Fantagraphics
RIP OFF PRESS
Fantagraphics (1976-present)
Fantagraphics (previously Fantagraphics Books) is an American publisher of alternative comics, classic comic strip anthologies, manga, magazines, graphic novels, and the erotic Eros Comix imprint.
Fantagraphics was founded in 1976 by Gary Groth and Michael Catron in College Park, Maryland. The company took over an adzine named The Nostalgia Journal, which it renamed The Comics Journal. As comics journalist (and former Fantagraphics employee) Michael Dean writes, “the publisher has alternated between flourishing and nearly perishing over the years.”[4] Kim Thompson joined the company in 1977, using his inheritance to keep the company afloat as he became co-owner.
The company moved from Washington, D.C. to Stamford, Connecticut, to Los Angeles over its early years, before settling in Seattle in 1989. Beginning in 1981 Fantagraphics (under its Redbeard imprint) published Amazing Heroes, a magazine which examined comics from a hobbyist’s point of view, as another income stream to supplement The Comics Journal. Amazing Heroes ran for 204 issues (plus a number of specials and annuals), folding with its July 1992 issue.
Beginning in 1979, Fantagraphics began publishing comics, starting with Jay Disbrow’s The Flames of Gyro. They gained wider recognition in 1982 by publishing the Hernandez brothers’ Love and Rockets, and moved on to such critically acclaimed and award-winning series as Acme Novelty Library, Eightball, and Hate. The company moved operations to Greater Los Angeles in 1984. Catron acted as Fantagraphics’ co-publisher until 1985 (also handling advertising and circulation for The Comics Journal from 1982 to 1985), when he left the company.