Thursday, December 24th
Christmas Eve
11am – 5pm
Friday, December 25th
Christmas Day, closed!
Thursday, December 31st
New Year’s Eve
11am – 5pm
Friday, January 1st
New Year’s Day, closed!
Thursday, December 24th
Christmas Eve
11am – 5pm
Friday, December 25th
Christmas Day, closed!
Thursday, December 31st
New Year’s Eve
11am – 5pm
Friday, January 1st
New Year’s Day, closed!
Jhonen Vasquez, Eric Trueheart, Megan Lawton, and Rikki Simons will be here on Saturday, November 19th from 2 – 4pm!
We will have an Local Comic Shop Day exclusive Invader Zim special, don’t miss out.
Join us for a release party for Steven Weissman’s new book, Looking For America’s Dog! Mr. Dash Shaw will also be here with copies of his latest, Cosplayers.
So much fun in one place! Almost… too much fun.
Sci-fi comics’ hottest trio are coming to SHQ to celebrate the release of their new books!
Malachi Ward and Matt Sheean will be here for Ancestor and Simon Joy for Habitat. Malachi and Matt will have original pages and art for sale!
Stop by, pick up some sweet new reading material, and enjoy things gettin’ weird.
Ted Stearn is dropping by SHQ on Friday, October 21st at 7pm for the release of his latest Fuzz & Pluck book,The Moolah Tree! Come have a drink, meet the man, and get your copy signed!
As Simpsons creator Matt Groening says, “This epic tale of a hapless li’l bear and his defeathered friend is why I love comics. All hail the peculiar Fuzz and Pluck and their creator, Ted Stearn!”
Pluck, an irritable and featherless rooster, and his best pal, the awkwardly unsocialized but lovable teddy bear known as Fuzz, met long ago in a garbage truck. A tenuous if decidedly co-dependent friendship between Fuzz & Pluck followed, sending them on a series of not-so-heroic adventures. But now, we find them on a ramshackle barge, slowly drifting out to sea. How did they get there? How will they escape? The answer lies in the book’s title, but the true fun is in the Picaresque and often Swiftian adbsurdities that our heroes find themselves in along the way. Ted Stearn’s work is rich with pathos, wit, farce, existentialism and drama. Sometimes cruel but always funny, like a Winnie the Pooh for adults. – Fantagraphics