Tag: romance
PREVIEW: They will or they won’t in Sitterson & Dougherty’s SAVAGE HEARTS #5
The final issue of the fantasy romance series is due out this Wednesday.
REVIEW: Jakub Topor’s NATIONALIST LOVE is a riot
Nationalist Love is a genuinely funny story in the vein of Mel Brooks that mocks the inherent absurdity of hatred.
SILBER LININGS: Remember that time Swamp Thing had sex?
As a tie-in to The Beat's "A Month of Great Romance" series, Greg takes an affectionate look at one of comics' greatest–and strangest– love stories.
A Year of Free Comics: Love transcends death in SEE YOU IN MY 19TH...
Is remembering your previous lives a blessing or a curse?
A YEAR OF FREE COMICS: In JAMIE, romance is in the air
A chance meeting at a wedding leads to a serious crush in this webcomic.
COVER REVEAL: Molly Knox Ostertag’s new graphic novel, THE GIRL FROM THE SEA
Scholastic will publish the YA graphic novel in 2021.
REVIEW: Uncommon fairy tale romances are the focus in LOVE ON THE OTHER SIDE
This anthology collects tales of interspecies love, where young humans find themselves attached to humanoid or otherwise anthropomorphised beasts.
REVIEW: Yuri grows up in HOW DO WE RELATIONSHIP?
How Do We Relationship? is a reprieve from the endless toothless yuri series that center around ephemeral same-sex obsessions that are expected to fade as the girls involved grow into adulthood.
REVIEW: Love and misunderstandings in BLUE FLAG
Blue Flag is a shonen romance series noted for having a compelling narrative involving queer characters.
REVIEW: MY ANDROGYNOUS BOYFRIEND sweetly says “no thank you” to gender norms
My Androgynous Boyfriend is populated by charming characters, a sweet romance grounded in real mutual affection, and a clean, fashionable, and fun aesthetic.
A Year of Free Comics: Experience sweet romance with TINDER
You know that feeling when you have a crush, like your insides are going to explode with how much you like that person?
EX.MAG is international cyberpunk love fantasy comics
Peow’s genre anthology focuses on story and art, not conventions.