Margins
Strangers in Paradise, Volume 9 book cover
Strangers in Paradise, Volume 9
My Child Of Rage
2001
First Published
4.40
Average Rating
154
Number of Pages

Part of Series

Violence. She has been running from it for seven long years. Violence. She has seen what these people are capable of. Violence. She knows they will never stop looking for her. Violence. And now they've found her. Child of Rage is the conclusion to the saga of Katina Choovanski (Katchoo)'s flight from her own violent past, from a time spent with power junkies and murderous psychopaths, where decency was a weakness and human lives were handled with reckless abandon. Now the running is over. The huntred becomes the hunted when Katina turns the tables and stalker her own demons in a desperate attempt to reclaim her life, and the lives of her gentle friends, David and Francine. Child of Rage is the ninth collection in the Eisner Award-winning comic boko seris, Strangers in Paradise. Published in nine languages, SiP is recognized around the world as the comic book for people who don't read comics, an illustrated contemporary novel about love and friendship. Collects Abstract comic 31-32, 34-38

Avg Rating
4.40
Number of Ratings
471
5 STARS
55%
4 STARS
32%
3 STARS
11%
2 STARS
2%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Terry Moore
Terry Moore
Author · 36 books

Following the examples of independent comic creators such as Dave Sim and Jeff Smith, he decided to publish Strangers in Paradise himself through his own Houston-based "Abstract Studios" imprint, and has frequently mentioned a desire to do a syndicated cartoon strip in the authors notes at the back of the Strangers in Paradise collection books. He has also mentioned his greatest career influence is Peanuts' Charles Schulz.[1] Some of Moore's strip work can additionally be found in his Paradise, Too! publications. His work has won him recognition in the comics industry, including receiving the Eisner Award for Best Serialized Story in 1996 for Strangers in Paradise #1-8, which was collected in the trade paperback "I Dream of You". It was announced on June 15th, 2007 that Moore would be taking over for Sean McKeever as writer of Marvel Comics' Spider-Man Loves Mary Jane series starting with a new issue #1. On July 27th, Marvel announced that Moore would also take over for Joss Whedon as writer of Marvel's Runaways.[2] On November 19th, 2007 Terry Moore announced in his blog that his new self-published series would be named Echo and its first issue would appear on March 5th, 2008.[3]

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