Łukasz Kowalczuk’s ‘Radioactive Cross’: Episode Four
Episode four of a post-apocalyptic comic thriller by writer-illustrator Łukasz Kowalczuk. Radioactive Cross runs every Friday at We Are the Mutants.
Episode four of a post-apocalyptic comic thriller by writer-illustrator Łukasz Kowalczuk. Radioactive Cross runs every Friday at We Are the Mutants.
Episode three of a post-apocalyptic comic thriller by writer-illustrator Łukasz Kowalczuk. Radioactive Cross runs every Friday at We Are the Mutants.
By The Mutants
When I was about 7 or 8, one of the girls in my neighborhood explained what would happen to me if I didn’t become a Jehovah’s Witness. She said that we were all living in the “last days”…
Hal Lindsey’s bestselling The Late, Great Planet Earth, originally published by the Zondervan Corporation in 1970, revolutionized the Christian publishing industry and introduced the mainstream to rapture or “end times” terminology and imagery, which took root in America with Puritan settlers Increase and Cotton Mather. It was the first Christian book to be reprinted by a major publisher—Bantam, in 1973—directly after the Bantam edition of Chariots of the Gods? became a phenomenon…
Episode two of a post-apocalyptic comic thriller by writer-illustrator Łukasz Kowalczuk. Radioactive Cross runs every Friday at We Are the Mutants.
Episode one of a post-apocalyptic comic thriller by writer-illustrator Łukasz Kowalczuk. Radioactive Cross runs every Friday at We Are the Mutants…
By K.E. Roberts
Serious study of pulp novels—inexpensive paperbacks churned out by the millions from the 1950s through the 1970s—is a relatively recent development. The novel itself, even the enduring classics studied in universities today, was derided as idle and debauched until the beginning of the 20th century…
Hasbro’s Pogo Bal made a splash in the States during the summer of 1987, becoming the third bestselling toy on the market after G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero (also Hasbro) and Barbie. Invented in 1969 by two Belgians, Raphael J. Van Der Cleyen and Wilfried F. Ribbens, the updated pogo stick became “immensely popular” in Europe during 1985, where it was sold as “Lolo Ball” or “Lolobal.” Hasbro acquired the rights soon after…
By K.E. Roberts
White Lightning is the first in a long line of films and TV series about righteous lawbreakers in the post-Vietnam American South, where corrupt cops chase hot-rodding bootleggers and paid-by-the-mile truckers through the meager towns and backwoods scorned by “the people in Washington.” It’s a mythical land whose isolated, protective communities both resent and revel in their perceived marginalization…
After serving in the Marines during World War II, self-taught artist and typographer Paul Bacon (1923-2015) landed in New York City, where he designed several now-famous album covers for jazz labels Blue Note and Riverside Records. Bacon had discovered jazz in the ’30s, and he remained a great fan—he was befriended by Thelonious Monk, among others—throughout his life…