I've broken the bibliographies into
4
parts because the listing is somewhat long:
-
Bibliographies
by Michael Karpas (and now Peter Karpas)
-
Bibliographies by Richard Arndt
-
Other bibliographies by fans
-
Bibliographies by the
artists themselves
Other Bibliographies
by Fans
Most Popular
The Man Without Fear
site, run by Kuljit Mithra, has a comprehensive bibliography of all things
Daredevil.
The unofficial
John Byrne web site (home
page, and no, unlike many of the other artists on this page, I'm not going
to explain who John Byrne is!), maintained by Magnus Eriksson, has a thorough
check list
here.
Like John Byrne,
Steve Ditko needs no further explanation. Extensive
checklists of his work through 1998 can be found at the
"Ditko Looked Up" site.
Peter Franken has a site called
The Incomplete Comic Book Artist
Checklist. On his site, he has checklists for Chris Bachalo, Mark
Buckingham, John Cassaday, Duncan Fegredo, J.G. Jones, Michael Wm. Kaluta, Teddy
Kristiansen, Jose Ladronn, Joe Quesada, Frank Quitely, Eduardo Risso, John
Romita Jr., Alex Ross, Tim Sale, Peter Snejbjerg, and Bernie Wrightson.
Michael Norwitz has pulled together a directory for Golden Age fans. On
his site, he has a Golden
Age Bibliography, as well as extensive
Time-Line for the DC
Multiverse (plus links to other time-lines). His main comics page can
be found here.
Listed Alphabetically
Steven A Kravitz has pulled together a pretty impressive checklist for
Art
"Danger" Adams. The link
here goes to the main
page, since there's also a great section of cover scans. The checklist is
under the "timeline" link.
Norman Boyd has created an
extremely impressive, extremely comprehensive listing of the works of
Frank Bellamy. To quote from
the site, Frank Bellamy's "list of credits reads like a trip down nostalgia lane
in post war Britain: magazines such as Boy's Own Paper, Lilliput,
Home Notes, Everybody's and the Radio Times; comics such as
Swift, Eagle, Mickey Mouse Weekly, TV21, and
national newspapers such as the Sunday Times, and the Daily Mirror.
In his career in the late fifties he was well known as the artist who
illustrated various biographies in the Eagle. In the sixties he
spent many years on Thunderbirds in TV21. In the seventies,
he became associated with Dr. Who and the daily comic strip Garth."
The unofficial
John Byrne web site (home
page, and, unlike many of the other artists on this page, I'm not going
to explain who John Byrne is!), maintained by Magnus Eriksson, has a thorough
check list
here.
The Man Without Fear
site, run by Kuljit Mithra, has a comprehensive bibliography of all things
Daredevil.
Floro Dery, the visual creator of
Transformers The Movie and series, and the illustrator of the syndicated
Spider-Man with Stan Lee in the newspaper from 1982-1992, keeps his own web
site. At it, you'll find some nice copies of his work, references to his
other works, and his bio.
Like John Byrne,
Steve Ditko needs no further explanation. Extensive
checklists of his work through 1998 can be found at the
"Ditko Looked Up" site.
Mike Lyon has put together a very nice bibliography for
Warren Ellis, going
all the way back to his letter to the Warrior #4 letter column in 1982!
Christopher Day has a comprehensive
Harlan Ellison comic site. It's
called "Sequential Ellison: The Harlan Ellison Comic Book Bibliography", and
it's quite nice. Find it here.
Steve Englehart has his own
bibliography on his site, surprisingly enough called
www.steveenglehart.com (bad joke,
but what the heck). Steve has worked on a ton of stuff, including
Avengers, Batman, Captain America, Daredevil, Doctor Strange, etc. -- and that's
just some of the notables who start with the letters A-D!
Richard L. Anderson has created
a complete list of all comics for the
Magnus Robot
Fighter series, which started in 1963 and is still having stories published!
You can get it
here in Word doc format.
The Neil Gaiman
visual bibliography is pretty incredible, with scans of many of the comic
covers. Find it
here.
There's also an easy to read Neil Gaiman bibliography (easy to read because it
covers only his books, but that may be all you need)
here.
Michael Norwitz has pulled together a directory for Golden Age fans. On
his site, he has a Golden
Age Bibliography, as well as extensive
Time-Line for the DC
Multiverse (plus links to other time-lines). His main comics page can
be found here.
Peter Franken has a site called
The Incomplete Comic Book Artist
Checklist. On his site, he has checlists for Chris Bachalo, Mark
Buckingham, John Cassaday, Duncan Fegredo, J.G. Jones, Michael Wm. Kaluta, Teddy
Kristiansen, Jose Ladronn, Joe Quesada, Frank Quitely, Eduardo Risso, John
Romita Jr., Alex Ross, Tim Sale, Peter Snejbjerg, and Bernie Wrightson.
Stephen King has
an excellent bibliography done by Steve Blotner, which has some related comic
book bibliographic information. If the above link doesn't work, try
Steve's main page as he may be moving web
hosts soon. [If this happens, also please try to let me know so that I can
update the site]
Leylander.org has a nice
Marvelman bibliography,
complete with cover scans.
Mike Mignola, he of
Hellboy fame but who has also worked on Batman, X-Men, Superman, Hulk, etc. also
has a bibliography on the Comixographies site.
If you're looking for
Peter
Milligan, Kady Mae has written a bibliography for him.
While not a bibliography per se, Dave
McKean's art is too good not to include
this site dedicated to his art. A
ton of high quality scans, and a decent biography -- all found at
Dreamline.
Grant-Morrison.com
has, shockingly, a Grant Morrison bibliography. The good news is that it
cuts across his comics, prose, journalism, screenwriting, fanzines, interviews,
movies, and music. Not as detailed as the one above, but quite
wide-ranging nonetheless. Darren Shrubsole also has a Grant Morrison
bibliography that's here.
Marshall Rogers,
who's been doing this for years and has worked on such notable titles as JLA,
Spiderman, Silver Surfer, Batman, Green Lantern, Captain America, etc. has a
bibliography at this
site.
Masamune Shirow
has a fan site with a listing of complete works, including Ghost in the Shell
and Orion.
Jerry
Siegel and Joe Shuster! I wasn't sure I'd ever see this, but someone
has finally created a bibliography for Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster!
Exclusively hosted here at enjolrasworld, you can get Kevin Harrison's good work as an
HTML
file or as a
word doc.
There's a
Dave Sim bibliography of all things
non-Cerebus. It includes scans of much of his fanzine work -- a must see
if you're a Dave Sim fan.
While not bibliographies per se,
Julian Darius has put together a bunch of
chronologies in a
section at the Continuity Pages. It's a bibliography of sorts, putting
different authors' or imprints' output on a date shipped basis. Pretty
cool stuff.
Bibliographies by the Artists Themselves
Most Popular
Neil Gaiman has his own bibliography.
It's not as extensive as the one
here, but covers non-comic book writings so is worth checking out (as is
Neil's whole site, which is great). You can find it at
his site.
Scott
McCloud, author of Understanding Comics, Zot!, 12 issues of Superman
Adventures, etc. has a really cool
time-line
of his work. Very extensive and very nice. For a handsome biography
page that leads to this time-line, click
here instead.
Warren Ellis,
writer for Planetary, Transmetropolitan, and The Authority, has an abridged
bibliography (abridged? bah!) on his site.
Listed Alphabetically
Neal Adams, artist for
a ton of stuff, has a pretty cool site
which includes a checklist.
Kevin J. Anderson, whose comics output is mostly Star Wars: Tales of
the Jedi, keeps a biblio here.
John Cassaday, the
artist for Planetary as well as a bunch of other DC, Marvel, etc. comics, also
keeps his own bibliography.
Max Allan Collins,
who wrote some Batman in the latter half of the 80's, keeps his own
bibliography
as well. You can also go to his main home page
here.
Rich Corben (who's been doing comics
since 1969) has his own website with a checklist (bottom link in the
navigation).
Here is Jamie
Delano's, of Hellblazer, Animal Man, and Outlaw Nation fame.
Chuck Dixon's official
site, www.dixonverse.com, has a
checklist here. Be
sure to look at the bottom, where it lists a bunch of unpublished stories he
wrote but doesn't think will ever be published because of continuity reasons.
Warren Ellis,
writer for Planetary, Transmetropolitan, and The Authority, has an abridged
bibliography (abridged? bah!) on his site.
Glenn Fabry, cover
artist for The Preacher (among other things), keeps his own bibliography.
Neil Gaiman has his own bibliography.
It's not as extensive as the one
here, but covers non-comic book writings so is worth checking out (as is
Neil's whole site, which is great). You can find it at
his site.
Nat Gertler,
who's written Yogi Bear, Flintstones, Elf Quest, Jetsons, etc. keeps
his resume on-line.
Christopher Golden keeps not one
but two bibliographies on his site -- one for comics (where he's written
Buffy, Angel, Batman, Wolverine, etc.) and one for everything else (which
includes comics-based novelizations).
Here's Stuart Immonen,
illustrator for a variety of miscellaneous stuff (mostly for DC). His list
isn't great -- few issue numbers, for example -- but it seems relatively
complete.
Casey Jones did 10 issues of Excalibur art.
The Krigstein Archives covers pre-code comics artist
Bernard Krigstein (1919-1990) on a site
dedicated to preserving his art.
Joe R. Lansdale keeps an
extensive bibliography on his site, including his comics work. As Wheeler
Hall said to me, "well worth checking out."
Scott
McCloud, author of Understanding Comics, Zot!, 12 issues of Superman
Adventures, etc. has a really cool
time-line
of his work. Very extensive and very nice. For a handsome biography
page that leads to this time-line, click
here instead.
Don McGregor, who
since 1974 has done work for Marvel, Topps, Eclipse, Warren, Image, and DC,
keeps his own bibliography.
Bill Mumy, who played
Will Robinson in "Lost in Space" and Lennier in "Babylon 5", is also a comic
book writer. He has a solid bibliography with cover scans at
his site. I found it
interesting that his "The Comic Man" had pencils by Kelley Jones (of Batman
fame) and covers by Bill Sienkiewicz.
Here's where the bibliography for
Ariel
Olivetti, who has done some miscellaneous Daredevil, Avengers, JLA, and Lobo
illustrations, used to be. The site seems to be down (as of 30 Oct 02),
but I'll leave the link here since there's something on the home page.
...and Ken Penders,
who has both written and pencilled lots of Star Trek and Sonic the Hedgehog.
Dave Stevens, most
famous for The Rocketeer, doesn't have a bibliography on his site per se, but
does have images (many zoomable) of everything he's ever done.
Worth a look.
[Please note that some of the pages contain artistic nudity, and are not
intended for access or viewing by minors.]
Finally, here's Mike
Zeck, who for the last 25 years has a done a ton of art for Marvel
and DC comics.
Anything I'm missing?
Let me know!
since the Aug. 18th '03 Site Redesign