FutureQuake

British small press comic book
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Cover to FutureQuake issue 7, by Oliver Redding

FutureQuake was a British small press comic book founded by Arthur Wyatt, and later edited by Richmond Clements, David Evans and Owen Watts. Dedicated to showcasing work by new writers and artists, they published mostly self-contained comic stories, generally of 5 pages or less and usually of a sci-fi/fantasy/horror bent.

Under their FutureQuake Press imprint (FQP) they also published the Japanese Manga-influenced anthology MangaQuake and the horror comic Something Wicked. FQP also published other comics, and took over Dogbreath, the Strontium Dog fanzine and Zarjaz, the general 2000 AD fanzine.

39 issues of FutureQuake were published until publication went on hiatus following the death of David Evans in May 2021.

Contributors

FutureQuake played host to a wide range of contributors, including first time writers and artists, up-and-coming small press personalities and established creators. Issues featured the likes of Alan Grant, Arthur Ranson, Al Ewing, Stewart McKenny, PJ Holden, Arthur Wyatt, Inaki Miranda & Eva de la Cruz, Adrian Bamforth, Matt Timson, Michael Molcher, Paul Scott and Charlie Adlard.

Staff

The FutureQuake editorial team at the Bristol Comic Expo 2006. From left to right: Richmond Clements, Edward Berridge and David Evans.

In 2021, FutureQuake staff included art/commissioning editor Dave Evans, script editor Richmond Clements, editor Owen Watts, and webmaster Barny Shergold.

Previous members include founder and sole editor for issues 1-3 Arthur Wyatt, script editor James Mackay, and script editor Edward Berridge.

FutureQuake Press output

Though FutureQuake was ostensibly open to any form of submission from anyone who chose to do so, there were certain forms and themes to which the comic adheres. As an anthology, the stories often featured a moralistic 'twist' at the end, much in the same style as EC Comics's science fiction and horror comics like Weird Science and The Vault of Horror, as well as 2000 AD's Future Shocks. However, the stories were not necessarily bound by this.

Issues

Reviews

Awards

Fanzine of the Month in SFX for FutureQuake #5

MangaQuake

MangaQuake moves away from the FutureQuake format, opting instead for longer stories less reliant on the narrative structure of the 'twist', clearly influenced by the Japanese manga comics form.

Issues

Reviews

Awards

Fanzine of the Month in SFX for MangaQuake #2

Something Wicked

Something Wicked was the third title launched. The horror comic directly parallels and references the horror titles published by EC Comics and those published by Atlas during the 1950s.

Issues

There have been ten issues so far.[when?]

Reviews

Awards

Fanzine of the Month in SFX.

Others

They have published or agreed to take over publishing a number of titles all of which are not part of the core FQP titles (above). As well as their personal projects, these include:

Other press coverage

Magazine articles:

Awards

See also

References

  1. ^ The Eagle Awards 2006 Archived May 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Connelly, Brendon (29 October 2010). "Full Results Of The 2010 Eagle Awards". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  3. ^ Johnston, Rich (14 March 2011). "Eagle Awards Nominations Announced". Bleeding Cool. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  4. ^ Eagle Awards Archived 2011-02-05 at the Wayback Machine

External links