Collecting the smash-hit miniseries that launched AHOY Comics! On dark, gritty Earth-Omega, masked vigilante Dragonfly punishes evil maniacs and evades corrupt authorities. On sun-splashed Earth-Alpha, costumed crook-catcher Dragonflyman upholds the letter of the law. Now they're trapped on each other's worlds, where even the good guys don't share their values! This volume also collects all the original Stinger and Dragonflyman backup stories, plus extra behind-the-scenes features.
Collecting the smash-hit miniseries that launched AHOY Comics! On dark, gritty Earth-Omega, masked vigilante Dragonfly punishes evil maniacs and evades corrupt authorities. On sun-splashed Earth-Alpha, costumed crook-catcher Dragonflyman upholds the letter of the law. Now they're trapped on each other's worlds, where even the good guys don't share their values! This volume also collects all the original Stinger and Dragonflyman backup stories, plus extra behind-the-scenes features.
Tom Peyer - AHOY Comics' editor-in-chief's long, curly hair was declared "best in comics" by the influential social media account
Comics In The Golden Age. He has written such comics as
Penultiman, Hashtag: Danger, High Heaven, Legion of Super-Heroes, Hourman, and
Marvel Team-Up. One of the original editors of DC Comics' Vertigo imprint, today he writes and edits AHOY comics from a house across from a cemetery in a leafy suburb of Syracuse, NY.
Paul is a co-founder of
The Seattle Review of Books. He has written for
The Progressive, Newsweek, Re/Code, the Utne Reader, the Los Angeles Times, the Seattle Times, the New York Observer, and many North American alternative weeklies. Paul has worked in the book business for two decades, starting as a bookseller (originally at Borders Books and Music, then at Boston's grand old Brattle Bookshop and Seattle's own Elliott Bay Book Company) and then becoming a literary critic. Formerly the books editor for
The Stranger, Paul is now a fellow at Civic Ventures, a public policy incubator based out of Seattle.
A recipient of the 2011 Inkpot Award for outstanding achievement in Comic Art, industry veteran Jamal Igle is the writer/artist/creator of
Molly Danger for Action Lab Entertainment; the co-creator of
Venture with writer Jay Faerber; the artist of the series
Black from Black Mask Studios; the artist for
Supergirl; the artist for
Dudley Datson (with writer Scott Snyder) from Dark Horse/comiXology; and the penciler of AHOY Comics'
THE WRONG EARTH.
Jamal's detailed pencils have graced books as varied as
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, the all-ages action miniseries
Race Against Time, and mainstream hits such as
G.I.Joe, Iron Man, Spider- Man and
Green Lantern. Jamal has penciled popular runs on
Firestorm the Nuclear Man, Nightwing, Tangent: Superman's Reign, Superman, Supergirl, and
Zatanna for DC Comics;
Noble Causes for Image Comics;
New Warriors for Marvel Comics; and
The Wrong Earth for AHOY.
He's acted on the small screen, done voiceovers for commercials, packaged books for Scholastic, and drawn storyboards for
Roughnecks: Starship Trooper Chronicles and
Max Steel: MX1 for Sony Animation. Jamal is also a popular guest lecturer on the subjects of comics and animation.
Juan Castro, an inker and illustrator from Tijuana, Mexico, has been in the comics industry for over 10 years. He has worked on such titles as
Transformers, GI Joe, Halo: Escalation, Arrow, Aquaman, Grayson, Batgirl, Sensation Comics Featuring Wonder Woman, and many more. He has been nominated for three Inkwell Awards.
Frank Cammuso is the Chief Creative Officer of AHOY Comics. He also created the graphic novel series
Knights of the Lunch Table from Graphix/Scholastic. Frank drew the comic
Otto's Orange Day and
Otto's Backwards Day for Toon-Books. He also wrote and drew his self-published graphic novel
Max Hamm Fairy Tale Detective, for which he received an Eisner nomination.
Frank is the former award-winning political cartoonist for
The Post-Standard newspaper in Syracuse, NY. His cartoons have been reprinted in
The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Today and
Newsweek.
He has written fiction and satire with his good friend Hart Seely. Their work has appeared in
The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Village Voice, Slate, and on National Public Radio. He's the co-author of
2007-Eleven and Other American Comedies.