![]() In addition to making great comics, Moore and his artists seemed set on mixing in as many pop culture references as possible into every page of these books and none moreso than Top 10, a world in which every kind of superhero, sci-fi, pulp and fantasy character have come together in one place to be policed by the super-powered cops of Neopolis. ![]() He launched books like League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Promethea, Tom Strong and Top 10. That all changed in 1999 with the launch of WildStorm imprint America’s Best Comics. WildC.A.T.S.? Spawn? Supreme? Some of those books are pretty great, but they don’t seem like the kind of books a writer like Moore should be working on. Once you hit the 9’0s though, it looks like he was slumming it by working on random Image books and collaborating with Rob Liefeld. That’s why it’s funny to look through his comicography and see mostly random British books mixed in with his crazy popular ’80s classics. Even if Watchmen isn’t your cup of Earl Grey, you’ve probably dug The Killing Joke or Saga of the Swamp Thing, V For Vendetta or For the Man Who Has Everything. ![]() ![]() ?Let’s face it, pretty much everyone loves something Alan Moore’s written. ![]()
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