By: Beca Servoss
So, you’re tired of living in your parent’s basement and want to get a “real job” so they quit nagging you about when you’re going to move out. Or, perhaps you’ve passed this stage and have actually acquired this elusive, “real job,” and now you have to keep it. In either case, you’ve entered the dreaded corporate world; a place that will suck your soul dry of creativity, individuality and sense of self, if you’re not careful. But be at ease fellow darkling, there is shadow at the end of the tunnel. I should know. I’ve lived there quite happily for many years now. Full Story »
What makes a good Goth comic? It must be a little dark, the humor has to be a little twisted, perhaps even silly, and monsters always make for good reading. Voltaire’s “Oh My Goth” or Roman Dirge’s “Lenore” definitely meet these criteria, as does Batton Lash’s “Supernatural Law.” Wait, what? You haven’t been reading “Supernatural Law?” You’re missing something great. Batton says that he feels the idea of the comic comes off as a little “dry” at times, but if one were to read his work it is hardly so. Lighthearted and fun would be a better description. The idea of the comic is two lawyers take up casework for monsters. Frankenstein’s Monster, The Wolfman and many other creatures have come for legal advice from Wolff and Byrd. 





