These are links collected from various forums, etc. Big thanks to the original scanners & posters. Alan Moore's Miracle Man "MIRACLEMAN. Perhaps the most discussed, yet among least read superhero books in all of comics history. This is the book that began the revisionist superhero movement. You can trace Alan Moore's growth as a writer throughout the series as the idea grows from taking a lame superhero with a ridiculous origin and creating a mythos around him. It's a rather simple concept, but it sparked dozens of re-imaginings throughout the superhero world, from Frank Miller's THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS to Rick Veitch's THE BRAT PACK." Miracleman 1-5
Mã:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=3HHC9HOR
Miracleman 6-10
Mã:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=GJUGQQKB
Miracleman 11-15
Mã:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=P23IQZS5
"Gaiman's vision of Miracleman was very different to Moore's. Both saw the character as a being of incredible perfection living amongst flawed beings. Creatively, Gaiman had quite a difficult chore to follow up Moore's work, but what he did, though brief and unfinished, was transcendent. In Gaiman's first story arc, "The Golden Age", Miracleman had become a demagogue in a world of his own creation, where the dead lived on in an underground city." Miracleman 16-20
Mã:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=TX4FKSU0
Miracleman 21-25
Mã:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=VB8ADOP7
Swamp Thing Alan Moore's run on Swamp Thing went from #20-58, 60-61, 63-64, & Annual #2, revolutionising mainstream comics in the process. (with Stephen R. Bissette, Rick Veitch and others, 1983-1987 Alan Moore's Swamp Thing had a profound effect on mainstream comic books. It was the first horror comic to approach the genre from a literary point of view since EC Comics' horror comics of the 1950s, and broadened the scope of the series to include ecological and spiritual concerns while retaining its horror-fantasy roots. Moore began a trend (most notably continued by Neil Gaiman) of mining the DC Universe's vast collection of minor supernatural characters to create an overall mythology. Characters spun off from Moore's series gave rise to DC's Vertigo comic book line, notably The Sandman, Hellblazer, and The Books of Magic; Vertigo titles were written with adults in mind and often contained material unsuitable for children. Saga of the Swamp Thing was the first mainstream comic book series to completely abandon the Comics Code Authority and write directly for adults.
NOTE: The first 19 issues up to Moore's run are pretty average stuff. From 65 to about 83 Rick Veitch takes over, & he's a pretty good writer. Goes downhill from there. Also does not include Annual #2. If you have it, please post.A Small Killing ~30MB A Small Killing is a graphic novel by Alan Moore, published in 1991. It was illustrated by Oscar Zarate. It is a novel which looks inward, examining the images of one man's inner world. The protagonist is an ad company executive looking for inspiration for his latest project. This character is rather the apotheosis of 80's culture and serves as commentary of it. Seeking inspiration for the above mentioned project he returns to his home town to confront his perceptions of the past and himself.
Mã:
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=Y5IJAP67
Another Suburban Romance Writers: Alan Moore, Antony Johnston / Artist: Juan Jose Ryp An all new graphic novel from the writer who defined modern comics, Alan Moore. For the first time ever, Alan Moore's performance works making up the play Another Suburban Romance are put in print and lavishly illustrated as full sequential stories. Comprised of three major pieces, adapted from Moore's original presentations by frequent collaborator Antony (The Courtyard) Johnston, this original graphic novel is completely illustrated by the Spanish sensation Juan Jose Ryp. Running from the 1920s Chicago style killing in Old Gangsters Never Die, to the ruminations on modern life in the namesake piece Another Suburban Romance, this powerful work is one that no Alan Moore fan will want to miss!
The Bojeffries Saga The Bojeffries Saga was a series of comic book stories written by Alan Moore and drawn by Steve Parkhouse, and which started life in 1983 in Warrior. Described as a "soap opera of the paranormal" it features an eccentric English family of werewolves, vampires and monsters in various peculiar tales.
Alan Moore's The Courtyard Artist: Jacen Burrows The most celebrated writer in the industry, Alan Moore, teams up with the most demanded new artist, Jacen Burrows, to unleash this timeless tale of psychological horror. FBI man Aldo Sax has an amazing service record with the FBI. His legendary skills at piercing together the most baffling of cases has gotten him assigned to what may be his most confusing case yet. Several murders, no, more like lethal dismemberments, from the most unlikely of suspects just don't add up. And what few leads there are, all point to The Courtyard. This Lovecraftian tale of horror is stunningly illustrated by Jacen (Bad World, Scars) Burrows and fully rendered in gray tones by Nimbus Studios. The first Alan Moore sequential horror work in years is here!