620+ Historical UNDERGROUND COMIX (1960s-80s) - LGBT - SOCIAL JUSTICE - FEMINIST


620+ Historical UNDERGROUND COMIX (1960s-80s) - LGBT - SOCIAL JUSTICE - FEMINIST

When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.


Buy Now

620+ Historical UNDERGROUND COMIX (1960s-80s) - LGBT - SOCIAL JUSTICE - FEMINIST:
$9999.00


620+ Historical UNDERGROUND COMIX - (1960s - 80s) - GAY - LESBIAN - TRANS- LGBT - FEMINIST - RACE - SOCIAL JUSTICE

Thecutting edge of social rebellion -- profound, cheeky, and FUN!

Hereis a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to acquire a scholar\'s library ofhistory\'s greatest underground comix.

Lovinglyassembled over many years, it embraces the \"greats\" ofearly Social Justice cartooning.

Youneed it!

GivePOWER to someone you love!

Lookingfor a thesis topic? Ideas and inspiration? A great conversationpiece? Material for an award-winning paper? Here it is! You can builda career using this amazing resource! This is a tool that yourcolleagues and competitors do not have!

Thisis the perfect gift for enlightened human beings. Gender Studies orSocial Justice students, teachers, researchers, artists, sociologistsand human-rights advocates -- ecerybody.

Treatyourself or a loved one to many hours of empowering entertainment!These comics -- lovingly crafted by a highly diverse group of artists-- are inspiring, sustainable, and eco-friendly. Recycle themintellectually! They\'re waiting for your commentary...

Atreasure trove of countercultural GENIUS -- without the boring parts!

Whatdid it mean to be \"woke\" in the 1960\'s and 1970\'s?

Manyyoung, daring social justice activists and commentators chose to freethemselves of the repressive mainstream and embrace an enlightened\"underground\" subculture,. Their taboo-breaking early worksset the stage for today\'s struggles in a subversive, powerful way.These pioneering works are tremendously important. Follow theirtrajectory! Use them now!

Acool and savvy collection of RARE resources.

Theseare all original comix -- no facsimiles or reproductions! Most arefirst editions / first printings in excellent condition.

Eachis conserved in an easily-opened, transparent archival bag with anacid-free backing board.

Becauseof the frank nature of some of these books, buyers must be over 18years of age.

-----

Aworking archive of lively artifacts.

Thiscomprehensive collection includes hundreds of individual publications
plus these major series:

ZapComix--complete first series! -- #0(1968) to #10(1982)

SanFrancisco Comic Book-- all but the first! --#2(1970) to #7(1983)

YoungLust --complete series! --#1(1971) to #8(1993)

TheFabulous Furry Freak Brothers --complete first series!#1(1971) to #7(1982)

Tits& Clits --complete series! -- #1(1972) to #7(1979)

Wimmen\'sComics --complete series! -- #1(1972) to #17(1992)

InnerCity Romance --complete series! -- #1 (1972) to #5(1979)

BizarreSex #1--complete series! -- #1(1972) to #10 (1982)

CommiesFrom Mars --complete series! -- #1(1973) to #6(1987)

Dr.Atomic --complete series! -- #1(1972) to #6(1981)

ComixBook --complete series! -- #1(1974) to #5(1976)

WetSatin --complete series! -- #1 (1976) & #2(1978)

Quack--complete series! -- #1 (1976) to #6(1977)

GayHeart Throbs --complete series! -- #1(1976) to #3(1991)

RipOff Comics --complete series! -- #1 (1977) to #31(1991)

AnarchyComix --complete series! -- #1(1978) to #4 (1987)

Imagine--complete series! -- #1 (1978) to #6(1979)

GayComix -- the first ten issues!-- #1 (1980) to #10 (1987)

RealStuff #1-- first six issues! -- #1(1990) to #6(1992)

NaughtyBits --the first six issues! -- #1(1991) to #6(1992)

-----

Below, several titles have been selected and described.

(Please sendme e-mail requesting a complete list -- there are hundreds more!)

-----

ItAin\'t Me Babe (1970)

Thefirst American comic book entirely produced by women. A one-shotunderground anthology edited by Trina Robbins.

*****

AllGirl Thrills (1971)

Thesecond comic book in history to feature all women creators. Aone-shot underground anthology edited by Trina Robbins.

Thefirst and only underground comic byJeffrey Catherine Jones, a transgender artist.

Mertonof the Movement (1971)

Ananthology created by the Air Pirates collective, centering on ahousehold of ostensible revolutionaries who were basicallyunmotivated stoners.Includes the notorious comic \"Why Bobby Seale is Not Black\".

YoungLust #1 (1971) to #8 (1993) --complete series!

Along-running anthology series that satirized the genre of \"romancecomics\" then in vogue with kitchy, pop-art \"adults only\"content, drawn by a highly diverse collection of artists. Itbecame the third-best-selling underground comix, after Zap andThe Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers.

*****

Tits& Clits #1 (1972) to #7 (1979) --complete series!

Thefirst all-women underground comic anthology series. Published byNanny Goat Productions, an all-female press.

Wimmen\'sComics #1 (1972) to #17 (1992) --complete series!

Ahighly influential all-female underground comics anthology seriespublished by The Wimmen\'s Comix Collective from 1972 to 1992.The title provided a launching pad for many cartoonists\' careers, andinspired other small-press and self-published titles.

InnerCity Romance #1 (1972) to #5 (1979) --complete series!

Blackcartoonist Guy Colwell spent two years in prison for draft resistanceand took a lot of drug in the \'60s and \'70s, both of which had adirect effect on developing InnerCity Romance. Inthisfive-book series that spans seven years, Colwell delivers a varietyof gritty stories with gripping characters that reflect his life inOakland, California, his two years in prison, and a lifetime of keenperception about life on the city streets.

AmazonComics (1972)

FrankStack begins the book with an epicbattle-of-the-sexes tale with a feminist slant and ends it with anacademic debate about the same story at a gathering of collegeprofessors and one notable graduate student.

GirlFight #1 (1972) & #2 (1974) --complete series!

Earlyfeminist and girl-power underground comix by Trina Robbins.

BarefootzFunnies #1 (1972) to #3 (1979) --complete series!

CartoonistHoward Cruise was \"in the closet\" when the first issue waspublished, and the series evolved in interesting, subversive ways. InIssue #2, Barefootz’sartist pal Headrack comes out as gay -- the first continuing LGBTcharacter in comic books.

FactsO\' Life Funnies (1972)

Thereal facts about birth control, abortion, V.D. (remember that?),and... sexuality! Quaint nostalgia. Artists include Robert Crumb,Michelle Brand, GilbertShelton, Lora Fountain, Shary Flenniken and many more.

GoodJive #1 (1972) & #2 (1973)--complete series!

\"Allof the stories are by Richard \"Grass\" Green, who brokeground in the comics industry as one of the first black comicillustrators... His underground work was daring, sexy and funny, andso are these comic books.\"

BinkyBrown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary (1972)

\"JustinGreen’s autobiographical portrayal of his struggle with religionand his own neuroses. Binky Brown is a young Catholic battling allthe usual problems of adolescence... Deeply confessional, withartwork that veers wildly between formalist and hallucinogenic.\"

Talesfrom the Sphinx #2 (1972)

\"TalesFrom the Sphinx features Egyptian-based stories along with an \"EightDrawings\" section: beautiful heavily detailed hippie pin-ups ormandalas that can still be appreciated aesthetically but wereprobably best absorbed by readers blissed-out on acid in the early70s.\"

Left-FieldFunnies (1972)

Mertonof the Movement\'s distinctly hippy style stories of sexual politics,dope and revolution occupy half the book. The highlight of the issue,though, is Shary Flenniken’s delightful “Trots And Bonnie.”

SuperSoul (1972)

\"Richard\"Grass\" Green\'s devotion to superheroes, combined with anaudacious attitude toward women, sex, and especially interracial sex,made Super Soul Comix politically incorrect evenin its freewheeling day, and that\'s not likely to change.\"

BizarreSex #1 (1972) to #10 (1982) --complete series!

\"Oneof the great series in underground history, a\"no-holds-barred\" type of publication... The great thingabout the series is that it matured through the years, evolving froma comic book about atypical sex into more of an in-depth review ofsexual relations and the human condition.\"

*****

AbortionEve (1973)

PandorasBox (1973)

Thisanthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely is refreshinglyhonest about the real day-to-day life of modern women and theircontinual sexualization by men.

Pudge,Girl Blimp #1 (1973) to #3 (1977) --complete series!

Thefirst comic book to feature a woman with significant body issues as asympathetic protagonist. The quest of an overweight,unbeknownst Martian on Earth to lose her virginity.By Lee Marrs.

ComeOut Comix (1973)

Thefirst lesbian (and gay) underground comic book, by MaryWings.

Talesfrom the Leather Nun (1973)

\"Acult classic. Released in 1973, it\'s a sex-and-drugs assault onanything sacred, and an extremely odd artifact of thecounterculture.\"

Manhunt!#1 (1973) & #2 (1973) --complete series!

Anunderground anthology edited by Terry Richards. It is notable amongfeminist underground comix for including male contributors -- some ofwhom were either married to or would later marry prominent womencartoonists -- without chauvinistic and misogynistic biases.

ElPerfecto (1973)

AlineKominsky organized this \"Who\'s Who\" of Underground Creatorsto raise money for the Timothy Leary Defense Fund (he was chargedwith drug possession). The 31 artists include: Diane Noomin, TrinaRobbins, Lora Fountaint, Lee Marrs, Dot Butcher, Sharon Kahn Rudahl,Michele Brand, Aline Kominsky, Robert Crumb, Gilbert Shelton, BillGriffith, and Spain Rodriguez.

It\'sall about sex organs of every kind.

CommiesFrom Mars #1 (1973) to #6 (1987) --complete series!

\"Post-StarWars socio-political commentary from a broad range of artists andwriters. It features solid contributions that didn\'tread like other comics at the time.\"

*****

Sexand Affection (1974)

\"Sexand Affectionwasintended to be only the first in a series of four sex educationcomics for use with children, but not surprisingly the rest of theseries was never produced. And I doubt this book could get publishedin today\'s society.\"

ComixBook #1 (1974) to #5 (1976)-- complete series!

MarvelComics\' attempt to co-opt the coolness of the underground comix sceneby running tamer stories from the best artists in a high-qualitymagazine format.

Star*Reach#1 (1974)to #18 (1979) --complete series!

Thefounder of Star*Reach called this a “ground level comicbook”, stories that wouldn’t fit into the Comic Code-ruled majorcomics (like Marvel and DC) but not as raw and earthly as the typicalunderground comic. It became the gay-friendly home of many greatartists, and the bulk of Lee Marrs\' work can be found here.

*****

AmputeeLove (1975)

Araunchy tale of love and sex between two amputees, created by acouple who were both amputees. A ground-breaking depiction of personswith disabilities from their point of view. Co-created by Rich andRene Jensen.

BigApple Comix (1975)

Editedby legendary Marvel Comics receptionist Flo Steinberg, this comic isconsidered a transitional work between \"underground\" and\"alternative\" comics. Less risqué than most undergroundcomics and featuring many mainstream comics creators.

BarbarianWomen Comics #1 (1975)

\"BarbarianWomen is, thankfully, less about barbarians than it is about women.Underground comic pioneer Trina Robbins contributes a full story tothe inaugural issue.\"

WhiteWhore Funnies#1 (1975)

Agay black cartoonist celebrates, parodies, lampoons, and satirizesinterracial relationships in the format of \"romance\" comicbooks. By Larry Fuller and Ray Horne.

*****

WetSatin #1 (1976) & #2 (1978) --complete series!

Anrecurring anthology of women\'s erotic fantasies, edited by TrinaRobbins.

GayHeart Throbs #1 (1976) to #3 (1991)-- complete series!

LarryFuller\'s homosexual homage to Heart Throbs, a conventionalcomic book published for many years by DC Comics. The firstall-gay-male comic book.

Trina\'sWomen (1976)

Acollection of women\'s comix reprinted from various sources, edited byTrina Robbins.

DynamiteDamsels (1976)

\"Thefirst lesbian comic book\" and the first self-published comic bya woman, Roberta Gregory.

TwistedSisters (1976)

Ahilarious comic by Diane Noomin and Aline Kominsky-Crumb.

FarOut West (1976)

ByEve Furchgott a.k.a. Even Eve. Billed as \"The First UtopianComic Strip\", about a young woman on a vision quest, led by asupercomputer, for the ultimate high.

TheCompleat Fart. and Other Body Emissions (1976)

\"LeeMarrs presents an adult comic featuring stories and comicobservations on farts, menstruation, zits, sweat, ear wax, dandruff,and more farting.\"

This\"wild, political, and amazing\" anthology comic includes ahair-raising story about American intervention in the Philippines; atrip through a Disneyland-like setting called Realityland; thebetrayal of the Native Americans; and other themes.

WolfmanComix #1 (1976) to #3 (1981) -- completeseries!

\"Armandoand Joanna Zegri\'s playful comix bring a feel-good \'spirit of thenight\' into the Age of Aquarius.\"

*****

FrescaZizis (1977)

ByMelinda Gebbie. When it was imported into the United Kingdom in 1985,it was seized by customs and subsequently ruled obscene. It is stillillegal to possess in the UK.

ScarlettPilgrim (1977)

Atale inspired by sex workers\' rights activist Margo St. James, abouta prostitute recruited for a sting operation by the CIA. By TrinaRobbins.

CorporateCrime #1 (1977) & #2 (1979) -- completeseries!

RipOff Comics #1 (1977) to #31 (1991) --complete series!

\"Itlasted for 30 issues over 15 years, converting from a comic book to amagazine five years into its run, and featured some of the bestAmerican and European cartooning talent of its time... one of thefinest alternative comic anthologies in history.\"

\"FredaFoxx isn’t the first comics character to be strongly influenced byblaxploitation cinema, but she is one of the few black femalecharacters created by a black cartoonist. Ira Harmon is a skilledartist, and his work has a better sense of visual style and humorthan most underground comics of the period. This is still a sex comiccreated by a man, however, and it strongly shows that influence.\"

BaeglesLooney Hearts Club (1977)

\"JaneJenkins Oliver produces a memorable tribute to the Beatles.Everything in here appears to be factual, except the vampire,Bigfoot, a werewolf, and the ghost of Brian Epstein. This is a funread from a lovestruck fan who happens to be a cartoonist.\"

*****

DykeShorts (1978)

MaryWings\' mostly autobiographical comicconveys the life of a American lesbian in the 1970s.

Afeminist comics anthology that exposes the realities of working moms,child education, divorce and single motherhood. Edited by TrinaRobbins.

ABritish anthology featuring creators Suzy Varty, Sue Ash, LynFoulkes, Fran Landsman, Julia Wakefield, Trina Robbins, Borin VanLoon, Kate Walker, Meg Amsden, Tim Rayner, Judy Watson and PaulaWilliams! \"A stylistic milestone in women\'s comics.\"

LemmeOuta Here! (1978)

Amanthology focusing on autobiographical stories of childhood insuburbia. Edited by Diane Noomin.

Talesof Jerry the Stoned Vampire #1 (1978) & #2 (1982) -- thefirst two issues!

InJane Jenkins Oliver\'s self-published series, \"Vampire Jerry getstangled up in unholy adventures of sex, partying, blood drinking andsituation comedy. Readers are also regularly treated to a dose of theancient past.\"

Imagine#1 (1978) to #6 (1979) -- complete series!

Amagazine-sized black & white alternative science fiction &fantasy comic. Lee Marrs and P. Craig Russellwere regular contributors.

*****

TheBunch\'s Power Pak #1 (1979) &#2 (1981) --complete series!

Amongthe first of the autobiographical, slice-of-life genre. By AlineKominsky-Crumb.

*****

AreYour Highs Getting You Down? (1980)

Acollection of stories of women\'s substance abuse and recovery, basedon experiences by women in two Berkeley, California support groups.Self-published by the artist, Mary Wings.

GayComix #1 (1980) to #10 (1987) --the first ten issues!

Along-running anthology series featuring the work of gay, lesbian, andtranssexual artists, it had close ties with the Gay Liberationmovement. Edited by Howard Cruise.

Adventuresof Crystal Night (1980)

Afeminist dystopian sci-fi story, by Sharon Rudahki.

*****

HornyStories & Comix #1 (1981) &#2 (1981) --the first two issues!

Morehilarious hijinks by black cartoonist Richard \"Grass\"Green.

*****

Neilthe Horse #1 (1983) to #3 (1983) -- thefirst three issues!

\"Neilthe Horse ran in Canadian newspapers from 1975-1982, and subsequentlystarred in fifteen comic books in the 1980s. With its tagline,“Making the World Safe for Musical Comedy” it is the world’sonly musical comic book. Originally produced under the name Arn Saba,Neil’s creator came out as trans-woman Katherine Collins after thelast issue.\"

*****

Wendel(book) (1985)

*****

WatchOut Comix (1986)

Acollection of gay-themed comix by Vaughn Frick -- \"tales of thelast days of the sexual revolution.\"

LonelyNights (1986)

\"DoriSeda offers a mixture of autobiographical strips largely concerningher dog, with whom everyone assumes she has an unnaturalrelationship, and some further pieces on sex. They’re allperceptive, delightfully drawn and very funny.\"

*****

WingingIt #1 (1987)

RobertaGregory\'s ambitious and intricate graphic novel that used dark humorto explore the relationship between a suicidal woman and a fallenangel.

Dancin\'Nekked with the Angels (1987)

Acollection of Howard Cruse\'s work, including his early comic stripsfrom the Village Voice and various popular magazines.

*****

Melody:The True Story of a Nude Dancer #1 (1988) to #5 (1990) --the first five issues!

Thesecomics -- which Sylvie Rancourt wrote, drew, and self-distributedbeginning in 1985 -- chronicle her years working as a stripper inQuebec while living with her deadbeat husband. Later, Rancourtcollaborated with artist Jacques Boivin, who translated and re-drewthem for the American market.

*****

StreetPoet Ray #1 (1989)

\"Areal rarity from the heyday of black-and-white indie comics. MichaelRedmond\'s Street Poet Ray presents brief verses exploring both thetragic and ordinary aspects of city life, accompanied by simpledrawings from Junko Hosizawa. Subjects include domestic abuse, AIDS,bad haircuts and mowing the lawn.\"

*****

SexyStories from the World\'s Religions #1(1990)

\"\'Anart attack on the hypocrisy and destructiveness of religion,\' withwork by Paul Fetler, Caroline Wedier, Steven Cerio, Brad Johnson,Stephan Blanquet, Matso, Toshio Saeki, Rita Mercedes, Marcel Gotlib,and Pierre La Police. Wicked, warped, perverse fun in a variety ofstyles.\"

RealGirl #1 (1990) & #2(1990) --the first two issues!

\"TheComic About Sex For All Genders & Orientations... by CartoonistsWho Are Good in Bed!\"

Thistitle reprints many of Harold Cruse\'s strips from The Advocate,giving a humorous, thought-provoking look at love and relationshipsin the gay community.

*****

Author Roberta Gregory says: \"Themain character... is basically trying to prove she\'s still lesbianeven though she\'s had some experiences with a guy. It\'s basically astory about how you can\'t take anybody\'s sexuality for granted,including your own.\"

NaughtyBits #1 (1991) to#6 (1992) --the first six issues!

------

GodNose (1964)

Consideredby many to be the first \"underground\" comic book. Itfeatures God and Jesus taking a satirical look at modern life (in the\'60s). Self-published by Jack \"Jaxon\" Jackson.

TheAdventures of Jesus #1 (1969) to #3 (1972) --complete series!

\"Threeof the funniest social and religious satire comic books in history.\"Book #1, TheAdventures of Jesus,is a collection of comic strips Frank Stack did in 1962. Book#2, JesusMeets the Armed Services, isa terrific lampoon of America\'s military recruitment and inductiontraditions.In book #3,JesusJoins the Academic Community,takes a teaching job at a university.

JoelBeck\'s Comics and Stories (1977)

Reprintsthree of Beck\'s hard-to-find titles, some of the earliest in thehistory of underground comix; Lenny of Laredo (1965), TheProfit (1966), and Marchin\' Marvin, The Red Watcher!

ZapComix #0 (1969) to #10 (1982) -- the first ten issues!

\"Whilethere were others before it... Zap Comix is frequently considered tobe the true beginning of the popular underground comix movement. Itassembled and launched a dream team of the wildest, most technicallyskilled and stylistically diverse cartoonists to come out of thecountercultural scene.\"

MotorCity Comics #1 (1969) & #2 (1970) --complete series!

RobertCrumb sets aside much of his usual misogyny to craft the amazingstory of Lenore Goldberg and her Girl Commandos.

CaptainGuts #1 (1969) to #3 (1973) --complete series!

SubvertComics #1 (1970) to#3 (1976) --complete series!

SpainRodriguez\'s satirical fantasy of an anti-capitalist post-punksuper-spy, The Trashman, fighting for freedom in a totalitarianAmerica after a devastating nuclear war.

SlowDeath #1 (1970) to #10 (1979) --complete series!

Conceivedas an ecologically themed comics magazine (in conjunction with thefirst Earth Day), the title\'s \"underlying theme was always aboutwhat the human race was doing to damage the native planet.\"

Theradicalization of alligator Rufus the Reptile.

UncleSham #1 (1970) to #2 (1971) -- completeseries!

TheFabulous Furry Freak Brothers #1 (1971) to #7 (1982)

GilbertShelton says: \"I saw that these weekly, left wing newspaperswere awfully dull and I thought, \'What they need is comic strips.\'\"The Freak Brothers are shiftless stoners, whose motto is \"dopewill get you through times of no money better than money will get youthrough times of no dope,\" and their adventures all pretty muchfollow revolve around two basic plotlines: either they have a stashof pot and smoke it and do silly things while buzzed, or they\'re outof pot and do silly things in order to get some more.

CompostComics (1971)

\"Arepresentative example of the earthy-crunchy organic movement fromthe early 1970s, featuring Larry Todd (\"Dr. Atomic and hisChicken-Mobile\") and others.\"

JunkComix (1971)

\"JunkComix is the only comic that I have ever encountered that has atotally realistic description of heroin and heroin addicts. Veryhumorous--and at the same time, it does not glorify addiction. Atsome points in the stories there are totally accurate depictions ofhow some junkies think. Not for children.\"

DementedPervert #1 (1971) & #2 (1972) --complete series!

\"DaveGeiser\'s putrid and prurient examinations of American society\'s fatunderbelly. He serves up a platter full of searing one-pagers andsnappy stories... His characters come face-to-face with their worstnightmares and greatest fantasies, and sometimes those are one andthe same thing.\"

Dopin\'Dan#1 (1972) to #4 (1981) --complete series!

\"TheVietnam War was the first to be shrouded in a continuous, thick hazeof pot smoke. Which led Ted Richards to create Dopin\' Dan, perhapsthe most endearing male character in underground comic bookhistory... The first two books contain many funny tales of modernmilitary life... The final book shows us life after the war ends,aswe catch a peek of Dan\'s Southern-fried origins.\"

Blackand White (1973)

Includesthe notorious comic \"Robert Crumb Versus the Sisterhood\".

NetProfit (1974)

Anon-profit book for Joan McIntyre\'s Project Jonah: Save the Whalesand Dolphins. It is a mixture of mythical tales of dolphins, a lessonabout the life of dolphins that slightly exaggerates their human-liketraits, a disturbing story about tuna fishing by a tuna fishermanturned activist, and a call to action that includes a tuna boycott.Art by Michael Becker and Shelby Sampson.

TheIncredible Rocky vs. The Power of the People!: FeaturingAmerika\'s richest family! (1974)

\"Writtenin 1975, and published by the North American Committee on LatinAmerica (headquartered in New York), it presents, in comic form, aglimpse into the Rockefeller family as one of the most powerful andeconomically and politically connected families in the UnitedStates... This is an excellent lesson in political science andpolitical economy in a mere 52 pages.\"

ConsumerComix (1975)

\"Aneducational comix dealing with consumer rights, a project of theWisconsin Department of Justice, funded by the Office of EconomicOpportunity, Washington, D.C.\"

All-AtomicComics (1977)

Undergroundcomics all about Nuclear power, mostly from an Anti-Nuclear Powerstance. Story and Art by Leonard Rifas, Peter Weber, Shelby Sampson,Larry Rippee, Kevin Brady, Melinda Gebbie, Roger May, Marc Miyashiro,Moria Wright, Delores Thom, and Ray Kott.

AnarchyComix#1 (1978) to #4 (1987) --complete series!

Acollection of short-form histories of radical movements, peculiarrevolutionaries, and police-led events that needed uncovering anddenouncing. Filled with a metaphysical energy that kept it from beingjust another collection of polemical rants or libertarian complaints.

ClassWar Comix (1979)

\"Thisis a well-drawn, fascinating tale about real people, communal livingand the potential complications of living outside normal society.Unfortunately, this book was only the first chapter in an uncompletedseries; a second issue was never printed.\"

EnergyComics (1980)

Editedby Leonard Rifas, this Educomics book explores the risks and rewardsof various energy sources. Storiesby Rifas, Greg Irons, R. Crumb, R. Diggs, Denis Kitchen, JoyceFarmer, Lyuba Zarsky, Rinaldo Iturrino, Moria Wright, Larry Rippeeand Sharon Rudahl. This isone of the most entertaining Educomics books.

FoodFirst Comics (1982)

\"Publishedby Educomics for the Institute for Food and Development Policy.Explores the political changes that need to be take place to dealwith the root causes of global hunger. Based on the book \"FoodFirst: Beyond the Myth of Scarcity\" by Frances Moore Lappe &Joseph Collins.\"

EveryFamily Has One (1982)

Apromotional comic produced by Dick Hafer the Comic Commando forCitizen\'s Organized to Replace Kennedy. C.O.R.K. created this comicto persuade people to not vote for Teddy Kennedy in the 1982 senaterace in Massachusetts.


Thereare hundreds more! Pleaseemail me for a complete list!

Thankyou!




620+ Historical UNDERGROUND COMIX (1960s-80s) - LGBT - SOCIAL JUSTICE - FEMINIST:
$9999.00

Buy Now