Sep 29, 2025

Dave McKean: V for Vendetta is the one!

Transcript from a short video in the great Bob Fish presents channel.
You can watch the video HERE.
Bob Fish presents channel HERE. Highly recommended! 
Dave McKean: [V for Vendetta] is the best book that Alan did.

Bob Fish: Better than Watchmen?
 
DMK: I'm not a fan of Watchmen anymore. I was. I loved it...

BF: Because of the superheroes?


DMK: Because of the superheroes. 
Whereas this one... it always seemed like a really strong personal vision, conceived with no pressures on it. It didn't have to use characters from here... 'cos Watchmen started with Charlton characters.

Whereas this is a total from scratch, "I can do anything I want and I feel passionate about this and I need to make this story". That's why I think this one survives. 
Watchmen now feels like the end of an era rather than this that feels much more like the beginning.

David Lloyd really was a terrific for this particular story. Endlessly inventive and beautifully crafted ideas. 

And I think this Alan's work will be the one that will be remembered from this particular era.

Sep 27, 2025

Sep 26, 2025

TGW, comics and... mass infantilisation

Transcript excerpts of an audio interview from BBC Front Row program, conduced by Samira Ahmed. The episode, on air the 15th of September, can be listened here and downloaded here. Moore segment starts around minute 28. 
The interview is mostly focused on The Great When with incursions in other territories of interest too.
Alan Moore: [about his fascination with post-war London] I think that the main reason why I wanted to write The Great When was because I'd noticed in my readings that all of my favourite London characters were essentially low-life characters who had slipped through the cracks of conventional history. People like Iron Foot Jack or Prince Monolulu or particularly Austin Osman Spare.

I thought that these people suggested a different history of London and it was that that I wanted to pick out in The Great When

Samira Ahmed: You know reading the prose of this book from the very first paragraph it feels like you're revelling in painting vivid pictures in words. Is it liberating not writing for comics or did comics liberate you to write this freely? 

AM: I think that comics probably certainly affected my writing. Certainly in my later books, in books like Jerusalem, I was very aware that I am known mostly as a comics writer - which is something which I am probably not that happy about and which I'm trying to rectify - but I was aware that I might be seen as a comics writer who suddenly hadn't got an artist. 

So I think that I wanted to compensate to make the pictures inside the reader's head and I've come to realise recently that probably the major influence upon all of my prose work would probably be Mervyn Peake
Mervyn Peake
SA: Do you know I was thinking of him? Yeah, the Titus Groan books. 

AM: I've just been reading them to my grandchildren recently and that has reacquainted me with them and I've suddenly realised that he's drunk on language. 
He takes off on all of these ridiculous flights of fancy and they are... they're immaculate. The language is perfect, it drips like jewellery and... I was reading them again that I suddenly realised that Mervyn Peake was probably where I got my prose style from. I also realised that I probably got all of my approach to humour, as applied in The Great When, because he is quite funny in places. 
But I think I got all of my approach to humour from Galton and Simpson. I was watching The Complete Steptoe a couple of years ago and realising that so many of the tropes and the approaches of that working class humour were exactly what I was playing with in The Great When. 

SA: So in The Great When the plot revolves around a fictional book that appears in the work of Arthur Machen, a real writer from the early 20th century whose horror stories earned him a cult following particularly amongst writers like yourself and Stephen King. 
But there's this whole joke in the book about how he's gone out of fashion for being a fascist sympathiser. It feels like a very knowing joke given everything we know about how writers are assessed against their views these days. Tell me why he was a focus for the story.

AM: Well I mean the reason that Machen was the focus of the story was that he's one of my favourite London authors and I noticed that in a couple of his works he seems to be talking about a truer London, a more blazing London that exists behind the facade of the earthly London. So I thought that this would give me access to some of the ideas that I wanted to play with. 
The thing about Machen's fascism... this was during the 1930s when Machen was a very old man. Arthur Machen, amongst others, came out for Franco. This has been a bit of a problem for me, squaring that with the Arthur Machen that I've loved in all of his other fiction. I don't think that he'd necessary thought it through and I don't think it's a major factor in Machen's writing but it was one that I felt ought to be addressed. 
 
[...]
 
SA: You've spoken out about the double nature of fandom, that it can feed obsessive and toxic behaviour and I wonder... do you sometimes look at the modern world, look at the news and think it looks like an Alan Moore comic come to life? 

 
AM: If it had been an Alan Moore story come to life it would have had much better dialogue and it would have been building towards something with genuine meaning rather than absolute incoherence. No, you can blame me for an awful lot of things in the modern world. I will put my hand up and yes I do have an upsetting habit of being right in my dystopian projections for the future. 

SA: What do you think you've got right most famously? Because I have to confess I have watched the film V for Vendetta - as well as having read the comic - and I watched it during lockdown and I was struck by how it imagined a revolution after 100,000 pandemic deaths and in fact we'd had more than twice that in the UK from Covid-19 and no revolution. 

AM: Well I think that I managed perhaps in V for Vendetta where I was talking about a dystopia in the future that is all centred upon a centralised computer network. We didn't have the word hacking back then but, yeah ,I think that that's a fairly good prediction of what was actually to come. And I would also say that when in 2011 I made my apparently very upsetting statement that there was something wrong with the masses of people going to see superhero movies that this spoke to me of a kind of mass infantilisation which I thought was politically worrying and this has earned me my reputation as a crazy angry old man who is just angry with everything you know I'm angry with my bowl of Shreddies in the morning because actually that's a lot easier than actually addressing any of the points that I was making. 

SA: Some of your most acclaimed comics - Watchmen, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, V for Vendetta - have been adapted into films which you've disowned and refused to watch. The Great When is going to be adapted, isn't it? Why do you feel differently about this one? 

AM: Mainly because I actually own this one and it is not an unauthorised work being made into a film that I didn't want it to be made into. Also because I believe that The Great When might actually make quite a good film or TV series, well specifically a TV series, because this is the modern extended television series, is a new format that has arisen since I was complaining about the film adaptations. 

One of the reasons I was complaining about them was that you cannot get an extended work into the couple of hours needed for a film. Also because of the way that The Great When is written it's not a comic strip with most of those comic strips that you mentioned I was deliberately trying to do things that could only be done in the comic strip medium so I've got quite high hopes for this potentially forthcoming Great When television series. 
SA:
Excellent. And you'll know that Watchmen in particular is regarded as perhaps one of the greatest novels of the 20th century, let alone a comic. 
I think Time Magazine listed it as one of the kind of 100 best novels and as someone who grew up with comics has been such a major figure in them you'll also be aware that there's great anxiety over the past decade about whether comics - particularly the big brands, Marvel, DC - have lost their way amid the culture wars especially in the US and become bogged down possibly in identity politics and I wonder what you think has happened to comics whether they still have a future. 


AM: I have disowned about nine tenths of my comics work including Watchmen, V for Vendetta simply because I'm not allowed to own them and because those works can now be made into any adulterated or ridiculous thing and I have no say in that and so I am also.. I don't really wish to be associated with comics anymore. I realise it's a bit late for that and that yes in the first line of the obituary they're going to be talking about Rorschach. 
Nobody's really interested in comics anymore, they don't sell. The only thing that people are interested in is superhero movies. I think that superheroes have grown over the entire comics medium. The comics medium is a wonderful thing, the simple thing of telling stories with a mixture of pictures and words it allows for all sorts of effects that people have barely scratched the surface of. And yet when people talk about comics these days, when people say that they're comics fans, they don't even necessarily have to have read a comic: they just went to see the last Avengers movie. 
 
I think that there are some wonderful talents working in the industry but the industry does not deserve them. Comics have never grown up properly and they insist upon treating their readership and the creators that work for them as if they were children. You know, there has never been an American billionaire who has been traumatised as a child and has decided to go out and fight crime and defend people dressed as a giant bat. 
 

Sep 20, 2025

Alan Moore by Tim Acke

Art by Tim Acke
Above, an Alan Moore caricature by Belgian artist Tim Acke.
 
For more info about the artist, visit his site HERE

Sep 17, 2025

Moore, Swamp Thing and Abby by Raulo Caceres

Sketch art by Raulo Caceres
Above, a great portrait sketch of The Man fused with Swamp Thing and Abby by Spanish artist Raulo Caceres (from Mario B.'s amazing CAF Gallery).
 
Caceres illustrated some special, limited covers for Providence (check it here).
For more about the artist, visit his web site, here.

Sep 14, 2025

I hear... Long London Vol. 2 calling me

We already know that the title is a reference to English record producer and songwriter Joe Meek (picture above). And now, we have a synopsis too. 
It's 1958 and Dennis Knuckleyard has decided to leave his adventures in the Great When in the past where they belong. For nine years, he's avoided so much as thinking about the magical version of London, until he rediscovers an unpleasant reminder of his last adventure-a key that he'd secretly brought into his own world from the other for safekeeping.

But while Dennis may believe he's done with the Great When, it's far from done with him. When Dennis gives the key to a friend, its magical properties reawaken, bringing creatures from the other world into Dennis's and sparking riots in Notting Hill. Even worse, Dennis's old crush Grace Shilling has been forced into the Great When to investigate strange happenings in both cities.

Desperate to keep Grace safe, Dennis follows her into Long London. But once inside the other city, it will not let him go away again so easily, and Dennis and Grace must fight to set things right in the Great When and their own world, or forever lose their lives-and each other.

Full of Moore's characteristically stunning world building and rollicking prose, I Hear a New World is the extraordinary second adventure in the Long London series.

Sep 7, 2025

Beautiful like a Cadillac

Excerpt from a short article focused on Moore's then upcoming WildC.A.T.S run and his plans on the series. Published in Hero Illustrated n. 25, 1995. 
Alan Moore: [...] In issue #21 -  which is the first issue that I'll write - the entire issue is dedicated to the putting together of the replacement WildC.A.T.s team, and it's only after that, with issue #22, that we break into 16 pages of the original team in space and then eight pages of the new team back on Earth; but the two stories will run in parallel and will hopefully coincide in, oh, about seven or eight issues time. 
The lineup of the new team is Majestic and Savant, who have both been seen before. There'll be kind of a replacement Grifter in the form of his brother Max Cash who turned up in the Jim Lee/Savage Dragon crossover.
He's a nastier character than his brother. In my script notes, I've said that he shouldn't be quite as corrupt as Harvey Keitel in The Bad Lieutenant, but he's getting there. The code name that he works under is Condition Red, and he'll be getting a new look to go with it.
Then there are two new characters that I've created for the book. One is a genetically engineered character called Tao, which stands for Tactically Augmented Organism. The other character is called Ladytron, which is in fact named after one of my favorite tracks on the first Roxy Music album
It seems to be about a woman but you suspect that it's probably about a car, and this character sort of combines some of the best elements of both. It's a female cyborg. with a lot of serious personality problems. She's beautiful like a Cadillac.

Sep 6, 2025

3 novels and The Great When

Transcript of a video posted yesterday on YouTube. You can watch it HERE
Moore visited his local Waterstones in Northampton to reveal more about The Great When, and three novels that played into his writing of it.  
The Great When has just been released in paperback format
Alan Moore[...] The Great When is the first of five books in the Long London series which is an excavation of some of the more marginal and little known points of London's history that is all stirred up into a very very  baroque fantasy. And there's been a lot of books that have actually very much played into the writing of The Great When. 
 
I mean one of them is Pariah/Genius by my very good friend Ian Sinclair; for my money one of the best writers in the English language. And in Pariah/Genius he's  following the story of John Deakin, who was the photographer that Francis Bacon actually got all  of those images from. And not a very likable man, but a very, very interesting man. And Ian has done this wonderful story about John Deakin. He's already dead when the book opens and the rest of the book is the thought going through the mind of this extraordinary dying man. 
 
Other books that have played into The Great When would include Flann O'Brien, The Third Policeman, probably  one of my favourite novels ever. The main thing about Flann O'Brien's The Third Policeman is it's very, very strange and quite frightening in places but it's very, very funny. And that was something that I was trying to keep in mind while writing my book that there's no reason why  everything has to be straight-faced. There's no problem with having a laugh once in a while. 
 
And the third book that certainly was a huge inspiration was Brian Catling's The Vorrh. This is the first book of a trilogy. But having read this, I realised that Brian had really raised the bar  for fantasy writing because fantasy, as I see it, really shouldn't be about things that you already  know about. I mean, I've got a lot of room for magicians and dragons and all the rest of the fantasy paraphernalia, but I would prefer a fantasy that gives you things that you've never even imagined before. And certainly in the Vorrh trilogy, Brian does that in spades. 
 
So while I  was writing my books, I was thinking of all of these authors and trying to make sure that my book  was at least in the same ballpark as these greats. 
Watch the video HERE  

Sep 5, 2025

Miracleman and a democratic art-form

Excerpts from Amazing Heroes Preview Special n.2, published by Fantagraphics in 1986.
At the time Eclipse was publishing Miracleman, reprinting for the US market the Marvelman episodes previously presented in UK Warrior magazine, in b/w. Starting from issue n.6, Miracleman included (then) new material continuing the stories of the British hero. 
Alan Moore: What we’re attempting to do with Miracleman is strip away a lot of the accumulated cliches and dross that have built up around the super-heroes, and try to get back to what we perceive as the original idea - which was probably something very closely akin to the original function of the Greek and Norse legends. When those particular legends were current, when they had just been evolved, they were contemporary: they weren't set in an exotic faraway land or faraway time, they were happening at the end of the street. What we are trying to do is reinterpret the idea of a god amongst people, which is basically what the idea oi the super-hero is, even though the original idea has been diluted.
We're trying not to go over the more conventional background of the super-hero, like... you won't find a lot of super-heroes in Miracleman. With the exception of Kid Miracleman, whom you've seen already [in the first two issues], there are not any villains planned for the immediate future of the book. I find it more interesting not to see how powerful, exaggerated characters react to each other, but how one powerful, exaggerated character - Miracleman - reacts to the human race in general.
We'll also be going into the psychology of the character, trying to get into what would feel like to actually do all this bizarre and miraculous stuff. Anytime someone jostled you in the line at cafeteria you could just throw them into orbit. I think it would probably change your view of society slightly.
Those are the areas that we're going to get into: what it feels for the person himself being a god amongst creatures that must look to him like animals.
What it feels like for the humans suddenly being confronted with something that's a million times better than they are. [...]

[Talking about the inflated prices on the premiere issue of MM] 
Miracleman #1 is a comic book, a throwaway comic book, that should be bought for 75 cents and briefly enjoyed. The thing I like about comics is that they are a democratic art-form - often with very good art - that is in the price range of anybody who has 75 cents. He can just go down to the corner news agent and buy a comic. That is one of the things that attract me about comics.
When you start getting to the point where something with a cover price of 75 cents changes hands for 10 dollars, I certainly don't want anything to do with it. I find it a bit distressing, I certainly wouldn't pay that much. Quite frankly, I would advise other people not to, although obviously, what they do is up to theme. It seems like a wholly false, manufactured, and artificial situation to me.