs with “Best of” Lists regarding comics and combined them into a spreadsheet. There are over 4,500 different listings of books from these websites. I should note that I’ve included books that were given honourable mentions. In short, if somebody thought it was a good book that you should check out, it’s on here.

I found a lot more lists by Librarians this year. Like last year I included a lot of lists made by youtube content creators. I found more of them this year than I did last, but it’s possible I missed some. I did not include all of them as I am using the description and transcription features to get the lists without having to listen to the whole video. In some videos there are multiple people talking back and forth and no clear way of seeing what books are being picked by which person. I skipped including that list as I do not have the time to listen those videos as they can stretch multiple hours. I also skipped a lot of lists that were the best thing they read that year, which included a lot of stuff that was not published in 2025.

The Top 10 books were:

  1. Absolute Martian Manhunter by Deniz Camp & Javier Rodríguez (DC Comics)
  2. Absolute Wonder Woman by Kelly Thompson, Hayden Sherman, Matias Bergara, Mattia De Iulis, Dustin Nguyen, Jordie Bellaire (DC Comics)
  3. Absolute Batman by Scott Snyder, Nick Dragotta, Gabriel Walta (DC Comics)
  4. Tongues by Anders Nilsen (Pantheon)
  5. Assorted Crisis Events by Deniz Camp, Eric Zawadzki, Jordie Bellaire (Image Comics)
  6. Drome by Jesse Lonergan (23rd St.)
  7. The Power Fantasy by Kieron Gillen, Casper Wijngaard (Image Comics)
  8. Spent by Alison Bechdel (Mariner)
  9. Cannon by Lee Lai (Drawn & Quarterly)
  10. Batman: Dark Patterns by Dan Watters, Hayden Sherman, Triona Farrell (DC Comics)

1. Absolute Martian Manhunter by Deniz Camp & Javier Rodríguez (DC Comics)

Congratulations are in order to:
DC Comics for capturing the top 3 and 4 of the top 10.
Deniz Camp for getting 1st & 5th place.
Hayden Sherman for 2nd & 10th place.
Jordie Bellaire for 2nd & 5th place.

Below are all the books with 5 mentions or more.

Book Title Count Writer Artist Publisher
Absolute Martian Manhunter 65 Deniz Camp Javier Rodríguez DC Comics
Absolute Wonder Woman 60 Kelly Thompson Hayden Sherman, Matias Bergara, Mattia De Iulis, Dustin Nguyen, Jordie Bellaire DC Comics
Absolute Batman 55 Scott Snyder Nick Dragotta, Gabriel Walta DC Comics
Tongues 43 Anders Nilsen Anders Nilsen Pantheon
Assorted Crisis Events 42 Deniz Camp Eric Zawadzki, Jordie Bellaire Image Comics
Drome 42 Jesse Lonergan Jesse Lonergan 23rd St.
The Power Fantasy 38 Kieron Gillen Casper Wijngaard Image Comics
Spent 31 Alison Bechdel Alison Bechdel Mariner
Cannon 31 Lee Lai Lee Lai Drawn & Quarterly
Batman: Dark Patterns 29 Dan Watters Hayden Sherman, Triona Farrell DC Comics
This Place Kills Me: A Graphic Novel 29 Mariko Tamaki Nicole Goux Harry N. Abrams
Ginseng Roots: A Memoir 26 Craig Thompson Craig Thompson Faber & Faber
Exquisite Corpses 25 James Tynion IV, Pornsak Pichetshote Michael Walsh, Marianna Ignazzi & Valentine De Landro Image Comics
The Ultimates 25 Deniz Camp, Jonathan Hickman Various Marvel Comics
Transformers by Daniel Warren Johnson 24 Daniel Warren Johnson Jorge Corona, Ludo Lullabi, Dan Mora, Mike Spicer, Adriano Lucas Image Comics
The Once and Future Riot 24 Joe Sacco Joe Sacco Metropolitan
Do Admit!: The Mitford Sisters and Me 23 Mimi Pond Mimi Pond Drawn & Quarterly
Beneath The Trees Where Nobody Sees: Rite Of Spring 22 Patrick Horvath Patrick Horvath IDW Publishing
Absolute Superman 22 Jason Aaron Rafa Sandoval DC Comics
Ultimate Spider-Man 22 Jonathan Hickman Marco Checchetto, David Messina, Matt Wilson, Erick Arciniega Marvel Comics
The Cartoonists Club: A Graphic Novel 20 Raina Telgemeier, Scott McCloud Raina Telgemeier, Scott McCloud, Beniam C. Hollman Graphix
Superman: The Kryptonite Spectrum 20 W. Maxwell Prince Martin Morazzo, Chris O’Halloran DC Comics
Captain America 20 Chip Zdarsky Valerio Schiti Marvel Comics
Oasis 19 Guojing Guojing Godwin Books
Bug Wars 19 Jason Aaron Mahmud A. Asrar, Matthew Wilson Image Comics
Holy Lacrimony 19 Michael DeForge Michael DeForge Drawn & Quarterly
Escape 19 Rick Remender Daniel Acuña Image Comics
Batman & Robin: Year One 19 Mark Waid Chris Samnee DC Comics
Black Arms to Hold You Up: A History of Black Resistance 18 Ben Passmore Ben Passmore Pantheon
Song of a Blackbird 18 Maria van Lieshout Maria van Lieshout First Second
Raised by Ghosts 18 Briana Loewinsohn Briana Loewinsohn Fantagraphics
Precious Rubbish 18 Kayla E. Kayla E. Fantagraphics
Angelica and the Bear Prince 17 Trung Le Nguyen Trung Le Nguyen Random House Graphic
Red Coat 16 Geoff Johns Bryan Hitch, Kevin Nowlan, Andrew Currie, Brad Anderson Image Comics
Life Drawing 16 Jaime Hernandez Jaime Hernandez Fantagraphics
More Weight: A Salem Story 16 Ben Wickey Ben Wickey Top Shelf Productions
World Within the World: The Collected Short Comix 2010-2022 16 Julia Gfrörer Julia Gfrörer Fantagraphics
A Song for You and I 15 K. O’Neill K. O’Neill Random House Graphic
Daredevil: Cold Day in Hell 15 Charles Soule Steve McNiven, Dean White Marvel Comics
Bowling With Corpses & Other Strange Tales From Lands Unknown 15 Mike Mignola Mike Mignola, Dave Stewart Dark Horse Books
We Could Be Magic 15 Marissa Meyer Joelle Murray Feiwel & Friends
Flip: A Graphic Novel 15 Ngozi Ukazu Ngozi Ukazu First Second
Geiger 15 Geoff Johns Gary Frank Image Comics
Everything Dead & Dying 14 Tate Brombal Jacob Phillips Image Comics
Insectopolis: A Natural History 14 Peter Kuper Peter Kuper W. W. Norton & Company
We’re Taking Everyone Down With Us 14 Matthew Rosenberg Stefano Landini, Jason Wordie Image Comics
Out of Alcatraz 14 Christopher Cantwell Tyler Crook Oni Press
The Seasons 14 Rick Remender Paul Azaceta, Matheus Lopes Image Comics
The Ephemerata: Shaping the Exquisite Nature of Grief 14 Carol Tyler Carol Tyler Fantagraphics
Helen of Wyndhorn 14 Tom King Bilquis Evely, Matheus Lopes Dark Horse Books
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 14 Jason Aaron Juan Ferrayra, Joëlle Jones, Rafael Albuquerque, Cliff Chiang, Darick Robertson IDW Publishing
Hello Sunshine 13 Keezy Young Keezy Young Little, Brown Ink
Absolute Batman 2025 Annual 13 Daniel Warren Johnson Daniel Warren Johnson, Mike Spicer DC Comics
The Weight 13 Melissa Mendes Melissa Mendes Drawn & Quarterly
The New Gods 13 Ram V. Evan Cagle, Francesco Segala DC Comics
The Legend of Kamui 13 Shirato Sanpei Shirato Sanpei Drawn & Quarterly
Cornelius: The Merry Life of a Wretched Dog 13 Marc Torices Marc Torices Drawn & Quarterly
The Moon is Following Us 13 Daniel Warren Johnson Daniel Warren Johnson, Riley Rossomo, Mike Spicer Image Comics
Batman 13 Matt Fraction Jorge Jiménez, Tomeu Morey DC Comics
The Knives 12 Ed Brubaker Sean Phillips, Jacob Phillips Image Comics
Simplicity 12 Mattie Lubchansky Mattie Lubchansky Pantheon
Almost Sunset 12 Wahab Algarmi Wahab Algarmi HarperAlley
It Rhymes With Takei 12 George Takei, Steven Scott, Justin Eisinger Harmony Becker, José Antonio Villarrubia Top Shelf Productions
Muybridge 12 Guy Delisle Guy Delisle Drawn & Quarterly
Rook Exodus 12 Geoff Johns Jason Fabok, Brad Anderson Image Comics
Hyde Street 12 Geoff Johns Ivan Reis, Danny Miki Image Comics
Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy 11 Paul Auster, Paul Karasik Paul Karasik, David Mazzucchelli, Lorenzo Mattotti Pantheon
Invincible Universe: Battle Beast 11 Robert Kirkman Ryan Ottley Image Comics
Hunger’s Bite 11 Taylor Robin Taylor Robin Union Square & Co.
Chickenpox 11 Remy Lai Remy Lai Henry Holt and Co.
Huda F Wants to Know? 11 Huda Fahmy Huda Fahmy Dial Books
Milk White Steed 11 Michael D. Kennedy Michael D. Kennedy Drawn & Quarterly
Spectators 11 Brian K. Vaughan Niko Henrichon Image Comics
G.I. JOE 11 Joshua Williamson Tom Reilly, Jordie Bellaire Image Comics
Fresh Start 10 Gale Galligan Gale Galligan, K Czap Graphix
Skinbreaker 10 Robert Kirkman David Finch Image Comics
Dan in Green Gables: A Modern Reimagining of Anne of Green Gables 10 Rey Terciero Claudia Aguirre Penguin Workshop
Nocturnos 10 Laura Pérez Laura Pérez Fantagraphics
The Confessional: A Graphic Novel 10 Paige Hender Paige Hender Silver Sprocket
Dream On 10 Shannon Hale Marcela Cespedes Roaring Brook Press
Miss Ruki 10 Fumiko Takano Fumiko Takano New York Review Comics
Cabin Head and Tree Head 10 Scott Campbell Scott Campbell Tundra Books
Kaya 10 Wes Craig Wes Craig, Jason Wordie Image Comics
Fantastic Four 10 Ryan North Various Marvel Comics
The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn’t A Guy At All 10 Sumiko Arai Sumiko Arai Yen Press
Lu and Ren’s Guide to Geozoology: A Graphic Novel 9 Angela Hsieh Angela Hsieh Quill Tree Books
I’m a Dumbo Octopus! A Graphic Guide to Cephalopods 9 Anne Lambelet Anne Lambelet ‎Graphic Universe ™
Resurrection Man: Quantum Karma 9 Ram V. Anand RK, Jackson Butch Guice, Mike Spicer DC Comics
Fitting Indian: A Graphic Novel 9 Jyoti Chand Tara Anand HarperAlley
How to Talk to Your Succulent 9 Zoe Persico Zoe Persico Tundra Books
Crumble 9 Meredith McClaren Andrea Bell Little, Brown Ink
Saint Catherine 9 Anna Meyer Anna Meyer 23rd St.
Trans History: A Graphic Novel: From Ancient Times to the Present Day 9 Alex L. Combs, Andrew Eakett Alex L. Combs, Andrew Eakett Candlewick
Creaky Acres: A Graphic Novel 9 Calista Brill, Nilah Magruder Nilah Magruder Kokila
How to Say Goodbye in Cuban 9 Daniel Miyares Daniel Miyares Anne Schwartz Books
Gaysians 9 Mike Curato Mike Curato Algonquin Books
Poison Ivy 9 G. Willow Wilson Davide Gianfelice, Marcio Takara, Arif Prianto DC Comics
Spectrum 9 Rick Quinn, Dave Chisholm Dave Chisholm Mad Cave Studios
Lucas Wars: The True Story of George Lucas and the Creation of Star Wars 8 Laurent Hopman Renaud Roche 23rd St.
Strange Bedfellows 8 Ariel Slamet Ries Ariel Slamet Ries HarperAlley
Absolute Green Lantern 8 Al Ewing Jahnoy Lindsay DC Comics
Dogtangle 8 Max Huffman Max Huffman Fantagraphics
I Wish I Didn’t Have to Tell You This 8 Eugene Yelchin Eugene Yelchin Candlewick
Tedward 8 Josh Pettinger Josh Pettinger Fantagraphics
One Crazy Summer: The Graphic Novel 8 Rita Williams-Garcia Sharee Miller Quill Tree Books
One World Under Doom 8 Ryan North R.B. Silva Marvel Comics
Supergirl 8 Sophie Campbell Sophie Campbell, Tamra Bonvillain DC Comics
Speak Up, Santiago!: (A Hillside Valley Graphic Novel) 8 Julio Anta Gabi Mendez Random House Graphic
The Snips: A Bad Buzz Day 8 Raúl the Third Raúl the Third, Elenora Bruni, Elaine Bay Little, Brown Ink
The Flip Side: A Graphic Novel 8 Jason Walz Jason Walz Rocky Pond Books
Night Light 8 Michael Emberley Michael Emberley Holiday House
Kirby’s Lessons for Falling (in Love) 8 Laura Gao Laura Gao HarperAlley
Junie B. Jones and the Stupid Smelly Bus: The Graphic Novel 8 Barbara Park, Colleen AF Venable Honie Beam, Kiwi Byrd Random House Books for Young Readers
Santos Sisters 8 Fake Greg Floating World Comics
Aliens Vs. Avengers 8 Jonathan Hickman Esad Ribić Marvel Comics
Green Arrow 8 Chris Condon Montos, Adriano Lucas DC Comics
Spacewalking with You 8 Inuhiko Doronoda Inuhiko Doronoda Kodansha Comics
The Devil’s Grin 8 Alex Graham Alex Graham Fantagraphics
This Beautiful, Ridiculous City 7 Kay Sohini Kay Sohini Ten Speed Graphic
Veil 7 Kotteri Kotteri UDON
Froggy: A Pond Full of Pals! 7 Paige Walshe Paige Walshe Flying Eye Books
A Garden of Spheres 7 Linnea Sterte Linnea Sterte Peow2
Night Drive 7 Richard Sala Richard Sala Fantagraphics
Krypto: The Last Dog of Krypton 7 Ryan North Mike Norton, Ian Herring DC Comics
Goes Like This 7 Jordan Crane Jordan Crane Fantagraphics
You and Me on Repeat 7 Mary Shyne Mary Shyne Henry Holt and Co.
The Smythes 7 Rea Irvin Rea Irvin New York Review Comics
Mixed-Up 7 Kami Garcia Brittney Williams First Second
Speechless 7 Aron Nels Steinke Aron Nels Steinke, K Czap Graphix
Tall Water 7 S.J. Sindu Dion MBD HarperAlley
The Complete C Comics 7 Joe Brainard Joe Brainard New York Review Comics
Star Trek: The Last Starship 7 Jackson Lanzing, Collin Kelly Adrián Bonilla, Heather Moore IDW Publishing
Absolute Flash 7 Jeff Lemire Nick Robles DC Comics
I Wanna Be Your Girl 7 Umi Takase Umi Takase Ink Pop
Tuck Everlasting: The Graphic Novel 7 Natalie Babbitt, K. Woodman-Maynard K. Woodman-Maynard Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Land of Mirrors 7 Maria Medem Maria Medem Drawn & Quarterly
Misery of Love 7 Yvan Alagbé Yvan Alagbé New York Review Comics
Mansect 7 Shinichi Koga Shinichi Koga Living The Line
Free Piano (Not Haunted) 7 Whitney Gardner Whitney Gardner Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Sea Legs 7 Jules Bakes Niki Smith Graphix
The Sacrificers 7 Rick Remender Max Fiumara Image Comics
Uncanny X-Men 7 Gail Simone David Marquez, Javier Garron, Luciano Vecchio Marvel Comics
Fishflies 7 Jeff Lemire Jeff Lemire Image Comics
Conan the Barbarian 7 Jim Zub Doug Braithwaite Titan Comics
Feral 7 Tony Fleecs Trish Forstner, Tone Rodriguez, Brad Simpson Image Comics
Superman 7 Joshua Williamson Dan Mora, Alejandro Sánchez DC Comics
Space Ghost 7 David Pepose Jonathan Lau, Andrew Dalhouse Dynamite Entertainment
Smoke Signal #44 – Gary Panter 6 Gary Panter Gary Panter Desert Island Comics
Wish I Was a Baller 6 Amar Shah Rashad Doucet Graphix
The History of Everything 6 Victoria Evans Victoria Evans HarperAlley
Universal Monsters: The Invisible Man 6 James Tynion IV Dani, Brad Simpson Image Comics
Crumb: A Cartoonist’s Life 6 Dan Nadel Robert Crumb Scribner
Infernal Hulk 6 Phillip Kennedy Johnson Nic Klein, Matthew Wilson Marvel Comics
Talking to My Father’s Ghost: An Almost True Story 6 Alex Krokus Alex Krokus Chronicle Books
Silenced Voices: Reclaiming Memories From the Guatemalan Genocide 6 Pablo Leon Pablo Leon HarperAlley
Big Gamble Rainbow Highway 6 Connie Myers Connie Myers Cram Books
The Many Misfortunes of Eugenia Wang 6 Stan Yan Stan Yan Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Terminal Exposure: Comics, Sculpture, and Risky Behaviour 6 Michael McMillan Michael McMillan New York Review Comics
The Raven Boys 6 Maggie Stiefvater, Stephanie Williams Sas Milledge Viking Books for Young Readers
The Witch’s Egg 6 Donya Todd Donya Todd Avery Hill Publishing
Tower Dungeon 6 Tsutomu Nihei Tsutomu Nihei Kodansha Comics
Love Languages 6 James Albon James Albon Top Shelf Productions
Buff Soul 6 Moa Romanova Moa Romanova Fantagraphics
News From The Fallout 6 Chris Condon Jeffrey Alan Love Image Comics
A Wizard of Earthsea: A Graphic Novel 6 Ursula K. Le Guin, Fred Fordham Fred Fordham Clarion Books
Checked Out 6 Katie Fricas Katie Fricas Drawn & Quarterly
The Dissident Club: Chronicle of a Pakistani Journalist in Exile 6 Taha Siddiqui, Hubert Maury Hubert Maury, Elise Follin, Ariane Borra Arsenal Pulp Press
Baby Blue 6 Bim Eriksson Bim Eriksson Fantagraphics
Ghost Town 6 Eric Colossal Eric Colossal Harry N. Abrams
Superman Treasury 2025: Hero For All 6 Dan Jurgens Dan Jurgens, Bruno Redondo DC Comics
Night Chef: An Epic Tale of Friendship with a Side of Deliciousness! 6 Mika Song Mika Song Random House Graphic
Crickets 6 Sammy Harkham Sammy Harkham Breakdown Press
The Deviant 6 James Tynion IV Joshua Hixson, Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou Image Comics
Outsider Kids 5 Betty C. Tang Betty C. Tang Graphix
I Shall Never Fall in Love 5 Hari Conner Hari Conner HarperAlley
Hey, Mary! 5 Andrew Wheeler Rye Hickman, Hank Jones Oni Press
Love, Misha 5 Askel Aden Askel Aden First Second
Creature Clinic 5 Gavin Aung Than Gavin Aung Than First Second
Adorable Empire 5 Laura Terry Laura Terry Graphix
Aquaman 5 Jeremy Adams John Timm, Rex Lokus DC Comics
Red Night 5 Hanawa Kazuichi Hanawa Kazuichi Breakdown Press
Batman and Robin 5 Phillip Kennedy Johnson Javi Fernandez DC Comics
No Man’s Land 5 Szymon Kudrański Szymon Kudrański Image Comics
The Cabbie: Definitive Edition 5 Martí Riera Ferre Martí Riera Ferre Fantagraphics
I Witnessed: The Lizzie Borden Story 5 Jeramey Kraatz Crystal Jayme HarperAlley
Batman/Deadpool 5 Grant Morrison Dan Mora, Alejandro Sanchez DC Comics
Valley Valley/Idella Dell 5 Audra Stang Audra Stang Frog Farm
Meat Eaters 5 Meredith McClaren Meredith McClaren Oni Press
Beat It, Rufus 5 Noah Van Sciver Noah Van Sciver Fantagraphics
Smoke Gets in Your Eyes 5 Anaïs Flogny Anaïs Flogny Harry N. Abrams
Tales of Paranoia 5 Robert Crumb Robert Crumb Fantagraphics
Clementine: Book Three 5 Tillie Walden Cliff Rathburn Image Comics
Cry When the Baby Cries 5 Becky Barnicoat Becky Barnicoat Gallery Books
Alanna: Song of the Lioness 5 Vita Ayala, Tamora Pierce Sam Beck Harry N. Abrams
How to Draw a Secret 5 Cindy Chang Cindy Chang Allida
Story Spinners: A Sisterly Tale of Danger, a Princess, and Her Crew of Lady Pirates 5 Cassandra Federman Cassandra Federman Aladdin
In the End We All Die: A Graphic Novel 5 Tobias Aeschbacher Tobias Aeschbacher Helvetiq
Very Bad at Math 5 Hope Larson Hope Larson HarperAlley
Imperial 5 Jonathan Hickman, Jed MacKay Iban Coello, Federico Vicentini Marvel Comics
Halfway to Somewhere 5 Jose Pimienta Jose Pimienta Random House Graphic
Pacheco and the Witch of the Mountain 5 Juan E. Zambrano Juan E. Zambrano Andrews McMeel Publishing
The Color of the End: Mission in the Apocalypse 5 Haruo Iwamune Haruo Iwamune Yen Press
Hikaru in the Light! 5 Mai Matsuda Mai Matsuda, Culture Weaver CK Graphix
Band Nerd 5 Sarah Clawson Willis Emma Cormarie HarperAlley
Black Cohosh 5 Eagle Valiant Brosi Eagle Valiant Brosi Drawn & Quarterly
The Rocketfellers 5 Peter J. Tomasi, Francis Manapul Francis Manapul Image Comics
The Kiss Bet 5 Ingrid Ochoa Ingrid Ochoa WEBTOON Unscrolled
RuriDragon 5 Masaoki Shindo Masaoki Shindo ‎VIZ Media LLC
Nightwing 5 Dan Watters Dexter Soy, Veronica Gandini DC Comics
FML 5 Kelly Sue DeConnick David Lopez, Cris Peter Dark Horse Books
Storm 5 Murewa Ayodele Lucas Werneck Marvel Comics
Dogsred 5 Satoru Noda Satoru Noda ‎VIZ Media LLC
Saga 5 Brian K. Vaughan Fiona Staples Image Comics
Kagurabachi 5 Takeru Hokazono Takeru Hokazono ‎VIZ Media LLC
Hello Darkness 5 Various Various BOOM! Studios
Zatanna: Bring Down the House 5 Mariko Tamaki Javier Rodríguez DC Comics
Minor Arcana 5 Jeff Lemire Letizia Cadonici BOOM! Studios

The full spreadsheet with pivot tables for books, writers, artists, publishers and more is available here.

Regarding Publishers:

Image Comics had 105 different books picked this year, followed by DC Comics (100), Marvel Comics (89), 4th was Self-published books (75) and 5th was Fantagraphics (69). Out of the Self-published books Pleasure Beach by Josh Pettinger was the most popular with 4 reviewers picking it.

The most popular Webcomics were The Keluarga Cable Ship Company by Mereida Fajardo, Scorpio Venus Rising by Corinne Halbert and Nap Comix by Rachel Smith which all tied at 3 picks each.

Caveats:

Where a reviewer/writer wrote ‘best of’ lists for multiple websites, I’ve cross referenced their lists and removed books that were named twice. I did not think it would be fair if those writers could tip the popularity scale by naming the same book(s) over and over again on multiple websites. Sadly, there was an increase of websites publishing lists with no credit to who (or whom) created the list. In those cases, I marked them as n/a but the practice of not crediting writers is a shameful one. Although for libraries I understand fully if the Librarians picking the books want to remain anonymous due to the threatening, targeted climate in the United States.

Youtubers! Introduce yourselves when your start your videos! Many of your lists I put under n/a because I couldn’t find your name anywhere.

If a writer wrote for multiple sites, but one of those sites picks was a group effort, I did not remove books that are listed twice. There were also sites that did fan voting and picked the same book for various categories, I kept them in that case as well.

I generally did not include lists that were a mixed of prose books and graphic novels unless there were a significant number of graphic novels on the list, or they had a list of GNs only and put a GN on a otherwise list of prose books. I’ve come to really appreciate publishers that put : A Novel in the books title as it helps identify prose books when they have a GN looking cover. I also noticed this year that publishers are putting in : A Graphic Novel in the title and that helps too.

With inkers and colourists I often, but not always included them within the Artist section. Where there were multiple (usually more than 5) involved in a book, or in the title’s run over the course of the year, various was used instead of listing them all. In some cases, I combined those involved even if they worked on the title for different issues. Where the translators were credited (without me having to really dig for it) are mentioned on column G of the data. The same goes for the editors of anthologies.

To simply things, if a list named a specific comic book issue or specific volume of a graphic novel, I removed those specifics and just listed the series title, with rare exceptions. The same goes with issue #s when reviewers were picking best single issues. My apologies to the reviewers of those books.

Some reviewers included books that were published in 2024 or earlier. Normally the number of times these books were mentioned is not significant to the overall list. Often (but not always) the work was published again in a new collected edition and that is what the reviewer picked.

Most of the lists were general ‘best/favourite books’ of 2025, but I also included lists dedicated to young readers, manga, 2SLGBTQI+, etc… What type list is noted on column B in the spreadsheet.

Some lists also had rankings and those are included in Column C. I’ve also included age groups or other identifiers in that column.

As a final note, I’m sorry this is later than I normally have this done. There are a variety of reasons for that and among them is the Google of 2025 is not the Google of 2024. There was a serious downgrade in quality results from my Google Alerts and I had to go to Yahoo to manually search for lists. That’s not because Yahoo got any better, it’s just Google has gotten so much worse that old Yahoo is now the best search engine.

This list of websites this list is compiled from:

@hexagonmanart https://hexagonmanart.substack.com/p/the-stuff-that-destroyed-me-in-2025
2000AD https://2000ad.com/news/the-best-of-2000-ad-in-2025-as-chosen-by-you/
828 News Now https://828newsnow.com/news/228822-the-best-books-of-2025-according-to-wnc-booksellers/
9 Panel Grid https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9pxQNAu4GyQ
A David Lewis Instagram https://www.instagram.com/p/DSBpI16jE1z/?e=14949ae3-accc-49d1-9c26-9ab235722920&g=5
A.V. Club https://www.avclub.com/best-comics-2025-absolute-batman-fantastic-four-drome
Absolute Geek https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5HEA_CQPus
AIPT Comics https://aiptcomics.com/2025/12/16/aipts-best-comics-of-2025-part-1/
AIPT Comics https://aiptcomics.com/2025/12/18/aipts-best-comics-of-2025-part-2/
AIPT Comics https://aiptcomics.com/2025/12/28/aipt-comics-podcast-episode-359-best-comics-of-2025/
ALA https://www.ala.org/gncrt/lists/bgna-2025
ALA https://www.ala.org/gncrt/lists/bgnc-2025
ALA https://www.ala.org/gncrt/awards/ocac-2025
ALA https://www.ala.org/gncrt/awards/ocaya-2025
ALA https://www.ala.org/gncrt/awards/ocaa-2025
Amazon https://www.amazon.com/b/?_encoding=UTF8&node=17296348011&ref_=cct_cg_BOTY25EN_2b1&pf_rd_p=6e9f19b2-ab86-404d-b0c2-bfe1d51932ae&pf_rd_r=P2K69GS0FAV8Z01RCBSM
Amazon https://www.amazon.com/b/?_encoding=UTF8&node=17296348011&ref_=cct_cg_BOTY25EN_2b1&pf_rd_p=6e9f19b2-ab86-404d-b0c2-bfe1d51932ae&pf_rd_r=P2K69GS0FAV8Z01RCBSM
Amazon https://www.amazon.com/b/?_encoding=UTF8&node=17296349011&ref_=cct_cg_BOTY25EN_2c1&pf_rd_p=6e9f19b2-ab86-404d-b0c2-bfe1d51932ae&pf_rd_r=P2K69GS0FAV8Z01RCBSM
Amazon https://www.amazon.com/b/?_encoding=UTF8&node=17296350011&ref_=cct_cg_BOTY25EN_2d1&pf_rd_p=9f927f0c-dddc-4607-90e5-d90cb8464cbf&pf_rd_r=YJGAGY0F9A1KM6KFVC2K
Anime News Network https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/seasonal/2025/the-best-anime-of/the-best-new-and-continuing-manga-of/.232031
ara https://en.ara.cat/culture/the-15-best-comics-of-2025_1_5598199.html
Asian Movie Plus https://asianmoviepulse.com/2025/12/the-12-best-manga-releases-of-2025/
Atomic Junkshop https://atomicjunkshop.com/the-best-comics-i-read-in-2025/
Austin Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/467400277/2906967527
Austin Talks Comics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wA8Ms-_JnXo
Back Corner Comics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxP3MB0LwVI
Bam Smack Pow https://bamsmackpow.com/top-25-must-read-comic-book-series-2025-ranked
Barnes and Noble https://www.barnesandnoble.com/blog/best-young-readers-books-of-2025/
Bellingham Public Library https://bellingham.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/110058314/2896403807
Big Planet Comics https://www.bigplanetcomics.com/best-of-2025
Book DNA https://bookdna.com/bboy/2025/graphic-novels
Booklist https://www.booklistonline.com (December Issue)
BookRiot https://bookriot.com/the-best-comic-books-and-graphic-novels-of-2025/
BookRiot https://bookriot.com/best-new-graphic-novels-for-kids/
BookRiot https://bookriot.com/the-best-comics-and-graphic-novels-of-2025/
BookRiot https://bookriot.com/best-books-2025/
Bookshop https://bookshop.org/lists/best-comics-graphic-novels-for-adults-2025
Bookweb https://www.bookweb.org/news/2025-indie-gift-guide-genre-lovers-preview-1632240
Borg https://borg.com/2025/12/18/the-best-books-of-2025/
Boston Globe https://www.bostonglobe.com/2025/12/22/arts/best-books-2025/?p1=BGSearch_Overlay_Results
Boston Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/114085694/2904857117
Bram Stoker Awards https://bramstokerawards.horror.org/front-page/the-2025-bram-stoker-awards-preliminary-ballot-announced/
Brightly https://www.readbrightly.com/middle-grade-chapter-books-2025/
Brightly https://www.readbrightly.com/young-adult-books-2025/
Broken Frontier https://www.brokenfrontier.com/broken-frontier-awards-2025-announcing-the-winners/
BunkmastaB On Comics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPAhPtQQHyw
BunkmastaB On Comics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-9KiPjEjoMY
Burnaby Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/83430610/2905614637
C H Wilkins’ Future / No Future https://chwilkins.substack.com/p/the-best-comics-of-2025-part-1
C H Wilkins’ Future / No Future https://chwilkins.substack.com/p/the-best-comics-of-2025-part-2
C H Wilkins’ Future / No Future https://chwilkins.substack.com/p/the-best-comics-of-2025-part-4-captain
C H Wilkins’ Future / No Future https://chwilkins.substack.com/p/the-best-comics-of-2025-part-5-supernatural
C H Wilkins’ Future / No Future https://chwilkins.substack.com/p/the-best-comics-of-2025-part-6a-honourable
C H Wilkins’ Future / No Future https://chwilkins.substack.com/p/the-best-comics-of-2025-part-6b-honourable
C H Wilkins’ Future / No Future https://chwilkins.substack.com/p/the-best-comic-of-2025-dan-watters
Capes and Tights https://capesandtights.com/comics-of-the-year-2025/
Carl’s Collection https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2VzJgzYv9E
Carnegie Library https://www.carnegielibrary.org/staff-picks/2025-teen-graphic-novel-wrap-up/
CBC https://www.cbc.ca/books/the-best-canadian-comics-of-2025-9.6995957
CBC https://www.cbc.ca/books/the-best-canadian-children-s-books-of-2025-9.7000273
CBC https://www.cbc.ca/books/the-best-canadian-books-of-2025-9.7019177
CBR https://www.cbr.com/best-indie-comics-2025-ranked/
CBR https://www.cbr.com/cbr-top-100-comics-of-2025/
Chapel Hill Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/344917327/2903693939
Chapel Hill Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/344916587/2903663481
Chicago Public Library https://chipublib.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/200121216/2873965107?_gl=1*1vcwzj*_ga*MTgxODg0NDE0Ny4xNzYzNTgwNDE5*_ga_G99DMMNG39*czE3NjM1ODA0MTkkbzEkZzAkdDE3NjM1ODA0MTkkajYwJGwwJGgw*_ga_92RPWHE421*czE3NjM1ODA0MTkkbzEkZzAkdDE3NjM1ODA0MTkkajYwJGwwJGgw
Chicago Public Library https://chipublib.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/199702383/2891642387
Chicago Public Library https://www.chipublib.org/news/2025-teen-best-reads-list-curated-by-chicago-teens/#top
Chicago Public Library https://chipublib.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/200049033/2886159897
Chicago Public Library https://chipublib.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/200049033/2886889497
Christchurch City Libraries Ngā Kete Wānanga o Ōtautahi https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/76033284/2897454027
Christchurch City Libraries Ngā Kete Wānanga o Ōtautahi https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/76033284/2897457497
Christchurch City Libraries Ngā Kete Wānanga o Ōtautahi https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/75056694/2902364757
ChubbyRay Comics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_FpJI4AWqQ
Comic Book Club https://comicbookclublive.com/2025/12/23/best-comic-books-of-2025/
Comic Book Corner 2.0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INyXm8OD2tQ
Comic Book Couples Counseling https://www.comicbookcouplescounseling.com/post/the-stampies-best-comics-of-2025-part-two
Comic Book Couples Counseling https://www.comicbookcouplescounseling.com/post/the-stampies-best-comics-of-2025-part-one
Comic Book Herald https://www.comicbookherald.com/the-best-comics-of-2025/
Comic Book Revival https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NY3AUnsNqHs
Comic Book Revolution https://www.comicbookrevolution.com/best-comic-book-series-of-2025/
Comic Book Yeti https://www.comicbookyeti.com/post/comic-book-yeti-s-best-of-2025-from-the-indie-community
Comic Culture https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V2Kjcdu9E24
Comic Frontier https://www.comicfrontier.com/p/best-comics-2025-list-marvel-dc
Comic Power https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WvKVzIBQh0c
Comic Tropes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIO8DkytApo
ComicBook.com https://comicbook.com/comics/list/7-best-comics-of-2025/
ComicBooks.com https://comicbook.com/comics/list/10-2025-dc-stories-you-need-to-read/
ComicBooks.com https://comicbook.com/comics/list/10-marvel-comics-you-need-to-read-in-2026/
Comicon.com https://comicon.com/2025/12/26/comicons-best-comic-series-of-2025/
Comicon.com https://comicon.com/2025/12/26/comicons-best-ogns-and-collected-editions-of-2025/
Comicon.com https://comicon.com/2025/12/26/comicons-best-single-issues-of-2025/
Comicon.com https://comicon.com/2025/12/30/comicons-best-digital-webcomics-of-2025/
Comicon.com https://comicon.com/2025/12/31/comicons-most-progressive-comics-of-2025/
Comics Are Dope https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Uch2ixLeNQ
Comics Are Dope https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtz_Vsd2waI
Comics Are Dope https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-eny_P8V40
Comics Are Dope https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ete9Ed1cRQ
Comics Beat https://www.comicsbeat.com/best-comics-of-2025/
Comics Beat https://www.comicsbeat.com/best-kids-comics-of-2025/
Comics Beat https://www.comicsbeat.com/the-marvel-rundown-the-best-marvel-comics-of-2025/
Comics Beat https://www.comicsbeat.com/dc-round-up-the-10-best-dc-comics-of-2025/
Comics Grinder https://comicsgrinder.com/2025/12/11/comics-grinder-best-comics-graphic-novels-2025/
Comics Lawyer https://www.comicslawyer.com/2025/12/2025-comic-book-recommendations.html
Coy Jandreau https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8YVujGFPTg
Culture Slate https://www.cultureslate.com/lists/5-of-the-best-comics-of-2025
DC Blog https://www.dc.com/blog/2025-12-15/my-2025-top-three-joshua-lapin-bertone
DC Blog https://www.dc.com/blog/2025-12-16/my-2025-top-three-donovan-morgan-grant
DC Blog https://www.dc.com/blog/2025-12-19/my-2025-top-three-alex-jaffe
DC Blog https://www.dc.com/blog/2025-12-18/my-2025-top-three-joseph-mc-cabe
DC Blog https://www.dc.com/blog/2025-12-17/my-2025-top-three-sami-de-monster
Denver Public Library https://www.denverlibrary.org/kids/list/staff-picks/2025-staff-picks-books-kids#graphic
Denver Public Library https://www.denverlibrary.org/preteen/list/dps-top-100-middle-school
Denver Public Library https://www.denverlibrary.org/teen/list/staff-picks/2025-staff-picks-books-teens
Denver Public Library https://www.denverlibrary.org/adult/list/2025-staff-picks-books-adults
Denver Public Library https://www.denverlibrary.org/teen/list/denver-public-schools-top-ya-books
Deschutes Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/605421362/2914039047
Diverse Tech Geek https://www.diversetechgeek.com/10-favorite-webcomics-2025-edition/
Doom Rocket https://doomrocket.substack.com/p/these-are-the-best-comics-of-the-e31
Edmonton Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/70923485/2937584567
Evanston Public Library https://evanstonlibrary.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/2577696079/2885074977
Evanston Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/2615383689/2896148947
Evanston Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/2640366035/2915598137
Excelsior Award https://www.excelsioraward.co.uk/black2026
Excelsior Award https://www.excelsioraward.co.uk/red2026
Excelsior Award https://www.excelsioraward.co.uk/blue2026
Excelsior Award https://www.excelsioraward.co.uk/white2026
Fandom Wire https://fandomwire.com/10-best-comic-books-of-2025-ranked/
Fluxblog https://fluxblog.substack.com/p/fluxblog-580-these-are-a-few-of-my
Flyleaf Books https://flyleafbooks.com/2025-flyleaf-gn
Forbes https://www.forbes.com/sites/robsalkowitz/2025/12/19/10-amazing-books-that-best-graphic-novels-of-2025-lists-may-have-missed/
Game Rant https://gamerant.com/best-manhwa-to-start-reading-in-2025/
Games Radar https://www.gamesradar.com/comics/the-25-best-comics-of-2025/
Gaming Trend https://gamingtrend.com/editorials/2025-favorites-of-the-year-and-holiday-guide-gamingtrend-comics-manga
GeekDad https://geekdad.com/2026/01/stack-overflow-our-favorite-books-of-2025/
GeekyOlHog https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=puOlPEoR7i0
Gifted Rebels https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p_2dI6l45fs
GLAAD https://glaad.org/mediaawards/37/nominees/
Good Reads https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/223656.The_Best_Comics_and_Graphic_Novels_of_2025
Good Reads https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/219957
Gosh https://goshlondon.com/gosh-best-of/best-of-2025/kids-young-adult-2025/
Gosh https://goshlondon.com/gosh-best-of/best-of-2025/adult-2025/
Graphic Novel Life https://metaphrog.substack.com/p/graphic-novel-reads-of-2025
Graphic Policy https://graphicpolicy.com/2026/01/01/bretts-favorite-comics-of-2025/
Graphic Policy https://graphicpolicy.com/2026/01/05/logans-10-favorite-comics-of-2025/
HobbiesofaMan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQ4ZH7lQOH8
HobbiesofaMan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P4M8lk5tPbY
Hollywood Reporter https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/lists/best-comics-graphic-novels-2025/
Hornbook https://www.hbook.com/story/fanfare-2025-booklist
I Read Comic Books https://ircbpodcast.com/best-comic-books-of-2025
IGN https://www.ign.com/articles/the-best-comic-book-or-original-graphic-novel-of-2025
Imagination Soup https://imaginationsoup.net/best-middle-grade-books-of-2025/
Imagination Soup https://imaginationsoup.net/best-chapter-books-of-2025/
Imagination Soup https://imaginationsoup.net/best-nonfiction-childrens-books-of-2025/
Imagination Soup https://imaginationsoup.net/35-best-aka-my-favorite-picture-books-of-2025/
Indianapolis Public Library https://indypl.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1652485239/2898137489
Indianapolis Public Library https://indypl.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1652485239/2898670647
Indianapolis Public Library https://indypl.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1652485239/2898633107
Irish Examiner https://www.irishexaminer.com/lifestyle/artsandculture/arid-41766887.html
Jefferson County Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1042677847/2918336317
Joshua Edelglass https://joshuaedelglass.com/joshs-favorite-comic-book-series-of-2025-part-one/
Joshua Edelglass https://joshuaedelglass.com/joshs-favorite-comic-book-series-of-2025-part-two/
Just Indy Comics https://justindiecomics.com/2025/12/21/15-fumetti-del-2025/
K-Comics Beat https://kcomicsbeat.com/2025/12/12/best-manga-and-manhwa-of-2025/
K-Comics Beat https://kcomicsbeat.com/2025/12/16/k-comics-beats-best-webtoons-and-webcomics-of-2025/
King County Library System https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/217743566/2898920047
Kirkus https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-lists/best-graphic-middle-grade-books-2025/#tuck-everlasting-2
Kody Collects and Mekhi Chambers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERif4b6yOwU
Kurt’s Comic Review https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QN6xCErrLZw
Library Journal https://www.libraryjournal.com/story/Editors-Picks-of-the-Year-Best-Books-2025
Los Angeles Public Library https://www.lapl.org/books-emedia/lapl-reads/book-lists/best-2025-graphic-novels
Making Comics https://makingcomics.substack.com/p/the-10-best-comics-of-2025
Medium https://johncassillo.medium.com/the-best-comic-books-of-2025-e4b7326f9d07
Menlo Park Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/150468461/2929829127
Menlo Park Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/150468461/2929829597
Mid-Continent Public Library https://mymcpl.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1936417969/2897726707
Mombain https://mombian.com/2025/12/12/2025s-best-lgbtq-middle-grade-books-for-holiday-giving/
MPRnews https://www.mprnews.org/story/2025/12/29/mpr-newsroom-best-book-picks-of-2025
Multnomah County Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/114633184/2891634197
Multnomah County Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/135258321/2891113077
Multnomah County Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/135258471/2891097118
Multnomah County Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/114633184/2894840787
NAACP Image Awards https://naacpimageawards.net/nominees/
New York Public Library https://www.nypl.org/books-more/recommendations/comics-2025/adults
New York Public Library https://www.nypl.org/books-more/recommendations/best-books/kids?year=2025&f%5B0%5D=terms%3AGraphic%20Novels\
New York Public Library https://www.nypl.org/books-more/recommendations/best-books/kids?year=2025&facets_query=&f%5B0%5D=terms%3APicture%20Books
New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/12/books/review/best-graphic-novels-2025.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share
New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/13/books/review/best-childrens-books-2025.html
New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/24/books/notable-books.html
New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/11/books/hidden-gems-books-favorites.html
No Flying No Tights https://noflyingnotights.com/blog/2026/01/17/staff-picks-top-comics-of-2025/
NPR https://apps.npr.org/best-books/#tags=comics+%26+graphic+novels&view=covers&year=2025
On Heavy Rotation https://edwarddanielcalvert.substack.com/p/on-heavy-rotation-my-end-of-2025-07e
OverDrive https://www.overdrive.com/collections/1430449/the-best-books-of-2025?view=grid
Phoenix Comics & Games https://shop.phoenixseattle.com/blogs/news/phoenix-comics-presents-best-of-2025
Pop Culture Philosophers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ki9yCqswyUU
Publishers Weekly https://best-books.publishersweekly.com/pw/best-books/2025/comics
Publishers Weekly https://best-books.publishersweekly.com/pw/best-books/2025/young-adult#book/book-1
Publishers Weekly https://best-books.publishersweekly.com/pw/best-books/2025/picture-books
Publishers Weekly https://best-books.publishersweekly.com/pw/best-books/2025/middle-grade
Publishers Weekly https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/comics/article/99252-do-admit-and-spent-top-pw-s-2025-graphic-novel-critics-poll.html
Random Thoughts https://lars.ingebrigtsen.no/2026/01/01/the-best-comics-of-2025/
Reading Middle Grade https://readingmiddlegrade.com/the-best-kids-graphic-novels-of-2025/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q7gy7t/my_top_20_favourite_comic_releases_of_2025/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q611bu/my_favorite_releases_of_2025/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1qtw9uu/seths_40_best_books_he_read_in_2025/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx6owlp/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx6mj8q/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx6i39j/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx5f7u7/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx59tf5/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx57mg8/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx52vgs/
Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/graphicnovels/comments/1q1dhrx/top_10_of_the_year_2025_final_edition/nx4u8ni/
Richland Library https://www.richlandlibrary.com/staff-picks/best-comics-2025
Ryan C.’s Four Color Apocalypse https://www.patreon.com/posts/four-color-2025-146467941
Ryan C.’s Four Color Apocalypse https://www.patreon.com/posts/four-color-2025-146545694
Ryan C.’s Four Color Apocalypse https://www.patreon.com/posts/four-color-2025-146616265
Ryan C.’s Four Color Apocalypse https://www.patreon.com/posts/four-color-2025-146957268
Ryan C.’s Four Color Apocalypse https://www.patreon.com/posts/four-color-2025-147037811
Ryan C.’s Four Color Apocalypse https://www.patreon.com/posts/four-color-2025-147115795
San Mateo County Libraries https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/771619447/2911345237
School Library Journal https://www.slj.com/story/best-graphic-novels-2025-slj-best-books
School Library Journal https://www.slj.com/story/best-manga-2025-slj-best-books
Scotland Herald https://www.heraldscotland.com/life_style/25682429.bowie-mitford-sisters-10-best-graphic-novels-2025/
Screen Rant https://screenrant.com/best-comics-of-2025-ranked-official-list/
Shonen Ouji https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfbGM2tn4bk
Skokie Public Library https://skokielibrary.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1076774408/2903299627
Skokie Public Library https://skokielibrary.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1076774408/2902489767
Sktched https://sktchd.com/column/the-sktchd-awrds-the-comics-of-2025/
Smash Pages https://smashpages.net/2026/01/06/my-favorite-comics-of-2025/
speedsultan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7hvLWhQ45g
Superhero Hype https://www.superherohype.com/comics/645131-matt-morrisons-5-best-superhero-comics-of-2025
Taylor Talks Comics! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZC7vPnl2wY
Tessa Is A Nerd https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ubVkp7iMnc
Texas Library Association https://txla.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/2026-Little-Maverick-Graphic-Novel-Reading-List.pdf
Texas Library Association https://drive.google.com/file/d/1h_0g5dWAijop-03f6aA5Ui5oPFOyxI1W/view?pli=1
The Brave and the Boys https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GI0xeuJHNMM
The Brave and the Boys https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOzyLOQuzdk
The Children’s Book Review https://www.thechildrensbookreview.com/18-of-the-best-graphic-novels-of-2025/
The Comic Literate podcast https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIRZgIIMCAo
The Comic Patrol https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nQMVdHSaI14
The Comics Journal https://www.tcj.com/the-best-comics-of-2025-as-chosen-by-our-contributors/
The DOOMCAST https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UxGVKRe4tzY
The Geeky Waffle https://thegeekywaffle.com/home/2025/12/27/hopes-best-of-2025
The GLASSCITY Courant https://davidcranna.substack.com/p/best-of-2025-rename-man-this-sucks
The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/dec/02/best-graphic-novels-2025-anders-nilsen-michael-d-kennedy-gareth-brookes
The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/dec/01/best-childrens-books-2025-annie-booker-neill-cameron-robert-macfarlane
The Kovacs Report https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ygKDBqxBQQ
The Machiavelli Ledger https://machledger.substack.com/p/countdown-my-favorite-individual
The Machiavelli Ledger https://machledger.substack.com/p/countdown-my-favorite-individual-982
The Manga Bean https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaCB8i0WSqk
The New Yorker https://www.newyorker.com/best-books-2025
The Observer https://observer.co.uk/culture/books/article/the-observers-books-of-the-year-2025
The Seattle Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/73413760/2898672365
The Seattle Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/72851023/2895811743
The Seattle Public Library https://seattle.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/72450558/2899014697
The Seattle Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/72450558/2899014257
The Star https://www.thestar.com.my/lifestyle/culture/2025/12/14/four-graphic-novels-worth-checking-out-this-holiday-season
The Whole Shebang! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MLozMoIRr94
TheRealComicBookGamer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDUVCORHlwo
Thinking Critical https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=08LHMVydk20
Timberland Regional Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/2358071919/2914324037
Toledo Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/2390160039/2906599858
Toledo Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/2390160039/2906803977
Tony’s Substack https://substack.com/home/post/p-182933606
Trucker Man Reads https://truckermanreads.substack.com/p/my-2025-in-comics
Tsunami Studios https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NRDmg3wCk_U
Two Guys and a Stack of Comics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kkzm9Gwb9e4
UltimateChance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BVbN5jWfaMU
UltimateChance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pXzK-Vn_2g
UltimateChance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPFT2UJ_B4g
UncannyDerekComics https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dFQ-_CXTMdc
Vancouver Public Library https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/82873109/2896492217
Washington County Cooperative Library Services https://more.bibliocommons.com/v2/list/display/1618398080/2909051287
Washington Post https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2025/11/22/best-graphic-novels-comics-2025/
Waterstones https://www.waterstones.com/blog/the-best-teenage-and-young-adult-books-of-2025
Waterstones https://www.waterstones.com/blog/the-best-childrens-fiction-of-2025
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Scott McCloud Interview

Scott McCloud at TCAF 2015

Scott McCloud at TCAF 2015

Originally published August of 2001. I think this might have been the first interview I did over the phone. I did attempt to do this interview by e-mail but Scott wasn’t fast at typing, which was funny as he was really championing the internet and digital comics as the way of the future. Doing it over the phone did make for a better (and longer) interview. I probably should have done more interviews that way, but I really dislike transcribing.

 

An Interview With Scott McCloud

Over the last few months, Scott McCloud’s name has been all over the place. Mainly because of his book Reinventing Comics and the criticism that it has drawn. Within The Comics Journal issues #232 and #234 Gary Groth wrote a scathing editorial against McCloud and his views. Scott gave a reply in issue #235, but did not address all of the criticisms. In this interview he replies to those criticisms still remaining from Gary Groth editorials and to others in the industry.

 

Jamie: Over the weekend I read your response to TCJ’s Cuckoo-Land thing, so this interview will be a little bit shorter since you already discussed that.

Scott McCloud: (laughter) Right, yeah.

 

Jamie: I’ll start off with Understand Comics, one of the things you mentioned was Sequential Art. Obviously we know what that is, one after the other. But you didn’t talk too much about political cartoons or single panel cartoons, as if they are not comics. Any comment on that?

Scott McCloud: I think it’s misunderstood that I don’t see them as comics doesn’t mean that they’re some lesser form of art. I think cartooning has every bit as rich a history as comics does: I just see one of them as being a way of drawing and a way of seeing and the other a way of arranging what we create. So they are two different things. Now they intersect all the time, of course. There is a rich joint tradition of cartooning in comics. I just don’t think it’s the same thing. So Keith Haring was a cartoonist for example, but he wasn’t making comics. He did his cartoons on walls and whatnot. If he was doing, you know, the comics in the newspaper then it would be easier to think of him as a cartoonist but he still wouldn’t be a comic book artist. Or excuse me, he would be a *comics* artist. Of course, comic *books* that is a whole nother can of worms. So by making that separation, making a very small subtraction, from my general lumpy conception of what comics are, I was able to draw that boundary much, much larger for many other things, many historical precedence’s and many potential future forms. So even though I cut loose that one single panel exception, I was able to draw my map larger and able to include a whole lot of other things. Seemed worth it. But I think many people misunderstood that exception is somehow a demotion of single panel cartoons like The Far Side or political cartoons or caricature. And it’s not. Some of my favorite artists are single panel cartoonists. People like Steinberg or some of the great political cartoonists, they’re terrific. It’s just not comics, that’s all.

 

Jamie: Moving on to Reinventing Comics. There is a DC Disclaimer that you mentioned before about particular ideas giving some people problems. What particular ideas do you know that set some people off?

Scott McCloud: I think it was pretty clear. Towards the discussion at the end of the product of the book, was the chapter that was most objectionable to some people at DC was the business chapter. The 2nd Chapter of the book, I think, that some people up at DC and Time Warner found my projections for the future of comics distasteful on some levels. But it was really my view of the history of the business of comics that upset some people. To DC’s credit, they honoured the contract that I had with them and did not enforce any corrections for editorial reasons. And I appreciate that, I think they behaved honourably, but it’s not the history of comics as DC would necessarily like to see it.

 

Jamie: There are two versions of Reinventing Comics, one Perennial/Harper Collins and one that DC was publishing.

Scott McCloud: That was true for Understanding as well.

 

Jamie: Understanding, as well?

Scott McCloud: Yeah. It’s a bit of a long history, but in brief Understanding Comics was first published by Tundra. By the time it hit the stands Tundra no longer existed and had been swallowed up by Kitchen Sink Press. Kitchen Sink Press was the company that I first signed up with to produce Reinventing Comics. In fact. I did most of the work on that book while still at Kitchen Sink Press. And when Kitchen Sink Press underwent a great deal of turmoil and it floundered, Dennis Kitchen was forced out. I needed to find an escape route quickly. I didn’t trust the people that were running the company. I didn’t want anything to do with it. DC looked like the safest port in the storm and we needed to make a decision extremely fast. And DC was that decision (laughter). And when we did it, Understanding Comics came with us. As far as the book market, Dennis Kitchen had tried to market Understanding Comics in the book trade and in other comics, obviously. We found it was just not practical so we had partnered with Harper Collins and since 1994 both Understanding Comics and later Reinventing Comics appeared in bookstores under the Harper Collins imprint, specifically Harper/Perennial. So it’s a bit complicated, but basically one company handles it for comic book stores, another company handles it for the general market, the book stores and airports and everything else. And that’s worked out all right. Harper also licenses it to other countries and Understanding Comics is in about 14 languages.

 

Jamie: Wow!

Scott McCloud: I like what Harpers is doing.

 

Jamie: Still, with Reinventing Comics, you mentioned one of the drawbacks to self publishing, specifically mentioning Dave Sim, is doing all the business related stuff. Is that not similar to publishing your own web comics because you have to learn HTML and make sure everything works in both browsers and all the server-related stuff and so forth?

Scott McCloud: Those certainly are challenges for publishing on line but they are radically different in one respect, which is those are creative challenges; challenges in producing the work. The challenge of making that work available to the public is trivial in comparison to making it available in print. It takes enormous, constant, backbreaking work and a huge amount of money to get your work printed, or to print it yourself, to get it shipped, to deal with the distribution system, the retail system, and to get your work hauled all over the country just to make it available to what may potentially be a very small number of customers. If you have 3 people nationwide who want to buy your book, you’re going to have to ship 100,000 copies to make it available to those 3 people because you don’t know where they are. So self publishing is constant, extremely hard and expensive work; whereas the work of publishing on the net is primarily the work of learning how to produce the work. Once you have the business of uploading it to the website, it’s trivial. It’s one of the easiest parts of making a web comic. It’s simply uploading it. And at that point, your work is available to anyone who wants to see it… if they can find you, which is whole nother whole can of worms. Then the expense is 70 dollars to register a website domain for 2 years and on average, probably somewhere between 20 to 40 dollars to have that domain hosted somewhere, a month. And while I don’t want to downgrade the importance of that, obviously for some people that can be a hardship, but compared to self publishing (mutual laugher) those that can’t afford that I don’t see self publishing as viable alternative, either.

 

Jamie: Just out of curiosity, I know you were interviewed in the same Internet comic that Groth did . . . his first Cuckoo-Land piece. I was wondering when that happened, the interview?

Scott McCloud: Are you referring to the Internet issue of Comics Journal?

 

Jamie: Yes.

Scott McCloud: And the question was?

 

Jamie: How long prior to the issue did that interview take place?

Scott McCloud: That was done for that issue. Charles Hatfield and I had been kicking around the idea of an interview for a while. That one was set up with the implication that it would run in the same issue. As to Groth’s review, I should say to Gary’s credit he gave me fair warning that the review was coming and we had a perfectly polite exchange prior to it and although I haven’t spoken to him since, I expect to have a perfectly polite exchange after the fact. We live in a civil society (laughter), Gary’s opinions are as strong as anything you can find in the comics press. I consider him the loyal opposition and it’s all part of the debate and thanks to Gary that debate has become much more pronounced, much more public, and frankly much more interesting. Now, that’s not to say that I didn’t consider some of what he wrote to be unfair, but I was given ample opportunity to call him on it and I did.

 

Jamie: My next question was: What was your general reaction to it when you finally read it?

Scott McCloud: It was a Gary Groth Review (laughter). I began reading the comics press about 25 years ago. The Comics Journal was on the scene about that time, maybe a little before. And every time Gary writes just about anything, he just about excoriates it (laughter).

 

Jamie: Scorched Earth is the term I hear (laughter).

Scott McCloud: Yeah a scorched earth review, and even jokingly said in the subject line of his original e-mail that there was a hatchet job on the way. Which ironically, he considered a serious review, but yeah, he’s always been like this. We would expect no less of him (laughter). I think maybe some younger fans that don’t know the history, might be a little appalled at it because Gary has been fairly quiet lately. He hasn’t really been on the rampage much but there is ample history of that sort of thing.

 

Jamie: Okay, I’m going to go through the nuts and bolts of stuff that I didn’t think you address very well or address very much.

Scott McCloud: Go for it.

 

Jamie: I know you went back and forth with Gary over this, but do you think you have been hyping the Internet and web comics a bit too much?

Scott McCloud: Hmm.. It’s problematic, because I think Gary is right, that I haven’t spent enough time addressing the potential for corporate abuse and some of the darker aspects of the Internet. So I think it’s correct that I haven’t done enough on the negative. I don’t think that necessarily means that I’ve done too much hyping of the positive. Because I think the potential of positive change is enormous. In our community, there are still a great number of people who dismiss the Internet out of hand. There are still many that think the Internet is about to destroy everything they love about comics and I can raise my voice to a thousand decibels and could barely rise above the barrier of cynicism or even of apathy. So I keep my voice raised to a high pitch on the issue, because I still think there is a great deal of work to be done on the issue. I still think that to this day, that I’m not done yet. The hyping is one of the unfortunate little coincidences of comics history, in that, since I became obsessed with the potential of comics on the Internet, at the same time, popular culture became obsessed. Well, actually a few years before that, there was a real frenzy of popular culture for all things with a dot in the name . . . probably began in 97 or 98. And it was pretty thoroughly entranced before that. But I would like to believe that my enthusiasm for the potential for the web has very little in common with what was actually being hyped on billboards and TV commercials and talk shows. I wasn’t telling anybody to invest in the stock market and I wasn’t telling anybody that AOL and Microsoft were going to save the world. I wasn’t telling anybody that if they just get a website, they would become a millionaire overnight. The message that I was trying to express and still am, is that there is enormous potential for direct communication between artist and the readers online and there still is enormous potential for creative exploration of comics out of boundaries online. I was writing about the future and I still am. I never promoted the idea that the future is now, the revolution has come, that this is the web today. What I’m promoting in fact, I am very explicit in Reinventing Comics, is that we can be misled by some of the drawbacks in the technology that exists today. I don’t have a product basically. The future I’m talking about is not shrink wrapped, you can’t go and buy it today. That’s not what I’m trying to say at all. One of the statements that I make in Reinventing Comics that Gary misunderstand is this idea: ‘If it’s about the present it’d probably hype, if it’s about the future, no amount of hype can do it justice’. Anyone who has something to sell you now, it’s probably hype (laughter) but the magnitude of the excitement is about the potential of the Internet itself. I don’t think it is at all misplaced and I still think the web is in it’s infancy and we have only seen the tiniest hint of it’s potential. So I’m still as excited as I was in the beginning. It just had nothing to do with the stock market, IPO’s or this week’s product.

 

Jamie: Moving on, Groth thinks you hate beautiful print drawing. True or False?

Scott McCloud: (laughter) False. Okay, one of the interesting fallouts of web comics and digital distribution is the fact that print is becoming visible for the first time. People are able to choose print in a way that my generation wasn’t. We inherited print. If we loved comics, print was the only way to express that. We now have to consciously choose print or the web and in either case, choose it for the properties that plays to their strengths. Now print has enormous strengths . . . it’s just that now we can appreciate it for what it is. It’s no longer invisible because it’s no longer ubiquitous.

 

Jamie: Your Adventures of Abraham Lincoln, you and Groth both admit that it wasn’t very good.

Scott McCloud: (laughter) Yeah. I believe Groth called it a widely derided train wreck.

 

Jamie: Did that give you a pause in using computer technology and comics?

Scott McCloud: No it didn’t, not in the least. How do I explain Lincoln? The best explanation I came up with for that at the time, when people said they didn’t like it: If you can guarantee the results in advance, it’s not an experiment. The notion that I should put it all on the shelf and forget about computers because I have this one disastrous failure in using computers, the only translation I can come up with for that is: if you first don’t succeed, then quit. And that’s not my philosophy. I assume when I fail at something that the failure is mine. That I failed to use those tools to their best advantage. You have to remember that Lincoln really began almost as soon as I had tools in hand and it’s the very first ever thing I did, using just computers to generate. And I choked (laughter).

 

Jamie: Some people think that Reinventing Comics was done just to capitalize on Understanding Comics and that it should have been told in an essay form.

Scott McCloud: That would be Gary.

 

Jamie: Yeah, Gary. So why did you think that Reinventing Comics needed to be told in a comic book form?

Scott McCloud: Well, just about everything I wanted to say could best be said visually, especially when it’s about a visual medium. I’m a comics loyalist. I’m interested in the things can be expressed through comics. I think Gary is right in that there are parts of the book that don’t use comics particularly well. Maybe the parts should have been told in prose. But it’s not a comic because I wanted to capitalize on anything, it’s a comic because . . . because I’m me (laughter). Because I love comics. Because it’s the whole point for me, seeing what comics can do. In Understanding Comics it’s clear that it was the right medium for the book.

 

Jamie: For sure.

Scott McCloud: In Reinventing, it sometimes is and sometimes it isn’t. But I’m exploring the boundaries of non-fiction comics and the only way to find those boundaries is to stretch it. And some cases, to stretch it to the breaking point. I think in some places it broke and in some places it’s solid. But anyone that knows me know why I made Reinventing Comics as a comic (laughter). Because that’s what I’m about. That’s everything that I am, as a comic book artist, seeing where comics can go. I said at the end of Understanding Comics that I wouldn’t do a sequel right away. Understanding Comics was about 7 years of thinking about comics and 7 years worth of ideas. And so it just collected to a point where I needed to put them somewhere, so I put them into a book (laughter). I predicted that it would be another 7 years of ideas before I would want to write another, and that’s what happened. I think it’s clear that starting in ’94, I was heavily obsessed with computers. Anyone on the convention circuit knew that. Well, I had another books worth of ideas so I had to put them somewhere.

 

Jamie: You mentioned that the line work in Reinventing Comics wasn’t quite up to your own standards. Why was that? Was it because of the technology or . . . ?

Scott McCloud: It was my use the technology. It still not quite organic enough. I still think I have a ways to go. I’m still learning how to use a sable brush, too. I think it looks better than Lincoln (laughter). But again, are we going to project the message that I should just quit? Because it’s not up to standards? Because others are using digital technology in a very organic and convincing way? Between Kyle Baker, Demian 5 from Switzerland, all those people have used it to great effect. In fact, I think my work has a warmer organic quality compared to some of the online work that I did, which was done after Reinventing Comics. I never claimed to be a particularly exciting draftsman (laughter) and I really don’t know that anyone else has, either. That was never my strength to begin with, but I want to continue exploring and this is where my passions take me right now. I’d be an idiot just to stop right now just because of a few failures.

 

Jamie: Groth notes your bibliography didn’t include books that criticize the Internet and the possible future it brings. Why didn’t you?

Scott McCloud: Well, what can I say? Groth’s general criticism that I don’t spend enough time discussing potential for corporate abuse is valid. I think, well you know pretty much what I think (laughter). I think some of the objections to the bibliography are a bit silly, especially when he lectures me for not responding to books that were written 9 months after Reinventing Comics.

 

Jamie: Yeah, IBM and the Holocaust.

Scott McCloud: Yeah, IBM and the Holocaust. What can I say? I think he could have made a valid point about that, but he stretches it to ridiculous extremes. Whatever.

 

Jamie: Do you think computer created artwork will one day aesthetically surpass traditionally made artwork?

Scott McCloud: No, I don’t think so. I don’t see a world that would exclude one or the other. I don’t see aesthetics as some demolition derby where there is only one car left at the end (laughter). I would hope that there would be artists making significant and exciting work in all these mediums. I don’t see it as one or the other. For me personally, digital is the most exciting. But that’s just me, this is what I want to work on right now and I assume others will make that choice also. You know, I assume others will make that choice for now.

 

Jamie: One of the problems with your theories is that people will do what you want them to, in terms of either going out and looking for great non-corporate entertainment on the web and by paying micro payments instead of pirating entertainment. Why do you have such high amounts of faith in the masses?

Scott McCloud: I would turn that question around and I don’t know why Gary and some other people have such of an incredibly bleak view of people. In my experience, most people like to think of themselves as being reasonably honest people, reasonably honourable . . . when they’re faced with a very easy way to get something for free, that would cost them hundreds or even thousands of dollars, otherwise . . . That temptation is pretty strong, they usually go for it. I don’t see any system eliminating piracy entirely. One of the reasons I advocate micro payments should it ever become practical, is that I think that if the price is sufficiently low and it’s very easy to get something legitimately for that low a price, I think most people will go for it. Because, well, for a few different reasons. This is such a huge issue. Sorry. I’ve written whole essays about this and it’s hard for me to condense it down to one or two sentences. There are a couple of factors: one of them is the fact that if it’s just a little bit more convenient to get it legitimately, if it’s a little more difficult to steal it, and if it’s just a few cents more, it’s just simpler, it’s just easier and also because piracy to some extent, has a philanthropic character online. People that are uploading songs and making their computers available for others to get those songs, they’re devoting a certain amount of time and resources and they’re not getting rich off it, either. This isn’t like selling pirated CD’s in Times Square. This is something where you’re not making a cent, you’re actually devoting your time and computational resources to giving away this work. Well, if it’s work just available for a few cents and that few cents is actually going to the musician or cartoonist or writer you’re stealing from, then that whole enterprise just seems a little less interesting, a little less worth it for the pirate. Again, nothing will eliminate piracy completely but I think that there are some systems that could make the influences of piracy lower and allow people to look at themselves in the mirror and feel good about themselves and not go bankrupt illegally.

 

Jamie: Your history of the Internet stops just at the time it gets privatized. Why did you stop it there?

Scott McCloud: For one thing, it was pretty recent history when I began writing the book (laughter). It got privatized in ’93, late ’93, and the world wide web hit the mainstream, which would have been ’94, and I started writing the book in ’97. I was talking about the origin of the Internet, I hadn’t expanded from that since the last really big event. Now Gary is right that the Telecommunications Act of ’96 should have been mentioned at that point. I think it was ’96, pretty sure.

 

Jamie: Yes it was ’96.

Scott McCloud: I think he’s right. I think he’s right. That should have been included and I should have gone into a discussion of that. But . . . I think he’s right. Perhaps I should go into a discussion of that now? Maybe I’m a little tired (laughter) of talking about . . . I’d rather make comics for a change. You know, I never see myself as the only voice in this debate. That is one objection that’s subjected repeatedly, by Gary in particular. There is this notion that it is my responsibility to cover *everything*, I mean even Understanding Comics was criticized because it refused to indulge in value judgments.

 

Jamie: You mentioned specifically about not including a chapter on bad drivers.
[Note: This refers to Scott’s reply to Greg Cwiklik and Gary Groth TCJ #211. Saying “If I wrote a book about how cars work would I be criticized for not including a chapter on bad drivers?”]

Scott McCloud: Yeah, (laughter) and I think this is silly because I’m not the only voice and I never claimed to be the only voice and talking about the inner workings of comics is a voice all unto itself. Now, if you want a broad balanced education, you also seek out writers who are discussing aesthetic values of comics or discussing the political context of comics or the cultural context of comics. In the comics industry, all those things are important too. But I don’t think it’s my responsibility to put everything and the kitchen sink in that one book. In fact, I actually visited many of the issues that he felt were missing in Understanding Comics and of course he hated that even more, because they weren’t his (laughter). It’s little hard to win with that standard being applied.

 

Jamie: You also mention the limitations of print comics by having to turn the page and the square size. But how much is that because the industry tends to stick to the same format? Could the limitations be not be so limiting if they played around with different formats?

Scott McCloud: I think they are beginning to do that now, they are beginning to experiment with shapes but they tend to be low run, you know silk screen, fort thunder, things like that. The industry makes it very difficult to experiment with different sizes. I did a large comic called Destroy back in ’85 . . . ’86, excuse me, and most retailers just didn’t know where to put it. It wasn’t even that dramatic of a difference, it might have been 80% larger than your average comic, but this was deeply aggravating to the average retailer because they didn’t have a shelf that size. So it’s systemic, it’s not just a lack of imagination. If you’re a retailer, you’re going to have to build shelves that you can fit your product on . . . (laughter) and I think that’s reasonable and it’s a problem when somebody comes up with one that simply doesn’t fit on the shelves. Of course, that’s not an issue online.

 

Jamie: You also mentioned the infinite canvas and doing web comics, a crazy example given, a comic the size of Europe.

Scott McCloud: That was just a . . .

 

Jamie: Yeah, that’s why I called it a crazy example (laughter). But if you did do a really large web comic, there is a good chance both IE and Netscape would crash, you know. I wonder how infinite is the canvas if you’re stuck to the limitations of the browser?

Scott McCloud: Well no, I talk about that in the book. What I’m proposing is not something that we can accommodate with today’s technology, with today’s browsers. Even with HTML itself, it has all sorts of limitations. I talk about a comic which you can zoom through, where each panel is embedded within the previous panel, you couldn’t do that in straight HTML either, you’d need something like Flash to pull it off. But we have an enormous canvas, so to speak, just as in the average computer game. If you have a comic the size of the landscape you roam through in Tomb Raider (laughter), you’d have a pretty enormous comic. So there might be other programming environments that are more appropriate for comics in the long run. The book about the future. I never claimed for an instant that you can do all these things in IE 5, in the year 2001. That would be absurd. Now there are some people working along those lines, who are doing beautiful concepts, shorter works that still point to the potential of that expanding canvas. And I think it’s on the strengths of those works, those creative explorations going on in even this limited environment, that speaks of potential of that expanded craft. The book is about the future, if it wasn’t about the future, it wouldn’t have been in the book.

 

Jamie: Do you think in the future Microsoft or someone will create a browser that can handle such a large webcomic?

Scott McCloud: I doubt it.

 

Jamie: You doubt it?

Scott McCloud: I doubt that Microsoft will (laughter). I don’t see them charging up the hill in particular. It could be some third party creation. It’s hard to predict. Some very important software has come out of just college kids. Or just working out of the garage, you never know.

 

Jamie: I know you discussed about bandwidth increasing and how that would help with the comics in terms of loading time and so forth. But won’t it eventually get to the point where it’s too powerful, where comics will be not so great in compared to how quickly movies and animation can load?

Scott McCloud: I don’t think I understand, if movies and animation are loading quickly then comics will load instantaneously.

 

Jamie: Yeah, but what happens when movies and animation load instantaneously as well? Won’t most people pass over the comics and go straight to those?

Scott McCloud: No, well I think that’s the great challenge isn’t it? It will take more convincing, personally compelling, especially unique to comics, so that there won’t be a reason to not read comics. And if we have all these movies and videos and animation, not to mention game and virtual reality environments. But that’s what all this is about, that’s what the entire book is about. I see comics as having unique aesthetic ideas to plant and if you allow that idea to grow in a digital environment, you can see something that’s uniquely comics: that is very exciting, something very new that’s very deeply tied to comics, to the original idea and not like movies, not like prose, not like any other visual art. Something that is completely new. I don’t know how to describe it exactly. It’s hard, words fail. It’s an idea comics that can scale. If you see comics as this temporal map, as this idea in equal, equal in time. It’s an idea of scale. The more bandwidth you throw on it, the more wonderful the new forms that can grow out of that idea. They don’t look anything like any other medium. When we begin to mix motion and sound with comics, I think we begin to hit that slippery slope and when we get enough bandwidth where it can all becomes a movie war. I hope it doesn’t turn into that.

 

Jamie: I read your Cuckoo Reply that is coming out in issue #235 of the Comics Journal. Is there anything in there that you now wish you said differently?

Scott McCloud: No, I’m pretty happy with it.

 

Jamie: Pretty happy with that?

Scott McCloud: Yeah.

 

Jamie: Your reply seemed like giving him a taste of his own medicine.

Scott McCloud: Although, well now, I hope it didn’t come across as giving him a taste of his own medicine because . . . I don’t . . . use the same medicine (laughter). I’ve tried to respond on point. I try not to make any ad hominem attacks. I’ve tried to be polite and reasonable and . . . y’know, I hope it doesn’t come across as just more of the same, but that’s up to the readers to decide.

 

Jamie: As of late you have been battling a lot of backlash, not just from the Journal but from Penny Arcade, Bill Griffith and more. Did you think your ideas would cause this much of a reaction?

Scott McCloud: There were some surprises. I didn’t think certain ideas would get people as angry as they did. I misjudged which ones were the hot spots (laughter). Who knew that my little essay about micro payments would set off this scorching brush fire in the online comic strip community? Although really, there was a lot of different issues under the surface, that one wasn’t just about micro payments. That whole period was just over a one week period, most notably by Tycho at Penny Arcade and which was pretty personal and nasty. But I talked to Tycho, I talked to John Rosenberg who does Goats. I talked to Glitch who had written something on her strip, no stereotypes. And in all cases, we had a polite reasonable conversation. Tycho posted his thoughts on the conversation that he thought he misjudged me and it’s done. We’re done now, the flame war is out. Basically, there are no parts of the landscape still on fire, as far as I know. I think it ended pretty amicably. There were a lot of misunderstandings that went into that one, and we dealt with them as well as we could.

 

Jamie: Are you sick of defending micro payments yet?

Scott McCloud: No.

 

Jamie: No?

Scott McCloud: I will continue, but I am tired. I’m a little tired because the debate has strayed a lot from the central issues and much of the time I spend defending it, it is not really so much defending my ideas as it is trying to explain what people think I was saying and it is not what I was saying at all.

 

Jamie: Yeah.

Scott McCloud: That can get a little tiring because that is wasted time. If I have to defend against things like ‘Well, McCloud thinks we should pay 25 cents every time we visit a webpage’ that’s . . . that’s . . . I never said that (laughter). And yet I’ve heard that parroted back to me a dozen times. So that part of it is tiring. But the actual discussion is worth it because there are people out there trying to make it happen, and keeping the public debate alive is one of the ways which that process can be facilitated.

 

Jamie: Yeah one of the people trying to make it happen is Javien?

Scott McCloud: Javien is a Canadian company that’s one of many that is trying to put together a workable micro payments system. I mentioned them recently because they had one or two good ideas that I liked. I can’t predict whether or not they’re the ones who are going to pull it off. I’ve always been careful not to back any one company because I have yet to see any one company that has all the answers. Believe me, I would (laughter,) I would if I thought one company had figured out all of the answers and I was very confident in them. I would back them and I would use their service.

 

Jamie: One of the practical problems I have today is whenever I go to the bank machine, I get dinged with a one dollar service charge. I’m thinking how anyone would make money charging 25 cents, even in the future, when the services charges are so high among the banking industry?

Scott McCloud: Well Amazon and Paypal charge a service fee in that realm and that’s why they are not micro payments (laughter). You can’t charge somebody 2 pennies if it’s going to cost you 25 cents for the privilege. But all along, that’s been the challenge of micro payments. If those transaction fees weren’t so high there wouldn’t have been a problem to begin with. That’s what the whole discussion is about.

 

Jamie: Do you think some company will come in and save the day for you? You know, making micro payments available for a very low amount of money?

Scott McCloud: I don’t know when it will happen and I don’t know who will pull it off. I think the ability to charge small amounts of money directly over the Internet is not an unsolvable problem. I think there are those who believe it will never happen. I think, having just finished the century which we landed on the moon, cured polio and sent our voices and ideas around the earth at the speed of thought, I think this idea that we will *never* solve the technical problems of charging small amounts of money over the Internet is just absurd. It’s not that hard, it’s not rocket science. We’ve done harder things than this. It just may take a little more time and I’ve never been good with deadlines, so (laughter) things never happen as fast as I want them too, but they happen.

 

Jamie: So when micro payments do happen, do you see yourself using them?

Scott McCloud: Sure, sure. Yeah, absolutely. But again, I want to make sure I don’t inadvertently wind up endorsing some particular company that doesn’t get it all right. I’m very cautious about that, because at this point who ever. I even mentioned Javien to Tycho in a phone conversation and now everyone thinks I’m endorsing them. You know (laughter) and that’s a good example of why I’m so cautious.

 

Jamie: In your second episode of ‘I Can’t Stop Thinking’ you mentioned a wide variety of things you can do on the Internet because shelf space is not as limited as it is in the normal store. At the same time, the Internet lets us go directly to what we want and we don’t get exposed quite so often to different things that we are not interested in. Is this a good thing?

Scott McCloud: No, I think we do get exposed, we get exposed by others letting us know about things. We want to dwell on one particular area of interest, we can. But the Internet is such a riot of other options of links, to links, to links, to links. And the opportunity for dozens or even hundreds of acquaintances over time to send you links to interesting works, that I think there is a counter-active trend to that tunnel vision tendency. That doesn’t mean there won’t be a certain vulcanization on the web, I think there will be, but I think within any given community, let’s say the comics community, I think that diversity has the upper hand in the long run. I think that right now, diversity is so thoroughly discouraged by economic systems that we have and by the dynamics of shelf space, that the web has already shown it’s ability to show its direction. The best web comics today are remarkably diverse, compared to what’s on the average comic store shelf.

 

Jamie: In Reinventing Comics, you use that one symbol, the eye open and the eye shut a lot. It’s even on your main webpage. Why are you so fond of that symbol?

Scott McCloud: I just had to pick something (laughter.) Having finished Understanding Comics, I realized I didn’t really have a symbol for comics itself and the little guy with the hat, you know that fellow raising his hat seemed a little bit overly specific. In the end, I decided that, to me, would be the essences of comics; two images of comics first of all, any two images in sequence but in particular the eye open, eye closed because I thought the balance between the visible and the invisible and I don’t know, it just seemed like the best single image I could pick to represent the form because I was going to be using it. I had to use something (laughter) when I was putting together all those diagrams there . . . there needed to be a symbol for comics itself and the tubed hat seemed a little specific to Understanding Comics.

 

Jamie: Are you planning on doing a 3rd ‘Something’ Comics book?

Scott McCloud: Yeah, not right away.

 

Jamie: Not right away?

Scott McCloud: Probably in another 7 to 10 years.

 

Jamie: Do you know what that will be about?

Scott McCloud: Yeah, I pretty much do, but I’m not telling anyone. Or at least not right now (laughter). Because the 3rd book is different from the first two just as the 2nd one was different from the first.

 

Jamie: Is that going to be done through print or is that going to be on-line?

Scott McCloud: I don’t know.

 

Jamie: Have to see what it’s like 7 to 10 years from now.

Scott McCloud: Yeah exactly. I don’t want to predict.

 

Jamie: Are you still open to doing any print comics in the future?

Scott McCloud: Sure, I think there are all sorts of things that are interesting to do in print. But generally speaking, I like to do it for one or the other. If I’m working for the web I want to do something that’s designed for the web. Perhaps I could only work on the web, but I don’t like this idea of repurposing, I don’t like this idea of holding yourself back because you might reuse it in some other form. Only working in black and white, for example on the web because you’re hoping that King Features will pick up your strip. That’s just sad. You’re on the web, use the web. Or if your in print, use print (laughter) to speak to those aspects of print that are most exciting, use that dative quality. You know, use that high resolution and the ability to produce fine line work, use it. Do something that print can do best. I just hate repurposing, I hate castrating your work so that it would be suitable for a variety of platforms.

 

Jamie: Do you have any print projects in the near future?

Scott McCloud: A couple of magazine pieces. I’m doing a 6 page original comic in Wired Magazine, for example. But they’re piecemeal, I don’t have a graphic novel in the works at the moment but I may at some point. If I could just work online for the next two years I would. But I can’t. I have many things I’d like to do online but not because I hate print or anything, but because I’ve been working in print for how long is it now? 17 years? And I’m ready to do some . . . well I have a long list of online projects. I could easily go two years with it, but unfortunately I don’t have that option because the economy that works online is just not mature yet. Maybe someday.

 

Jamie: Do you think because of Reinventing you’re constantly talking about online comics, this hurts your ability to get print books?

Scott McCloud: Mmmmm… No, I don’t think other things have to do with it (laughter). I never really tested the waters that way, couldn’t say. But no, I don’t think a publisher would particularly care one way or another. I mean, if I expressed an interest in doing a book in print then I obviously have nothing against print as far as that book goes. I’ve never told people to stop making printed books. That’s just another weird, distorted version of me that people are trying to sell.

You can get more news and updates on Scott McCloud at ScottMcCloud.com