Alan Moore bibliography
This is a bibliography of works by British author and comic book writer Alan Moore.
Comics
2000 AD and other early British work
- Anon E Mouse (as Curt Vile, in Anon (The Alternative Newspaper of Northampton) c. 1977)
- The Ballad of Halo Jones (with Ian Gibson):
- "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 1" (in 2000AD #376-385, 1984)
- "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 2 Prologue" (in 2000AD #405, 1985)
- "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 2" (in 2000AD #406-415, 1985)
- "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 3 Prologue" (in 2000AD #451, 1986)
- "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 3" (in 2000AD #452-466, 1986)
- a one-off joke page in 2000AD #500, a jam issue, 1986 (not collected in the trade paperback; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
- The Bojeffries Saga (with Steve Parkhouse, in Warrior #12, 13, 19 & 20, 1983-1984; Dalgoda #8, Fantagraphics Books, 1986; A1 #1-4, A1 True Life Bikini Confidential, Atomeka Press, 1989-1990; collected edition, Tundra, 1992)
- Classic Star Wars: Devilworlds #1 & 2 (collects five stories from 1981's Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back Monthly #151, 154-156, & 159, Dark Horse, 1996) [2]
- The Collector:
- "Trash!" (short story, with Sven Arnstein/Pat Wright, in Eagle #3, 1982)
- "Profits of Doom" (short story, with Gabor Scott/Rex Archer , in Eagle #12, 1982)
- Dark Star #19-25, 1979-1980:
- "The Avenging Hunchback" (in Dark Star #19, March 1979; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
- "Kultural Krime Komix" (in Dark Star #20, May 1979; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
- "Talcum Powder" (in Dark Star #21, July 1979)
- "Three Eyes McGurck And His Death Planet Commandos" (written by Steve Moore as Pedro Henry, in Dark Star #22-25, December 1979 - December 1980; reprinted in Rip Off Comix #8)
- D.R. and Quinch (with Alan Davis, tpb, The Complete D.R. and Quinch Rebellion, 2006 ISBN 1-904265-48-0):
- "D.R. and Quinch Have Fun on Earth" (in 2000AD #317, 1983)
- "D.R. and Quinch Go Straight" (in 2000AD #350-351, 1984)
- "D.R. and Quinch Go Girl Crazy" (in 2000AD #352-354, 1984)
- "D.R. and Quinch Get Drafted" (in 2000AD #355-359, 1984)
- "D.R. and Quinch Go to Hollywood" (in 2000AD #363-367, 1984)
- "D.R. and Quinch Get Back to Nature" (in 2000AD Sci-Fi Special 1985)
- Doctor Who:
- "Black Legacy" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who (US comic) #14 (Marvel), also Doctor Who Magazine #35-38, 1980)
- "Business as Usual" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who (US comic) #15 (Marvel), also Doctor Who Magazine #40-43, 1980)
- Time War:
- "Star Death" (with John Stokes, in Doctor Who Magazine #47, also The Daredevils #5, 1980)
- "The 4-D War" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who Magazine #51, also The Daredevils #6, 1980)
- "Black Sun Rising" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who Magazine #57, also The Daredevils #7, 1980)
- Fat Jap Defamation Funnies (as Curt Vile, in The Backstreet Bugle, issue 10, January 1979)
- The Complete Alan Moore Future Shocks (tpb, Rebellion, 2006 ISBN 1-904265-88-X collects almost all of his short 2000 AD stories some of which were previously collected in Alan Moore's Shocking Futures ISBN 0-907610-71-4 and Alan Moore's Twisted Times ISBN 0-907610-72-2 from Titan):
- Abelard Snazz:
- "The Final Solution" (with Steve Dillon, in 2000 AD #189-190, 1980) (also in Twisted Times)
- "The Return of the Two-Storey Brain" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #209, 1981)
- "The Double-Decker Dome Strikes Back" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #237-238, 1981) (also in Twisted Times)
- "Halfway to Paradise" (with John Cooper, in 2000 AD #245, 1982) (also in Twisted Times)
- "The Multi-Storey Mind Mellows Out!" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #254, 1982) (also in Twisted Times)
- "Genius is Pain" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #299, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
- Future Shocks:
- "Grawks Bearing Gifts" (with Ian Gibson, in 2000 AD #203, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "The English/Phlondrutian Phrase Book" (with Brendan McCarthy, in 2000 AD #214, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "The Last Rumble of the Platinum Horde" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #217, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "They Sweep the Spaceways" (with Garry Leach, in 2000 AD #219, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "The Regrettable Ruse of Rocket Redglare" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #234, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "A Cautionary Fable" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #240, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "Mister, Could You Use a Squonge?" (with Ron Tiner, in 2000 AD #242, 1981)
- "A Second Chance" (with Jose Casanovas, in 2000 AD #245, 1982)
- "Twist Ending" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #246, 1982)
- "Salad Days" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #247, 1982)
- "The Beastly Beliefs of Benjamin Blint" (with Eric Bradbury, in 2000 AD #249, 1982)
- "All of Them Were Empty" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #251, 1982)
- "An American Werewolf in Space" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #252, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "The Bounty Hunters!" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #253, 1982)
- "The Wages of Sin" (with Bryan Talbot, in 2000 AD #257, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "Return of the Thing" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #265, 1982)
- "Skirmish" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #267, 1982)
- "The Writing on the Wall" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #268, 1982)
- "The Wild Frontier" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #269, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "The Big Day" (with Robin Smith, in 2000 AD #270, 1982)
- "One Christmas During Eternity" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #271, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "No Picnic" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #272, 1982)
- "The Disturbed Digestions of Dr. Dibworthy" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #273, 1982) (also in Twisted Times)
- "Sunburn" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #282, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "Bad Timing" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #291, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "Eureka" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #325, 1983) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "Dad" (with Alan Langford, in 2000 AD #329, 1983)
- "Buzz Off" (with Jim Eldridge, in 2000 AD #331, 1983)
- "Look Before You Leap" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #332, 1983)
- Time Twisters:
- "Hot Item" (written as Tharg) (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #278, 1982)
- "The Reversible Man" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #308, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
- "Einstein" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #309, 1983)
- "Chrono-Cops" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #310, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
- "The Big Clock!" (with Eric Bradbury, in 2000 AD #315, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
- "Dr. Dibworthy's Disappointing Day" (with Alan Langford, in 2000 AD #316, 1983)
- "Going Native" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #318, 1983)
- "Ring Road" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #320, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
- "The Hyper-Historic Headbang" (with Alan Davis, in 2000 AD #322, 1983) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "The Lethal Laziness of Lobelia Loam" (with Arturo Boluda, in 2000AD #323, 1983) (also in Shocking Futures)
- "The Time Machine" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #324, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
- "The Startling Success of Sideways Scuttleton" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #327, 1983)
- Marvelman (with Garry Leach, Alan Davis, John Totleben and others, Warrior #1-18, #20 & #21, 1982-1984; Miracleman #1-7, 9-16, Eclipse Comics, 1985-1989; collected in 3 volumes) (#8 is a fill-in issue with reprints of old Mick Anglo stories)
- A Dream of Flying (collects #1-3, which reprinted Warrior #1-3 & #5-11)
- Red King Syndrome (collects #4-7 & 9-10, which included reprints of Warrior #12-18, #20 & #21)
- Olympus (collects #11-16)
- Warrior #4 has an uncollected story called "The Yesterday Gambit", which was semi-adapted into Marvelman #15.
- Marvelman Special (includes new wraparound material by Moore, written around several Mick Anglo reprints, 1984)
- Miracleman 3-D Special
- Maxwell the Magic Cat (Northants Post, 1979-1986, tpb, Acme Press, 1986-1987 ISBN 1-870084-00-4, ISBN 1-870084-05-5, ISBN 1-870084-10-1 and ISBN 1-870084-20-9)
- Not! The World Cup Special 1982 (as Curt Vile, drawn by Barrie Mitchell, 1982)
- Once There Were Demons (written and drawn by Moore, in Embryo #5, 1971)
- One-Off:
- "A Holiday in Hell" (with Dave Harwood, in 2000AD Sci-Fi Special 1980, 1980)
- "Killer in the Cab" (with John Richardson, in 2000 AD #170, 1980)
- "The Dating Game" (with Steve Dillon, in 2000 AD #176, 1980)
- "Southern Comfort" (with Walter Howarth, in 2000 AD Sci-Fi Special 1981, 1981) (credited as "RE-Wright" due to Moore's dissatisfaction with the final story) [4]
- Ro-Busters (collected in The Complete Ro-Busters, 336 pages, Rebellion, November 2008, ISBN 1-905437-82-X):
- Rogue Trooper (both reprinted in 2000 AD Extreme Edition #15):
- "Pray for War" (with Brett Ewins, in 2000AD Annual 1983, 1982)
- "First of the Few" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000AD Annual 1984, 1983)
- Roscoe Moscoe (in Sounds, 1975-1981):
- "Who Killed Rock 'n' Roll"
- "The Stars My Degradation"
- "Christmas On Depravity"
- "The Bride of Pressbutton"
- "Ten Little Liggers"
- "The Rock and Roll Zoo"
- Scant Applause (in Frantic Winter Special, 1979)
- St Pancras Panda (in The Backstreet Bugle, #16-20, July-December, 1979)
- Warpsmith (with Garry Leach):
- "Ghostdance" (in A1, 1989, ISBN 1-871878-05-5)
- "Cold War, Cold Warrior" (in Warrior #9-10, January-May 1983; reprinted in Axel Pressbutton #2, Eclipse Comics, 1984)
DC Comics
- DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore (trade paperback, 2003, Titan ISBN 1-84576-257-6 DC ISBN 1-4012-0927-0).
- Three different variations of this paperback have been printed. All three include:
- Batman Annual #11: "Mortal Clay" (with George Freeman, 1987)
- DC Comics Presents #85: "The Jungle Line" (with pencils: Rick Veitch, inks: Al Williamson, featuring Superman and Swamp Thing, 1985)
- Detective Comics #549-550: "Night Olympics" (with Klaus Janson, featuring Green Arrow and Black Canary, 1985)
- Green Lantern Corps:
- Omega Men:
- "Brief Lives" (with Kevin O'Neill, from #26, 1985)
- "A Man's World" (with pencils: Paris Cullins; Inks: Rick Magyar, from #27, 1985)
- Secret Origins #10: "Footsteps" (with Joe Orlando, featuring The Phantom Stranger, 1987)
- Superman Annual #11: "For the Man Who Has Everything" (with Dave Gibbons, 1985)
- Vigilante #17-18: "Father's Day" (with Jim Baikie, 1985)
- the 2006 printing expands to include:
- in 2008, The Killing Joke was printed in a 20th Anniversary hardcover, and this collection was revised again to remove that story
- in 2009, Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? Deluxe Edition Hardcover trade paperback was released. This also contains the Superman Annual #11 story "For the Man Who Has Everything as well the DC Comics Presents story #85: "The Jungle Line"
- Swamp Thing #20-58, 60-61, 63-64, Annual #2 (with Stephen R. Bissette, Rick Veitch and others, 1983-1987, collected in 6 trade paperbacks with the exception of #20):
- Saga of the Swamp Thing (collects #21-27, 1987, hardcover contains #20-27, 2009)
- Swamp Thing: Love and Death (collects #28-34 & Annual #2, 1990; hardcover 2009)
- Swamp Thing: The Curse (collects #35-42, 2000)
- Swamp Thing: A Murder of Crows (collects #43-50, 2001)
- Swamp Thing: Earth to Earth (collects #51-56, 2002)
- Swamp Thing: Reunion (collects #57-58, 60-61, 63-64, 2003)
Image/Awesome Comics
- Alan Moore's Complete WildC.A.T.S (with Travis Charest and others, collects WildC.A.T.S. #21-34 and #50, Image, 1995-1998, tpb, 392 pages, DC, August 2007, ISBN 1-4012-1545-9, Titan, September 2007, ISBN 1-84576-617-2), and also previously collected as:
- WildC.A.T.S: Homecoming (tpb, collects #21-27, Image, 1998, ISBN 1-58240-006-7, DC, 2000, ISBN 1-56389-582-X)
- WildC.A.T.S: Gang War (tpb, collects #28-34, DC, 1999, ISBN 1-56389-560-9)
- Mr. Monster’s Gal Friday...Kelly #3: "It’s Kelly’s Boyfriend... Mr. Monster – Shopping" (with Alan Smith and Pete Williamson, Image, 2000)
- Spawn:
- Spawn #8: "In Heaven" (with Todd McFarlane)
- Spawn #32 (short story, prequel to Blood Feud)
- Spawn: Blood Feud (with Tony Daniel and Kevin Conrad, Titan, 1999, ISBN 1-84023-117-3)
- Spawn #37: "The Freak" (dialogue only, plotted by Todd McFarlane)
- Supreme:
- The Story of the Year (with Joe Bennett, Rick Veitch, Keith Giffen, Dan Jurgens, Stephen Platt, Chris Sprouse and others, Image Comics/Awesome Entertainment, 1996-1998, tpb, collects #41-52A&B, Checker Book Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9710249-5-2)
- Note that 52A & 52B have short stories not collected in the trade
- The Return (with Chris Sprouse, Rick Veitch and others, Awesome Entertainment, 1999-2000, tpb, collects #53-56, and the Return #1-6, Checker Book Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9710249-6-0)
- Note that 54 has a back up story not collected in the trade
- Violator:
- Violator: "The World" (with Bart Sears (1 & 2) and Greg Capullo (3) (pencils) and Mark Pennington (inks), 3-issue mini-series, 1994)
- Violator vs. Badrock (4-issue mini-series, 1994; tpb, 1998, ISBN 1-887279-11-3)
- Alan Moore: Wild Worlds (trade paperback, 320 pages, Titan Books, July 2007, ISBN 1-84576-559-1, Wildstorm, May 2007, ISBN 1-4012-1379-0) collects:
- "Spawn/WildC.A.T.S." (4-issue-mini series)
- Majestic: "The Big Chill" (with Carlos D'Anda (pencils) and Richard Friend (inks) , in Wildstorm Spotlight #1, previously collected in Mr. Majestic, 176 pages, DC, 2002, ISBN 1-56389-659-1)
- Voodoo: Dancing in the Dark (4-issue mini-series, tpb, 1999, ISBN 1-56389-533-1)
- Deathblow by Blows (with Jim Baikie, 3-issue mini-series, 1999-2000)
- WildC.A.T.S #50: "Reincarnation" (short story)
America's Best Comics
- America's Best Comics 64 page Giant
- The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (with Kevin O'Neill):
- Book One (6 issue mini-series, 1999-2000; collected hardback edition, 2001; paperback, 2002; Absolute edition, 2003 DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
- Book Two (6 issue mini-series, 2002-2003; collected hardback edition, 2003; paperback, 2004, Absolute edition, 2005 DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
- Black Dossier (ABC, November 2007 (dated 2008), 208 pages, ISBN 1-4012-0306-X; Absolute edition, 2008 DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
- Century #1 - 1910 (2009 Top Shelf and Knockabout, 2009, ISBN 978-1-60309-000-1) [5]
- Century #2 - 1969 (2011 Top Shelf and Knockabout, 2011, ISBN 978-1-60309-006-3) [6]
- Promethea (with J.H. Williams III and others, 32 issues 1999-2005, collected in 5 volumes, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
- Volume 1
- Volume 2
- Volume 3
- Volume 4
- Volume 5
- Absolute Promethea (#1-12) 2009
- Terra Obscura (with Peter Hogan and Yanick Paquette):
- Volume 1 (6 issues, 2003-2004, tpb, 2004, Titan, ISBN 1-84023-860-7, DC Comics, ISBN 1-4012-0286-1)
- Volume 2 (6 issues, 2004-2005, tpb, 2005, Titan, ISBN 1-84576-193-6, America's Best Comics ISBN 1-4012-0622-0)
- Tomorrow Stories (with various artists, 12 issues, 1999-2002, collected in 2 volumes in hardback and paperback, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC, in 2006, there were two additional "specials", 64 page issues half-written by Alan Moore)
- Tom Strong:
- Tom Strong (with Chris Sprouse and others, 36 issue series, 1999-2006, collected in 6 paperback and hardback volumes, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
- Tom Strong's Terrific Tales (with Steve Moore, Art Adams and others, 12 issues, 2002-2005, collected in 2 volumes, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC, each issue has one eight-page story by Alan Moore)
Self-published and miscellaneous
- The Bowing Machine (art by Mark Beyer, in RAW volume 2 number 3, 1991)
- From Hell: The Compleat Scripts, 1994, full scripts of prologue and first three chapters
- Love doesn’t last forever (art by Rick Veitch, in Epic Illustrated #34, February 1986; reprinted in Heartburst and Other Pleasures, 2008, ISBN 0-9800206-0-3)
- Lux Brevis (art by John Totleben, in Kimota: The Miracleman Companion, 2001)
- Outbreaks of Violets (24 postcards with various European illustrators[9], designed by Rian Hughes, 1995 MTV Europe Music Awards booklet)
- The Riddle of the Recalcitrant Refuse (with Michael T. Gilbert, in Mr. Monster #3, 1985)
- Technical Vocabularies: Games for May (Poetry, with Steve Moore, Somnium Press, 2004; limited edition, 101 signed and numbered copies)
- The Worm -- "The longest comic strip in the world" (storyline, script by Jamie Delano and others, art by "a galaxy of greats"; Slab-O-Concrete publications in association with and in aid of The Cartoon Art Trust, 64 pages, 1999, ISBN 1-899866-37-X)
- Radioactive Man (fictional run in The Simpsons). Said that he turned the character into a "...heroin-addicted, jazz critic who [wasn't] radioactive..."
Text stories and prose
- "A Hypothetical Lizard" (in Liavek: Wizard's Row, 1987; The Year's Best Fantasy, 1989; Demons and Dreams, 1989; Words Without Pictures, 1990)
- "Alphabets of Desire" (limited print designed and lettered by Todd Klein, available only from Klein's website)
- "Brasso with Rosie" (in Knockabout Trial Special, 1984, reprinted in Honk 2, January 1987; art by Peter Bagge)
- "The Children's Hour" (in Now We Are Sick, 1991)
- "The Gun" (in Batman Annual, 1985, UK; illustrated by Garry Leach)
- "Here Comes the Jetsons" (in Sounds, April 4, 1981; illustrated by Moore)
- "I was Superman's Double" (in Superman Annual, 1985, UK; illustrated by Bob Wakelin)
- "Light of Thy Countenance" (in Forbidden Acts, October 1995)
- "Mystery and Abomination" (in Sounds, August 8, 1981; illustrated by Moore)
- Night Raven: "The Cure" (in Marvel Super-Heroes #390-391, 1982; illustrated by Mick Austin and Paul Neary)
- Night Raven: "White Hopes..." (in Marvel Super-Heroes #392-393, 1983; illustrated by Paul Neary)
- Night Raven: "Sadie’s Story" (in M.S.H. #394-395, 1983; illustrated by Paul Neary)
- Night Raven: "Anaesthetic" (in The Daredevils #6, 1983; illustrated by David Lloyd)
- Night Raven: "Snow Queen" (in The Daredevils #7-10, 1983; illustrated by Alan Davis)
- "Protected Species" (Superman story in The Superheroes Annual, 1984; illustrated by Bryan Talbot)
- "Recognition" (in Dust: A Creation Book Reader)
- "Sawdust Memories" (in Knave, December 1984)
- "The Serpent and the Sword" (in Tales of Midnight Kosovo Refugee Benefit Comic, 1999; illustrated by Michael Fiamanya)
- "The Sinister Ducks" (2 pages in Critters #23, 1988)
- "Terror Couple Kill Telegram Sam In The Flat Field" (in Sounds, February 14, 1982, the title is a reference to the band Bauhaus; illustrated by Moore)
- "To The Humfo" (in Weird Windows #1, 1970)
- "Travel Guide for Agoraphobics" (in Honk 4, March 1987; illustrated by Eddie Campbell)
- "Zaman's Hill" (in Dust: A Creation Book Reader, 1996)
Novels and illustrated books
- Voice of the Fire, 1996, Victor Gollancz; 1997, Orion Books; republished 2003, Top Shelf Productions. This new edition features a dust jacket designed by Chip Kidd, an introduction by Neil Gaiman and thirteen color plates by José Villarrubia. Paperback edition released July 15 2009, Top Shelf Productions.
- The Mirror of Love, 2003, Top Shelf Productions. A new version of his story for AARGH (Artists Against Rampant Government Homophobia). This edition features an introduction by David Drake and forty-one color illustrations by José Villarrubia.
- 25,000 Years of Erotic Freedom, 2009, Abrams. Illustrating the essay from Arthur magazine. ISBN 0-8109-4846-X.
Non-fiction
As well as his run on Captain Britain in The Daredevils Moore contributed text Night Raven stories, fanzine reviews and a number of long articles (writing up to 24 pages out of the 54, for example in issue #5). The non-fiction pieces include:
- "The Importance of Being Frank" (The Daredevils #1-2, about Frank Miller, 1983) [10]
- "Invisible Girls and Phantom Ladies" (The Daredevils #4-6, about sexism in comics, 1983)
- "O Superman: Music & comics" (The Daredevils #5, 1983)
Other work includes:
- "C.B.? - That's a Big Ten-Four!" and "Bear's Monkey Business" in B.J. and the Bear Annual 1982 (1981), article and illustrations
- Scooby Doo Annual 1982, feature about haunted houses
- "A Short History of Britain" (in Marvel Superheroes #389, 1982)
- "Alan Moore's Writing for Comics", Avatar Press, (published previously in Fantasy Advertiser 92-95, August 1985-February 1986 and The Comics Journal 119-121, 1988)
- "Comments on Crumb" (in Blab #3, 1988)
- Comics Forum 4, 1993, transcript of a lecture discussing 1963, feminism, pornography and Image comics
- Comics Journal #167, 1994, tribute to Jack Kirby
- "Correspondence: From Hell", 1997, letters between Moore and Dave Sim in Cerebus #217-220; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore.
- Beyond our Ken, 2002, review of works by Kenneth Grant, published at free magazine, KAOS issue 14
- Unearthing, 2006, about Steve Moore, in London: City of Disappearances, edited by Iain Sinclair, hardcover ISBN 0-241-14299-7, paperback ISBN 0-14-101948-4.[11]
- "Bog Venus Versus Nazi Cock-Ring: Some Thoughts Concerning Pornography" (cached), Arthur Magazine, Vol 1, No 25, November 2006
- Dodgem Logic (Kitchen Sink Press, November 2009)[12]
Introductions to work by others
Audio recordings
- March of the Sinister Ducks b/w Old Gangsters Never Die (Single recorded by The Sinister Ducks, 1983)
- Hexentexts, 1994, Codex, Moore made one track and drew the cover
- The Birth Caul, 1996, D.O.R.; adapted for comics by Eddie Campbell, 1999, Eddie Campbell Comics
- The Moon and Serpent Grand Egyptian Theatre of Marvels, 1996, Cleopatra
- Brought to Light, 1998, Codex Books
- The Highbury Working, 2000, RE
- Angel Passage, 2002, RE
- Snakes and Ladders, 2003, RE; adapted for comics by Eddie Campbell, 2001, Eddie Campbell Comics
- Unearthing, 2010
Adaptations of Moore works in other media
Comics
- Alan Moore's Songbook (1998) a collection of song adaptations published in Negative Burn #10-14, 16-19, 25-26, 28, 35.
- Negative Burn #9 and #37, two more song adaptations.
- Alan Moore's The Courtyard, 2 issues (2003), Avatar Press; story by Moore, adapted for comics by Antony Johnston with artwork by Jacen Burrows. Collected into softcover and hardcover editions by Avatar Press (2004).
- Alan Moore's The Courtyard Companion (2004), Avatar Press; reprints Antony Johnston's script for Alan Moore's The Courtyard with annotations by NG Christakos, Moore's original short story (from which the series was adapted), new pinups/art by Jacen Burrows, and a new essay by Antony Johnson.
- Alan Moore's The Courtyard (Color Edition) (Avatar Press, 56 pages, Mar 11 2009) This is a colored version to the 2003 release.
- Alan Moore's Hypothetical Lizard, 4 issues (2005), Avatar Press. Collected in 2007. Written as a novella, adapted by Antony Johnston (writer) and Lorenzo Lorente (artist)
- Alan Moore's Magic Words (2002), Avatar Press; song lyrics, poems and other writings by Moore, adapted for comics by various artists, with a cover by Juan José Ryp
- Another Suburban Romance (2003), Avatar Press; play by Moore, adapted for comics by Antony Johnston and Juan José Ryp
- A Disease of Language (adapted by Eddie Campbell, from "The Birth Caul" and "Snakes and Ladders" with interview from Egomania Magazine, Knockabout Comics, hardcover, 160 pages, 2006, ISBN 0-86166-153-2) previously released as:
- Light of Thy Countenance (2009), Avatar Press, poem by Moore, adapted for comics by Antony Johnston with artwork by Felipe Massafera, 48 page, graphic novella, paperback January 2009 (ISBN 1-59291-062-9), hardcover, June 2009 (ISBN 1-59291-063-7)[8]
Films
- Ragnarok, 1982, a British mostly-animated sci-fi adventure, with story/script by Moore. (Character designed by Bryan Talbot.)[13]
- Fashion Beast, a 1988 unproduced screenplay by Moore for Sex Pistols manager Malcolm McLaren.
- The Return of Swamp Thing, 1989, directed by Jim Wynorski and partially inspired by Moore's comics run
- From Hell, 2001, adaptation directed by the Hughes Brothers
- The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, 2003, adaptation directed by Stephen Norrington
- Constantine, 2005, based on the character John Constantine, created by Moore with Steve Bissette, John Totleben and Rick Veitch in Swamp Thing
- V For Vendetta, 2006, adaptation written by the Wachowski brothers; directed by James McTeigue (Moore had his name removed from the film, which is credited to "Based on the graphic novel illustrated by David Lloyd")
- Watchmen, 2009, adaptation written by David Hayter and Alex Tse; directed by Zack Snyder (Moore refused to be credited)
Television
Works about Alan Moore
There have been numerous works (books, films and academic studies) examining Moore and his output.
Books
- Alan Moore The Pocket Essentials (by Lance Parkin, 95 pages, Pocket Essentials, 2001, ISBN 978-1-903047-70-5)
- Kimota! The Miracleman Companion (by George Khoury, 148 pages, TwoMorrows Publishing, 2001, ISBN 978-1-893905-11-5) [14]
- Alan Moore: Portrait of an Extraordinary Gentleman (by Gary Spencer Millidge and Smoky Man, 352 pages, Abiogenesis, 2003, ISBN 978-0-946790-06-7)
- The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore (by George Khoury, 224 pages, TwoMorrows Publishing, 2003, ISBN 978-1-893905-24-5) [15]
- Heroes & Monsters: The Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (by Jess Nevins, paperback, 239 pages, MonkeyBrain, 2003, ISBN 1-932265-04-X, Titan Books, 2006, ISBN 1-84576-316-5) [16]
- Alan Moore Spells It Out (by Bill Baker, 80 pages, Airwave Publishing , 2005, ISBN 978-0-9724805-7-4)
- A Blazing World: The Unofficial Companion to the Second League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (by Jess Nevins, paperback, 240 pages, MonkeyBrain, 2004, ISBN 1-932265-10-4, Titan Books, 2006, ISBN 1-84576-317-3) [17]
- Alan Moore's Exit Interview (by Bill Baker, Airwave Publishing, August 2007, ISBN 978-0-9724805-9-8)
- Impossible Territories: An Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen The Black Dossier (by Jess Nevins, paperback, 304 pages, MonkeyBrain, forthcoming July 2008, ISBN 1-932265-24-4)
- The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore - Indispensable Edition (by George Khoury, 240 pages, TwoMorrows Publishing, 2009, ISBN 978-1-60549-009-0)
- Alan Moore: Comics as Performance, Fiction as Scalpel' by Annalisa Di Liddo, 212 pages, University Press of Mississippi, 2009, ISBN 978-1-60473-213-9
Films
Notes
References
External links