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One Golden Summer is a follow-up to Carley Fortune's debut book Every Summer After and tells the story of Alice, a ...
Representation of non-Abrahamic religions and spiritual traditions, particularly in the mainstream comics universe, is minimal. Even when they are portrayed in comics, their presentation, as Singh and ...
June is Pride Month. To celebrate, we've curated a list of the latest fiction, nonfiction, poetry and comics by 2SLGBTQ+ ...
In October, Canadian author Paul Myers, brother of actor Mike Myers, will release the comedian’s new biography John Candy: A Life in Comedy with House of Anansi Press.
One of the first superheroes with African religious roots, Chireau said, was Brother Voodoo, created in the 1970s by Marvel publisher Stan Lee, writer Len Wein and artist John Romita.
This image provided by Greg Anderson Elysee shows six covers from Greg Anderson Elysée's Is'nana comics series about the adventures of the son of Anansi the Spider, a god in the Akan religion of ...
CBR journeys into the Noir Universe to reveal interesting facts behind Spider-Man Noir's dark origin story and his adventures across the Multiverse.
Vishavjit Singh, who educates youth about Sikhism through his Captain Sikh America character, poses for a portrait in costume at home, in New York’s Harlem neighborhood, Friday, May 30, 2025.
One of the first superheroes with African religious roots, Chireau said, was Brother Voodoo, created in the 1970s by Marvel publisher Stan Lee, writer Len Wein and artist John Romita.
Representation of many of the world's faiths and spiritual traditions has been minimal to nonexistent in the mainstream comics universe.