Alan Grant was a Scottish comic book writer known for writing Judge Dredd in 2000 AD as well as various Batman titles during the late 1980s and early 1990s. He is also the creator of the character Anarky.
Alan Grant first entered the comics industry in 1967 when he became an editor for D.C. Thomson before moving to London from Dundee in 1970 to work for IPC on various romance magazines. After going back to college and having a series of jobs, Grant found himself back in Dundee and living on Social Security. He then met John Wagner, another former D.C. Thompson editor, who was helping put together a new science fiction comic for IPC, 2000 A.D., and was unable to complete his other work. Wagner asked Grant if he could help him write the Tarzan comic he was working on; so began the Wagner/Grant writing partnership.
The pair eventually co-wrote Judge Dredd. They would work on other popular strips for the comic, including Robo-Hunter and Strontium Dog using the pseudonym T.B. Grover. Grant also worked on other people's stories, changing and adding dialogue, most notably Harry Twenty on the High Rock, written by Gerry Finley-Day. Judge Dredd would be Grant's main concern for much of the 1980s. Grant and Wagner had developed the strip into the most popular in 2000AD as well as creating lengthy epic storylines such as The Apocalypse War. Grant also wrote for other IPC comics such as the revamped Eagle.
By the late 1980s, Grant and Wagner were about to move into the American comic market. Their first title was a 12-issue miniseries called Outcasts for DC Comics. Although it wasn't a success, it paved the way for the pair to write Batman stories in Detective Comics from issue 583, largely with Norm Breyfogle on art duties across the various Batman titles Grant moved to. After a dozen issues, Wagner left Grant as sole writer. Grant was one of the main Batman writers until the late 1990s. The pair also created a four issue series for Epic Comics called The Last American. This series, as well as the Chopper storyline in Judge Dredd, is blamed for the breakup of the Wagner/Grant partnership. The pair split strips, with Wagner keeping Judge Dredd and Grant keeping Strontium Dog and Judge Anderson. Grant and Wagner continue to work together on special projects such as the Batman/Judge Dredd crossover Judgement on Gotham. During the late 1980s, Grant experienced a philosophical transformation and declared himself an anarchist. The creation of the supervillain Anarky was initially intended as a vehicle for exploring his political opinions through the comic medium. In the following years, he would continue to utilize the character in a similar fashion as his philosophy evolved.
Grant's projects at the start of the 90s included writing Detective Comics and Strontium Dog, but two projects in particular are especially notable. The first is The Bogie Man, a series co-written by Wagner which was the pair's first venture into independent publishing. The second is Lobo, a character created by Keith Giffen as a supporting character in The Omega Men. Lobo gained his own four issue mini series in 1990 which was drawn by Simon Bisley. This was a parody of the 'dark, gritty' comics of the time and proved hugely popular. After several other miniseries (all written by Grant, sometimes with Giffen as co-writer), Lobo received his own ongoing series. Grant was also writing L.E.G.I.O.N. (a Legion of Super-Heroes spin-off) and The Demon (a revival of Jack Kirby's charac
Мені справді сподобалось сполучення графіки і підходу до сюжету, в якому у двох розділах розгортається обігрується християнство в умовах фантастичного Мегасіті, а потім поява Сатани (цей розділ красивіше намальований, але гірше розіграний, зокрема й тому, що головні герої приречені на безсмертя серіальністю). П'ята зірочка скоріше як закладка собі на майбутнє, а от решта чотири, думаю, є моєю поточною оцінкою: really liked it.
I've only ever read the 2000AD that Alan Moore wrote. I heard of the Judge Anderson comics at the BL comics exhibition. I borrowed this one from the library. I have to say I really liked it. Anderson was an interesting hero. The apocalyptic setting was an interesting mixture of science fiction and mythology. The only thing that I found confusing was that the stories were two separate tales with parts in the middle missing. I guess they were going for a "theme" when they put this together but I'd much rather have read the stories in order. That said I did thoroughly enjoy this and will definitely be getting the rest of this series.
I was enjoying this, really was, until they got to the end and they staffed us with a Deus ex machina kinda of ending. 'Seeds of Doubt' and a puny crucifix? really? That is the undoing of the Devil, The Prince of Lies? And what about the Cydonians and Icarus and there advanced tech? Great artwork, great set up, but total anticlimax. And what is this bible quote, "None of the wicked shall understand, but the wise shall understand" Daniel 12:10, supposed to justify?
I thought it was an amazing read, my mind was blown away by the wonderful artwork and the compelling story that managed to reach epic heights in only a few pages.