Saturday, 29 January 2011

Comics Journal Review and Laydeez do Comics

Good review of Psychiatric Tales at The Comics Journal.

I was at the Laydeez Do Comics event in London this past Monday, and you can read all about that here.

Kong versus dinosaur fight from Uncle Bob on Skull Island.

kong dinosaur fight

Wednesday, 19 January 2011

Kong

From Uncle Bob on Skull Island. Jonas Nussbaum, the shipwrecked German sailor, meets Kong.

Kong

Friday, 14 January 2011

Uncle Bob And The Martian Invasion

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion is a chapter of the book Uncle Bob Adventures, which will be out from Blank Slate later this year.

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 1

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 2

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 3

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 4

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasionn 5

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 6

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 7

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 8

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 9

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 10

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 11

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 12

Uncle Bob and the Martian Invasion 13

Monday, 10 January 2011

Review in Publisher's Weekly

A fantastic review of Psychiatric Tales in the 1/10 Publishers Weekly:

“Speaking with compassion and clarity, Cunningham tells of his own struggles with severe anxiety and depression, creating a valuable tool for both those within the mental health profession and casual readers who may know someone with mental illness.”

Psychiatric Tales: Eleven Graphic Stories About Mental Illness
Darryl Cunningham, Bloomsbury, $15 (160p) ISBN 978-1-60819-278-6
In this debut book, Cunningham tells his reader right away that he has a message to impart. Having worked for years as a health care assistant in a hospital's psychiatric ward, he states his intent to counter the stigma surrounding mental illness and to represent the patients who suffer from "this most mysterious group of illnesses." The down and dirty truth about what it takes to care for dementia patients, the acts that self-harming patients are capable of, and the conundrum of bipolar disorder and schizophrenia all make for powerful, informative, and sometimes difficult reading. Cunningham's message, that "a mental illness is a brain disease just as a stroke or a brain tumor is a brain disease," is delivered in direct, no-nonsense language, while black and white drawings convey the hectic life of the disordered mind. Cunningham frequently speaks directly to sufferers, telling them that their symptoms are not their fault, that there are ways of dealing with them and simply that "you can survive." Speaking with compassion and clarity, Cunningham tells of his own struggles with severe anxiety and depression. creating a valuable tool for both those within the mental health profession and casual readers who may know someone with mental illness. (Feb.)