The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen timeline

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The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is an ongoing graphic novel series written by Alan Moore and illustrated by Kevin O'Neill. The primary commentator on the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen series (hereto after in this article referred to as LoEG), is Jess Nevins, whose published works are considered the most complete annotations of all the various literary references made by this series. This timeline is composed of events that take place in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volumes I and II, Allan and the Sundered Veil, and events hinted at or briefly covered in the expansive work The New Traveller's Almanac, all of these works written by Alan Moore and illustrated by Kevin O’Neill. However the latter two are text-based stories which take the form of a serialized, pulp-style "Boy's Story" and a travel guide, respectively, with a few illustrations by Kevin O'Neill, rather than being in graphic novel form.

It should be noted that in order to place these varied events into chronological order, and to get the best sense of the Leagues' activities, there is some speculation as to probable times and orders of events, as well as mention of several events which, while happening to characters contained in LoEG, do not actually occur in LoEG, but in the original works the characters were taken from. Since LoEG is a crossover fiction, there are several events which the writer of LoEG will assume the reader already knows about the character, and these events can be considered canon. At some points, however, the fictional canon of LoEG comes into conflict with the worlds of the various fictional works used as components of the LoEG fiction. These places are clearly marked, but as a general rule, unless specifically noted, the events of the sampled fictional canon all are assumed to have happened as depicted in the original work, with the addition of being in a world in which the events of all the other fictional bodies have taken place as well.

Secondly it should be noted that this timeline is written in ignorance of the events of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, The Black Dossier by Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill, which is currently scheduled to be released October 24, 2007 according to Amazon.com. Sufficient to say, there will be much needed addition and correction to this timeline with the release of "The Black Dossier.

Thirdly, it should be noted that in order to avoid the timeline being too cluttered with notations, the members of the various Leagues and other, comparable organizations present in LoEG are listed at the bottom of the page with a complete list of their bibliographical origins. Also, for this reason, the bulk of Orlando's travels are not, or not yet, listed as part of this timeline.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

[edit] 1550s

[edit] 1610s

[edit] 1620s

[edit] 1660s

[edit] 1670s

  • 1670'sSometime in the 70's Christian arrives in our world.(The New Traveller's Almanac Chpt.1 pg.6 by Alan Moore)
  • 1673Captain Robert Owe-Much,probably for reasons of avoiding his creditors, makes many long, far-flung voyages with his three ships. Some time in his travels Captain Owe-Much encounters a young man named Orlando, though Orlando's connection to Prospero’s Men has not been definitively established Orlando is a substantial contributor to the "New Traveller's Almanac" and associate to at least three of the British Leagues. (The Floating Island or a new Discovery Relating the Strange Adventure on a late Voyage from Lamberthana to Villa Franca, Alias Ramallia, to the Eastward of Terra Del Templo: By three Ships, viz., the ‘Pay-naught,’ the ‘Excuse,’ and the ‘Least-in-Sight’ under the Conduct of Captain Robert Owe-much: Describing the Nature of the Inhabitants, their Religion, Laws and Customs by "Frank Careless," AKA Richard Head and The New Traveller’s Almanac Chpt.3 pg.5 by Alan Moore)
  • 1674Lemuel Gulliver enters Emanuel College. (Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift)
  • 1677Lemuel Gulliver bound in apprenticeship to Mr. James Bates. (Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift)
  • 1678Travelling from the City of Destruction, Christian, the Everyman Journeyman, arrives in the town of Vanity Fair in which he turns down an alleyway and "steps into the streets of London." Seemingly Unable to return to his "shinning country" he reluctantly (reluctant because of the perception that Prospero's powers are diabolical in nature) agrees to ally himself with Duke Prospero and his group, the Duke being Christians only chance of returning home. (The New Traveller’s Almanac Chpt.1 pg.6 by Alan Moore)

[edit] 1680s

[edit] 1690s

[edit] 1700s

[edit] 1710s

[edit] 1720s

[edit] 1730s

[edit] 1740s

[edit] 1750s

[edit] 1770s

[edit] 1780s

[edit] 1790s

  • 1791Sir Percy Blankeney forms the League of the Scarlet Pimpernel, an organization dedicated to rescuing innocent French nobles out of France to avoid the Guillotine. Later this year Lady Marguerite and Sir Percy marry. (The Scarlet Pimpernel series internal timeline)
  • c. 1798 – With France’s defeat at the Battle of the Nile in August, and the formation of the Second Coalition against France, England is no longer alone in the battle against Bonaparte. Gulliver’s League sets out on a world tour, a last expedition, as it were, for the aging explorer and his fellowship. Their voyage most likely takes them through the Straits of Magellan, near which they briefly visit Megapatagonia in the southern polar region, and on to the Australias and the Pacific Ocean, where they take an extended reprieve on Feather Island, most likely not returning to England until 1800. (Historical events, La Découverte australe par um homme-volant by Nicolas Edme Restif de la Bretonne, Rélation très véritable d’une Isle Nouvellement Découverte by Fanny de Beauharnais, and The New Traveller’s Almanac by Alan Moore)

[edit] 1840s

  • 1841 – The Chevalier C. Auguste Dupin solves the Murders in the Rue Morgue. (The Murders in the Rue Morgue by Edgar Allan Poe)
  • c. 1849 - Count Allamistakeo, an Egyption nobleman, awakened in America as a result of an experiment using electricity. Edgar Allan Poe recounts the story before going to sleep using the same long sleeping technieque as Count Allamistakeo, which could explain why history would show him as being dead at about this time (October 7, 1849). Some time after this, Count Allamistakeo goes to sleep again, after having his portrait done: as in 1898 we see both his sleeping form and his portrait in the British Museum. ("Some Words with a Mummy" by Edgar Allan Poe. Minor Speculation; Edgar Allan Poe often wrote in the first person, while never identifying the speaker, it can thus be assumed that for the purposes of LoEG, as it is with much crossover using Poe's stories, that the speaker is a fictionalized Edgar Allan Poe himself. Also, the reason this Egyptian-American mummy is in the British Museum, the headquarters of the League, is a matter of speculation among fans of the series)

[edit] 1850s

[edit] 1860s

[edit] 1870s

  • c. 1870 – Lieutenant Gullivar Jones, of the United States Navy, is transported to Mars via a Magic Carpet. (Lieutenant Gullivar Jones: His Vacation by Edwin L. Arnold)
  • 1870Sergeant James Winston Pepper, of the British Navy, is lost at sea off the coast of South America. (The Yellow Submarine by The Beatles, and The New Traveller’s Almanac by Alan Moore)
  • 1871 - Jack Harkaway, an orphan, carves out a niche for himself at the Pomona House School with his fists and his wits and plays vicious pranks on the faculty. (Jack Harkaway's School-Days by Bracebridge Hemyng)
  • 1871 - Six years after her presumed abduction Miss A. L., during a family visit to the Deanery of Christ Church College, Oxford, passes through a looking glass in the Deanery and into the same "contra-rational" world she spoke of six years ago. This time, however, upon returning, a mere seven minutes later, she became ill. The disorder prevented her from eating and weakened her until death in late November. (Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll and The New Traveller's Almanac Chpt.1 pg.3 by Alan Moore Note: the death of Alice is an invention of Moore's for his league universe and is not in Caroll's book)
  • 1872 - Basil Hallward, the artist, makes a portrait of Dorian Gray. (The Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde)
  • 8:45 p.m. (GMT), Wednesday, October 2, 1872 - Phileas Fogg sets out on his 80-day tour around the world. (Le tour du monde en quatre-vingts jours (Around the World in Eighty Days) by Jules Verne)
  • 1874 - Jack Harkaway and his friends set out to see on the ship Fairy and begin an adventure around the world fighting pirates and brigands. (Jack Harkaway at Sea; His Adventures Afloat and Ashore by Bracebridge Hemyng)
  • 1876 - Dr. Eric Bellman leads a group to the "peculiar hole" located "perhaps a mile from Godstow." On April 23rd the group ventured into the "well-like space" whereupon the expedition members vanished along with the hole. Their party reappeared in Oct., completely insane, and minus one member. (The Hunting of the Snark (An Agony in 8 Fits) by Lewis Carroll, and The New Traveller’s Almanac Chpt.1 British Isles pgs.3,4 by Alan Moore)

[edit] 1880s

  • 1880 to 1930William Samson Sr. and William Samson Jr. record/report sites around Ardistan, which shares boreders with Pakistan, Afghanistan and Persia.( From TNTA Chpt. 4 Pg.3 by Alan Moore)

[edit] 1890s

[edit] 1900s

[edit] 1910s

[edit] 1930s

  • 1930 – Scientific Expedition to the Black Lagoon. The New Traveller’s Almanac (in the world of LoEG) published by Her Majesty’s Stationery Office and is said to have been edited by a man rumoured to be a British descendant of Captain Pysse-Gummes the Pirate. (The New Traveller’s Almanac by Alan Moore – as a side note, Alan Moore does not put himself into The New Traveller’s Almanac as it's creator or otherwise, but Kevin O’Neill does draw him in as Captain Pysse-Gummes in an illustration of the Pirate’s Conference, probably as a joke)

[edit] Bibliography of the League Members

[edit] Prospero’s Men

17th Century League

Prospero, Duke of Milan

Caliban

Ariel

Christian

Captain Robert Owe-Much

  • The Floating Island or a new Discovery Relating the Strange Adventure on a late Voyage from Lamberthana to Villa Franca, Alias Ramallia, to the Eastward of Terra Del Templo: By three Ships, viz., the ‘Pay-naught,’ the ‘Excuse,’ and the ‘Least-in-Sight’ under the Conduct of Captain Robert Owe-much: Describing the Nature of the Inhabitants, their Religion, Laws and Customs (Book, 1673) by "Frank Careless" (AKA Richard Head)

[edit] Gulliver’s League

18th Century League

Captain Lemuel Gulliver, MD

Sir Percy Blankeney

Lady Marguerite Blankeney

The Reverend Dr. Christopher Syn (alias Captain Clegg alias the Scarecrow)

Mistress Frances "Fanny" Hill

Nathaniel "Natty" Bumppo

[edit] Mina’s League

Late 19th Century League

Wilhelmina Murray

Allan "Hunter" Quatermain

Captain Nemo (AKA Prince Darkkar)

Dr. Henry Jekyll

Edward Hyde

Hawley Griffin (AKA the Invisible Man)

[edit] League Associates

These are individuals who either assist or have ambiguous ties to the League. Baron von Münchhausen has many portraits and busts and trophies in the British Museum (AKA Montagu House) which have led many fans to believe that he was a member of one of the Leagues, or a member of the body of British Intelligence which governs the League, for the purposes of this timeline supposed as The Royal Society. Orlando does encounter each of the confirmed Leagues in The New Traveller's Almanac, and is even there depicted with the symbol of the League (a question mark) on his/her watch chain. Orlando is also a member of the 20th Century League, and is one of the only three confirmed members as of The New Traveller's Almanac. Sherlock Holmes, historically, has been tied to British Intelligence through his brother Mycroft (a member of H.M. Government), and in Vol. 1 of LoEG, is shown to have the symbol of the League on his cigarette case. In The New Traveller's Almanac, there is a confirmed encounter between Wilhelmina and Sherlock Holmes. C. Auguste Dupin, while not a member of British Intelligence, is no less a friend of the League, as per the events of LoEG Vol. 1. William Sampson, Sr. is an original character created for LoEG, and is supposedly the farther of Bill Sampson (AKA the Wolf of Kabul), a 1920s British comic book character (who is also considered by some to be an associate of the League because of his canon association with the British Intelligence Corps). Campion Bond is also an original character created specifically for LoEG, and was originally intended to be James Bond's father, but this was never pursued due to licensing issues.

Karl Friedrich Hieronymus, Baron von Münchhausen

Orlando (right).
Orlando (right).

Orlando

Sherlock Holmes

The Chevalier C. Augusta Dupin

William Sampson, Sr.

Campion Bond

Mycroft Holmes

[edit] Speculative Leagues

[edit] Mina’s Second League

20th Century League's Speculated Lineup

This League is a confirmed League, headed by Wilhelmina Murray and Allan Quatermain (later Allan Quatermain, Jr., with the confirmed addition of Orlando, and the suspected addition of Professor Challenger. Though Prof. Challenger was only listed as a "sometimes consultant" to this League in The New Traveller's Almanac. The "Mr. Altamont" speculation was derived from the initials A.J. in TNTA, who we now have learned may be A.J. Raffles the reformed "Gentleman thief" of E.W. Hornung's, and now confirmed member of this league, often described as having a Holmes type intellect. Also confirmed is the occcult detective Carnacki "the ghost finder".

Wilhelmina Murray

Allan Quatermain, Junior

Orlando

A. J. Raffles From the stories of E. W. Hornung.

Carnacki

Professor George Edward Challenger

[edit] Fogg’s League

Speculative 19th Century League

There has been no confirmation of this League at all, aside from the popular belief among fans of the LoEG series that the portraits of the people behind the main 19th Century League on the cover of Volume 1 are in fact a past 19th Century League because they not only are all British (aside from Robur, who is therefore not considered among this League) and they all were active in their own canon around the 1870s. The picture in which this supposed League is portrayed is inside the League's headquarters in the British Museum. In this picture is even the group portrait of the 18th Century League discovered in the story of Vol. 1. Also, in this picture, is the actual character Count Allamistakeo (a mummy), sleeping, as well as a portrait of him.

Phileas Fogg

Sir Francis Varney

Count Allamistakeo

Sapathwa (AKA the Blue Dwarf)

  • The Blue Dwarf (Book, 1861) by Lady Esther Hope (AKA Percy B. St. John)
  • The Blue Dwarf (Book, c. 1870) by Percy B. St. John

Dorian Gray

Jack Harkaway

Fogg.
Fogg.
Varney.
Varney.
Sapathwa.
Sapathwa.
Grey.
Grey.
Harkaway - 1871.
Harkaway - 1871.

[edit] Other Groups

[edit] Les Hommes Mysterieux

The French League – Les Hommes Mysterieux

Les Hommes Mysterieux - 1913
Les Hommes Mysterieux - 1913

Les Hommes Mysterieux is said to be the "French counterpart to the League" in The New Traveller's Almanac. In A Blazing World by Jess Nevins, it is said that the roster of Les Hommes Mysterieux was based on information provided by a colleague of Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill, Jean-Marc Lofficier, a leading expert on French literature and pulp. There are two members, listed here, however, who are not confirmed members of Les Hommes Mysterieux. Doctor Omega has been rumoured to be a part of Les Hommes Mysterieux because an alien he encountered on Mars is shown in an illustration of Les Hommes Mysterieux, but Kevin O'Neill has said in conversation with J.M. L'Officier that making Doctor Omega part of Les Hommes Mysterieux was not his intent in that picture[2]. The second unconfirmed character is The Sâr Dubnotal, who is rumoured to be a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux that has simply yet to be confirmed.

Aeronaut Jean Robur

Doctor Omega

  • Le Docteur Oméga – Adventures Fantastiques de Trois Français dans la Planète Mars (Dr. Omega – Fantastic Adventures of Three Frenchmen on the Planet Mars; Book, 1905) by Arnould Galopin

Arsène Lupin

Sâr Dubnotal

  • Le Manoir Hanté de Creh'h-ar-Vran (The Haunted Manor of Creh'h-ar-Vran; Pulp Book, January 1909) by Norbert Sévestre
  • La Table Tournante du Docteur Tooth (Dr. Tooth's Turning Table; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Le Puits Fatal (The Fatal Well; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Le Médium Tragique (The Tragic Medium; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • La Grêve Sanglante (The Bloody Beach; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • La Détraquée du Passage Rimbaut (The Madwoman of Passage Rimbaut; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Tserpchikopf, le Sanglant Hypnotiseur (Tserpchikopf, the Bloody Hypnotist; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • La Piste Astrale (The Astral Trail; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • L'Écartelée de Montmartre (The Quartered Woman of Montmartre; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Jack l'Éventreur (Jack the Ripper; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Haine Posthume (Posthumous Hatred; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • La Fiancée de Gibraltar (The Fiancée from Gibraltar; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Les Vampires du Cimetière (The Vampires of the Cemetery; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • L'Empreinte Rouge (The Red Mark; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • La Somnambule du Gué Sanglant (The Somnambulist of the River of Blood; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • L'Affaire Azzef-Poloukhine (The Azzef-Poloukhine Case; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Un Complot Terroriste (A Terrorist Plot; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Dans l'Enfer Sibérien (In the Siberian Hell; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Azzef, le Roi des Agents Provocateurs (Azzef, King of the Agents Provocateurs; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre
  • Double-Taf, le Dernier des Pentyerns (Double-Taf, Last of the Pentyerns; Pulp Book, published circa 1909-1910) by Norbert Sévestre

The Nyctalope

Fantômas

  • Fantômas (Pulp Book, Feb. 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Juve Contre Fantômas (Juve Versus Fantômas; Pulp Book, March 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Mort qui Tue (The Killer Corpse; Book, April 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • L'Agent Secret (The Secret Agent; Pulp Book, May 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Un Roi Prisonnier de Fantômas (A Royal Prisoner of Fantômas; Pulp Book, June 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Policier Apache (The Thug Policeman; Pulp Book, July 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Pendu de Londres (The Hanged Man of London; Pulp Book, Aug. 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Fille de Fantômas (The Daughter of Fantômas; Pulp Book, Sept. 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Fiacre de Nuit (Night Cab; Pulp Book, Oct. 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • La Main Coupée (The Severed Hand; Pulp Book, Nov. 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • L'Arrestation de Fantômas (Fantômas Under Arrest; Pulp Book, Dec. 1911) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Magistrat Cambrioleur (The Burglar Judge; Pulp Book, Jan. 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • La Livrée du Crime (Crime’s Employment Agency; Pulp Book, Feb. 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • La Mort de Juve (The Death of Juve; Pulp Book, March 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • L'Évadée de Saint-Lazare (The Escapee from St.-Lazare Prison; Pulp Book, April 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • La Disparition de Fandor (Fandor Disappears; Pulp Book, May 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Mariage de Fantômas (The Marriage of Fantômas; Pulp Book, June 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • L'Assassin de Lady Beltham (Lady Beltham’s Murderer; Pulp Book, July 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • La Guêpe Rouge (The Red Wasp; Pulp Book, Aug. 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Les Souliers du Mort (The Fatal Shoes; Pulp Book, Sep. 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Rrain Perdu (The Disappearing Train; Pulp Book, Oct. 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Les Amours D'un Prince (The Loves of a Prince; Pulp Book, Nov. 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Bouquet Tragique (The Deadly Bouquet; Pulp Book, Dec. 1912) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Jockey Masqué (The Masked Jockey; Pulp Book, Jan. 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Cercueil Vide (The Empty Coffin; Pulp Book, Feb. 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Faiseur de Reines (The Queen-Maker; Pulp Book, March 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Cadavre Géant (The Giant Corpse; Pulp Book, April 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Voleur D'or (The Gold Thief; Pulp Book, May 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Le Série Rouge (The Bloody Series; Pulp Book, June 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • L'Hôtel du Crime (Crime Hotel; Pulp Book, July 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • La Cravate de Chanvre (The Hangman’s Necktie; Pulp Book, Aug. 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • La Fin de Fantômas (The End of Fantômas?; Pulp Book, Sep. 1913) by Pierre Souvestre
  • Fantômas Est-il Ressuscite? (Is Fantômas Alive?; Book, 1934) by Marcel Allain
  • Fantômas Roi des Receleurs (Fantômas, Black Market King; Book, 1934) by Marcel Allain
  • Fantômas en Danger (Fantômas in Danger; Book, 1935) by Marcel Allain
  • Fantômas Prend sa Revanche (Fantômas Takes His Revenge; Book, 1935) by Marcel Allain
  • Fantômas Attaque Fandor (Fantômas Attacks Fandor; Book, 1935) by Marcel Allain
  • Si C'etait Fantômas? (Can it be Fantômas?; serialized in various French Newspapers, 1933-1938) by Marcel Allain
  • Oui, C'est Fantômas! (Yes, It’s Fantômas!; serialized in various French Newspapers, 1933-1938) by Marcel Allain
  • Fantômas Joue et Gagne (Fantômas Gambles and Wins; serialized in various French Newspapers, 1935-1938) by Marcel Allain

[edit] Group of the Sundered Veil

Astral League – The League of the Sundered Veil

This grouping of characters appears in Allan and the Sundered Veil by Alan Moore

The Time Traveller

Allan "Hunter" Quatermain

John Carter

Randolph Carter

[edit] The Pirate’s Conference

Pirate's Conference - c. 1775
Pirate's Conference - c. 1775

This is a gathering that appears in The New Traveller's Almanac. Captain Blood, in this gathering, is believed by fans to be a later Captain Blood, as the original would have been long since dead at the time this gathering is said to have taken place.

Captain Clegg (alias The Reverend Dr. Christopher Syn alias the Scarecrow)

Long John Silver

  • Treasure Island (Book, 1883) by Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Silver’s Revenge (Book, 1985) by Robert Leeson
  • La Vera Storia del Pirata Long John Silver (The True History of the Pirate Long John Silver, AKA Long John Silver: The True and Eventful History of My Life of Liberty and Adventure As a Gentleman of Fortune & Enemy to Mankind; Book, 1999) by Bjorn Larsson

Captain Blood II

Captain Slaughterboard

The Yellow Creature

Captain Pugwash

Tom the Cabin Boy

Captain Hook

Captain Pysse-Gummes (AKA Captain Pissgums)

[edit] See also

[edit] References

Jess Nevins has produced a series of annotations for each volume which are available online (see the links) and have been expanded into book form:

  • Heroes & Monsters: The Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (paperback, 239 pages, MonkeyBrain, 2003, ISBN 193226504X, Titan Books, 2006, ISBN 1845763165)
  • A Blazing World: The Unofficial Companion to the Second League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (paperback, 240 pages, MonkeyBrain, 2004, ISBN 1932265104, Titan Books, 2006, ISBN 1845763173)
  • Impossible Territories: An Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen The Black Dossier (paperback, 304 pages, MonkeyBrain, forthcoming August 2007, ISBN 1932265244)

[edit] External links