Sequential Art

Sequential art refers to the art form of using a train of images deployed in sequence to tell a story or convey information. The best-known examples of sequential art are comics, graphic novels, and manga.

See also the compound shelves:
* graphic novels, comics, and manga
* graphic novels and comics
* graphic novels and manga
* comics and manga
...more

New Releases Tagged "Sequential Art"

The Marble Queen
Nothing Special, Vol. 1: Through the Elder Woods
The Baker and the Bard
Waverider (Amulet #9)
ダンジョン飯 13 [Dungeon Meshi 13] (Delicious in Dungeon, #13)
ダンジョン飯 9 [Dungeon Meshi 9] (Delicious in Dungeon, #9)
ダンジョン飯 7 [Dungeon Meshi 7] (Delicious in Dungeon, #7)
ダンジョン飯 11 [Dungeon Meshi 11] (Delicious in Dungeon, #11)
ダンジョン飯 10 [Dungeon Meshi 10] (Delicious in Dungeon, #10)
呪術廻戦 24 (Jujutsu Kaisen, #24)
Delicious in Dungeon, Vol. 12
It's Lonely at the Centre of the Earth
The Baker and the Bard
La Nouvelle(s) (Elles, #1)
Kristy and the Snobs: A Graphic Novel (The Baby-Sitters Club Graphic Novels #10)
The Many Deaths of Laila Starr
Roll Call (Dungeons & Dragons: Dungeon Club, #1)
Mary Anne's Bad Luck Mystery: A Graphic Novel (The Baby-Sitters Club Graphic Novels #13)
Jessi's Secret Language: A Graphic Novel (The Baby-Sitters Club Graphic Novels #12)
Watchmen
Saga, Volume 1
The Sandman, Vol. 1: Preludes & Nocturnes
V for Vendetta
Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic
The Complete Maus
Nimona
Heartstopper: Volume One (Heartstopper, #1)
Blankets
Saga, Volume 2
The Complete Persepolis
Saga, Volume 3
The Sandman, Vol. 2: The Doll's House
Saga, Volume 4
Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood (Persepolis, #1)

DC Comics is the present day publisher of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and other well-known superheroes. DC is the amalgamation of two different publishing concerns: National Comics, which produced Superman and Batman, and sister company All-American Comics, which produced Wonder Woman, Flash, and Green Lantern. The two companies merged in 1944 to form National Periodical Publications, whose comic books bore the “Superman-DC” logo. The publisher was known colloquially as “DC,” which it later ...more
Mike Madrid, The Supergirls: Fashion, Feminism, Fantasy, and the History of Comic Book Heroines

Trina Robbins
The storyline also changed with the times, and went from Marla Drake held captive by Nazis in the war years, to mad scientists, gangsters and kidnapping after the war. Miss Fury's adventures were part pulp, part film noir. ...more
Trina Robbins, Women And The Comics

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Hablemos de BD Grupo de discusión de Hablemos de BD, espacio para compatir y departir sobre los cómics à la fra…more
8 members, last active 8 years ago
I Read Comic Books This is the official Goodreads group for the I Read Comic Books podcast. We're open to everyone …more
1,206 members, last active a day ago
All types of sequential art - both superheroes and non-superheroes, but mostly marvel and dc com…more
1 member, last active 5 years ago
Christian Graphic Novels A group for fans of Christian Graphic Novels—Sequential Art, Manga, and Comics.
5 members, last active 5 months ago