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Swamp Thing (comic book)

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1498:#129 was the first issue to carry the Vertigo logo on the cover. Collins wrapped up her run by having the Swamp Thing promise Abby that he will never leave her side. He then breaks his promise and creates a secret double to stay and protect Abby as he goes into the Green during an environmental crisis. Abby feels betrayed and leaves a despondent Swamp Thing behind. He retreats into the Green, and when Lady Jane reaches out to him, it sparks into a love affair. Arcane returns and arranges an abduction of Abby to force Tefe to use her powers to grow him a healthy body. The ongoing stress from constant attacks and dealing with Tefe's powers leads to Abby rejecting Tefe and eventually leaving town with her new boyfriend. Fearing for Tefe's safety, Lady Jane betrays the Swamp Thing and kidnaps Tefe into the Green, so that she can be trained by the Parliament of Trees. 1244:. Luthor's weapon destroyed the Swamp Thing's psychic connection with the Earth, whilst the Swamp Thing's body was destroyed by napalm. Unable to regrow a new Earthly body, the Swamp Thing was presumed dead. However, the Swamp Thing's consciousness had instead fled to outer space, in search of a planet that was amenable to his new psychic wavelength. In the first tale of the Swamp Thing's extraterrestrial activities ("My Blue Heaven", #56), the Swamp Thing came upon a planet colored entirely in shades of blue, and on which there was no intelligent life. In this particularly popular issue, the Swamp Thing populated this lonely blue planet with mindless plant replicas of Abby and other reminders of his lost Earth. 1582:
Swamp Thing from destroying humanity so that the Parliament Elementals could claim control over Earth. In the end, the Swamp Thing unites all of the Elemental Parliaments into one collective hive mind with him in control of it. Achieving a global sense of consciousness, the Swamp Thing sees through the worldview of every living thing upon the planet and find the good and the potential in even his worst enemy. This is shown most notably with the final resurrection of Anton Arcane who, during his most recent stay in Hell, befriended a priest that was unfairly condemned to Hell and in the process renounced evil and became a born-again Christian.
1808:. This Swamp Thing informs Holland that he is a unique individual who would have become a legendary warrior for the Parliament and the Green, the essence of all plant life. When Holland died, the Parliament created a creature which thought it was him as a substitute. Holland rebuffs the creature's entreaties that he assume the mantle of the Swamp Thing. Next, he is approached by Abigail Arcane, the former lover of the Swamp Thing. She enlists him to help save her half-brother William Arcane, before he becomes the champion of the Rot, the force of decay, once known as the Swamp Thing's archenemy, 794:#23, Alec finally regains his humanity and while the creature was on the cover of the 24th and final issue of the series (albeit transforming into human), Holland appeared as human throughout the interior story. The cover illustration showed a yellow muscular creature, Thrudvang, beating up the Swamp Thing; the interior showed Holland imagining the Swamp Thing beating up Thrudvang, in similar positions but with roles reversedβ€”the issue itself depicting Holland and his new love interest (and his brother's research assistant) running away from Thrudvang. A battle between the Swamp Thing and 1494:, along with the Sunderland Corporation, as foils for the Swamp Thing. Collins also moved the series, which had focused on the Swamp Thing's time travel adventures and explorations into other-dimensional realms, back to normal society by having the Swamp Thing and Abby set up shop in southern Louisiana and attempt to live a normal life with friends and family, culminating in the introduction of the elemental babysitter Lady Jane into the supporting cast. It was during her run that DC officially launched the Vertigo imprint and 1825:
eventually becomes the new Avatar of the Green after the Swamp Thing chooses not to kill him. Holland manages to escape from the Green by becoming one of the Parliament of Trees and grabbing Woodrue to tap into the power of the Avatar. He manages to convince the Parliament that he is better by making all plant life, including the algae in the oceans and seas, to become hyperactive and produce massive amounts of oxygen, which makes all other beings feel lazier. The Parliament agrees and makes him the Avatar once more.
1733:. As of issue #15, botany professor Jordan Schiller, an influential man from Alec Holland's past, has been summoned to the swamp by strange visions and memories, apparently manipulated by this rogue consciousness. The full purpose for this manipulation was revealed in issues #21–24. In sacrificing his power, the Swamp Thing lost much of his Alec Holland personality. Now he is restored to his proper station and power and has resumed his romantic relationship with Abby, as of issue #25. Beginning with issue #21 onward, 25: 1077:) free rein to revamp the title and the character as he saw fit. Moore reconfigured the Swamp Thing's origin to make him a true monster as opposed to a human transformed into a monster. In his first issue, he swept aside the supporting cast Pasko had introduced in his year-and-a-half run as writer, and brought the Sunderland Corporation (a villainous group out to gain the secrets of Alec Holland's research) to the forefront, as they hunted down the Swamp Thing and "killed" him in a hail of bullets. 969:
his decision to stop working for the government in order to marry Abigail. The electroshock treatments caused permanent brain damage for Matt, resulting in him being unable to work and, ironically, granting him psychic ability in the form of being able to create lifelike mental illusions. Pasko also resurrected Anton Arcane, now a grotesque half-human/half-insect cyborg with an army of insectoid Un-Men who ultimately cannibalized their creator after the Swamp Thing was forced to kill Arcane.
1176:, where the Swamp Thing produces a fruit and the ingestion of the fruit makes Abby to see the Swamp Thing as a handsome man, and then they make love). The controversial relationship between a plant and a human would culminate in Abby being arrested later for breaking the laws of nature and conducting a sexual relationship with a nonhuman. Abby ultimately fled to Gotham City, leading to a story arc featuring the fourth encounter between the Swamp Thing and the 1812:. While traveling cross-country, Holland and Arcane find themselves increasingly attracted to each other. After confronting William, who has already become a servant of the Rot, Abigail is captured and taken away. At the same time, the Parliament of Trees comes under attack and is about to be destroyed. Realizing his mistake, Holland accepts the mantle of the Swamp Thing as the only way to save Abigail and prevent the Rot from triumphing. 3665:#20, which was not reprinted until 2009) from #21-64 was first collected in the U.K. in the late 1980s as a series of black and white trade paperbacks. Because DC had been reluctant to reprint the complete Moore run, these trades became highly popular amongst fans of the series, a popularity which was further fueled by them not being distributed in the U.S. Release of hardcover reprints began in 2009, with the first volume including 1696:. Even though she was chronologically 11–12, the series had Tefe aged into the body of an 18-year-old with a mindwipe to try to control her darker impulses, brought about by her exposure to the Parliament of Trees. Due to the circumstances under which she was conceived (the Swamp Thing, possessing John Constantine, was not aware he was given a blood transfusion by a demon), she held power over both plants and flesh. 3710:"You can't kill a vegetable by shooting it through the head./You see, throughout his miserable existence, the only thing that could have kept him sane was the hope that he might one day regain his humanity...the knowledge that under all that slime he was still Alec Holland. But if he's read my notes he'll know that just isn't true. He isn't Alec Holland. He never will be Alec Holland. He never 998: 1542:. As Collins had destroyed the status quo of the series, Morrison sought to shake the book up with a four-part storyline which had the Swamp Thing plunged into a nightmarish dream world scenario, where he was split into two separate beings: Alec Holland and the Swamp Thing, which was now a mindless being of pure destruction. 2957: 1214:#85. The storyline began with the Swamp Thing's old body being completely destroyed, and growing a new one. Constantine encourages the Swamp Thing to use the power for transportation, and the Swamp Thing learns to do so with increasing speed. The "American Gothic" storyline ended with a crossover with 1815:
Issues #8 and 9 were drawn by Yanick Paquette and Marco Rudy. Issue #10 was drawn by Francesco Francavilla, and #11 by Marco Rudy. Issue #12, which featured Animal Man, was a collaborative effort between Scott Snyder, Jeff Lemire, Marco Rudy, Dan Green, and Andy Owens. Issue #13 subsequently returned
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After the conclusion of Scott Snyder's tenure on the series, Charles Soule took over with issue #19. His run on the series has the Swamp Thing fighting with Jason Woodrue, now known as the Seeder in the new continuity, who gained power over the Green after saving Alec Holland in the past. The Seeder
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Millar's final arc for the series had the Swamp Thing, due to his success in beating the other Elemental Parliament Champions, become godlike and unapproachable by mortals, even as his estranged wife Abby returned to try to reconcile with him. With help from John Constantine, Abby sought to keep the
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The Swamp Thing went catatonic due to the shock of discovering what he really was, after having killed Sunderland in a fit of rage and escaped deep into the Green. Woodrue went insane after attempting to connect to the Green through the Swamp Thing, and Abby had to revive the Swamp Thing in order to
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on the Swamp Thing's body and discover it was only superficially human, its organs little more than crude, nonfunctional, vegetable-based imitations of their human counterparts, indicating that the Swamp Thing could never have been human. The Swamp Thing was not Alec Holland, but only believed it to
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team-up shortly before he began the series, resurrected plotlines from the original series. Abigail Arcane and Matt Cable were brought back and shown to be married, though this development had a darker side: Cable had been tortured via repeated electroshock treatments by his black-ops superiors over
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In issue #6, editor Len Wein declared, in response to a published letter, that Alec never had a brother and that every Swamp Thing series story after issue #21 of the original series never happened. The letter, however, questioned why the Swamp Thing had reverted, which had already been explained in
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series had been collected in trade paperbacks or reprint comics, primarily due to the popularity of Wrightson's artwork, stopping rather than concluding the story arc. Wein ended his run as writer by having the Swamp Thing reveal his identity to Matt Cable and ultimately avenging the death of his
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Millar then took over from Morrison with issue #144, and launched what was initially conceived as an ambitious 25-part storyline where the Swamp Thing would be forced to go upon a series of "trials" against rival elemental forces. This led to a series of lengthy storylines by Millar as the Swamp
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As sales figures plummeted towards the end of the series, the writers attempted to revive interest by introducing fantasy creatures, sci-fi aliens, and even Alec Holland's brother, Edward (a plot point that was never referred to or even mentioned again by later writers), into the picture.
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stories, the Parliament of Trees, having believed the Swamp Thing dead, grew a Sprout to replace him. Unwilling to sacrifice an innocent life, he convinced them that he would take the Sprout as his own child, and eventually impregnated Abby (now his wife) with it by possessing
819:(though they were unaware of Deadman's presence), a fact that would confirm the post-Wein Swamp Thing stories existence in DC Universe continuity years later when Deadman and the Swamp Thing met again during Alan Moore's run as writer. The Swamp Thing also appeared with the 1594:; due to its destruction some time before , Mars lamented Oa could not witness Earth's induction). This was the most significant change made to the character since Moore's reinterpretation, though in the Michael Zulli story "Look Away" (found within the 2000 special issue 1250:
Moore's run included several references to obscure or forgotten comic characters (the Phantom Stranger, Cain and Abel, the Floronic Man), but none so prominent as in issue #32, when he broke with the serious and moody storyline for a single issue. In the story "Pog",
1390:(vol. 2) #80–87. One issue of this storyline focused upon the Swamp Thing's regular supporting cast. In this issue, Matthew Cable died during his coma and arrived in the land of the Dreaming, where he encountered Morpheus and Eve. Cable would later be written into 1224:
in issue #47, which was where Earth elementals like him lay to rest after they have walked the Earth, and it was here Moore solved the continuity problem of the first and second Swamp Thing: the first Swamp Thing, Alex Olsen, was now a part of the Parliament.
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as a character despite having previously approved the script, in which the Swamp Thing is revealed to be the cupbearer who offers Jesus water when he calls for it from the cross. The move was said to be made due to controversies then arising from the
1721:(#9–29). In this latest series, the Swamp Thing is reverted to his plant-based Earth elemental status after the first storyline, and he attempts to live an "eventless" life in the Louisiana swamps. TefΓ©, likewise, is rendered powerless and mortal. 1092:
be so: Holland had indeed died in the fire, and the swamp vegetation had absorbed his consciousness and memories and created a new sentient being that believed itself to be Alec Holland. The Swamp Thing would never be human again because he never
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Matthew Cable, gravely hurt in the previous storyline, was revealed to have been possessed by Anton Arcane, and Abby unwittingly had an incestuous relationship with him. After a fight, Cable was thrown into a coma, and Abby's soul was sent to
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The series was later cancelled. Explanations for the cancellation vary, from low sales to Millar himself having become bored with the series. Despite this, Millar decided to leave the title which, in turn, caused DC to cancel the series.
1357:'s body. After the completion of this storyline, the Swamp Thing sought to resolve his need for vengeance against those who had "killed" him during his showdown in Gotham City, culminating in a showdown with Lex Luthor (and Superman) in 1551:
Thing fought rival elemental beings and in the process, became champions of the five main Elemental Parliaments: Trees, Stone, Waves, Vapor and Flames. It was during this time that the Swamp Thing also encountered the Batman's enemy
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The Swamp Thing thus spares humanity and becomes a Planetary Elemental, representing Earth itself, and joins the Parliament of Worlds, which is made up of all the other "enlightened worlds" (the only others actually named were
697:. These eras were met with high critical praise and numerous awards. However, over the years, the Swamp Thing comics have suffered from low sales, which have resulted in numerous series cancellations and revivals. 1658:
saw Matthew Cable's return to human form, his uneasy reunion and final departure from his ex-wife Abby (now married to the Swamp Thing) and Cable's restoration to his dream raven form. Matthew the Raven died in
1598:#1) the Swamp Thing ultimately returns to normal and renounces his status as a Planetary Elemental, due to his belief that he was more effective a figure as a normal elemental being living in the swamp. 3826: 730:. The Swamp Thing fought against evil as he sought the men who murdered his wife and caused his monstrous transformation, as well as searching for a means to transform himself back to his human form. 1259:(created in 1943) and all of his woodland friends show up as costumed visitors from another planet, looking for an unspoiled world after their own utopia was overrun and destroyed by brutal monkeys. 1804:, the series follows a resurrected Alec Holland who wants to put the memories of the Swamp Thing behind him. He is approached first by an earlier incarnation of the Swamp Thing, representing the 1105:
to the main Swamp Thing canon, that there had been dozens, perhaps hundreds, of Swamp Things since the dawn of humanity, and that all versions of the creature were designated defenders of the
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The appearance of Holland's brother toward the end of the series marked a series of plot developments, designed to provide the series with a happy ending, which generated much controversy. In
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Collins dramatically overhauled the series, restoring the pre-Alan Moore tone of the series as well as incorporating a new set of supporting cast members into the book. Collins resurrected
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and Mike Hoffman. Broderick's work had a more traditional, adventure-comics look than previous artists on the series. John Totleben continued to contribute painted covers up to issue #100.
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In issue #60, entitled "Loving the Alien", the Swamp Thing actually becomes the father of the numerous offspring of an alien cosmic entity after she "mates" with him against his will.
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human to start with. Woodrue also concluded that, despite the autopsy, the Swamp Thing was still alive and in a deep coma due to the bullet wounds and imprisonment in cold-storage.
1422:, who were originally slated to be the next writers, sympathetically declined to take up the helm. Gaiman, however, was cooperative enough with the editorial staff to write 815:
with the bio-restorative formula, reverted into the form of the Swamp Thing. Holland, along with the Challengers of the Unknown, encountered the supernatural being known as
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run. A later column pointed this out, so they said they would not deliberately contradict it, even though they would still go from the assumption that it never happened.
1867:. A new character Levi Kamei takes over the role as the new Avatar of the Green. The series was planned to be a ten-issue miniseries until it was extended to 16 issues. 3832: 1240:'s girlfriend), and the Martian Manhunter, partaking in relationships with human beings), the Swamp Thing was ambushed by soldiers using a weapon designed by 950: 1752:. Issue #29 was the final issue of the fourth volume, which had been cancelled due to low sales numbers, despite fan-supported efforts to save the series. 1163: 1022: 4009: 1386:
crossover event, the Swamp Thing was thrown into the past, and traveled through time trying to return to the present. The story was published in
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the comic book adaptation of the Craven movie. Now written by Martin Pasko, the book loosely picked up after the Swamp Thing's appearances in
4062: 3749: 3049: 3023: 4337: 1410: 1304:; after the CCA denied issue #29 the seal of approval, DC created an imprint to publish the series under and no longer submitted issues of 3909: 740:. Though they only met twice during the first series, Arcane and his obsession with gaining immortality, aided by his nightmarish army of 46: 4317: 3783: 96: 1452:
wrote issues #88–109. Wheeler quickly wrapped up Veitch's time travel arc and oversaw the birth of Abby and the Swamp Thing's daughter
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had already partially completed the art. The move disgusted Veitch and he immediately resigned from writing. Neil Gaiman and
911:#176, with the character wandering around the swamps of Louisiana as something of an urban legend that was feared by locals. 3914: 2254: 1436: 760:, a federal agent who originally mistakenly believed the Swamp Thing responsible for the deaths of Alec and Linda Holland. 4312: 4017: 2803: 1152: 4230: 4225: 4220: 1399:
Veitch's term ended in a widely publicized creative dispute, when DC refused to publish issue #88 because of the use of
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began scripting the series, continuing the story in a roughly similar vein for 24 more issues. Shortly after issue #65,
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in issues #81-87, also by Gerry Conway, the Swamp Thing returned as Alec Holland who, without continually producing and
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in the last 12 issues of the series. Most notable is the fact that real estate tycoons had been wanting to develop the
1162:(vol. 2) #34 ("Rites of Spring") the two confessed that they loved each other since they met, and "made love" though a 1013: 4327: 4307: 4302: 4297: 4292: 4287: 3963: 3953: 3943: 3933: 3923: 2829: 718:
was the writer for the first 13 issues before David Michelinie and Gerry Conway finished up the series. Horror artist
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has appeared in seven American comic book series to date, including several specials, and has crossed over into other
1190:) in issues #37–50, where the Swamp Thing had to travel to several parts of America, encountering several archetypal 39: 33: 4176: 3973: 2956: 2879: 2642: 2420: 1734: 807: 774: 4342: 4203: 4055: 2455: 1216: 1172: 749: 50: 4256: 1369: 3998: 4035: 4357: 4197: 2907: 2815: 2760: 2210: 1233: 888: 852: 297: 4352: 4140: 2404: 1615:, appearing at Hal Jordan's funeral alongside John Constantine. In 1997, the Swamp Thing was written into 1427: 1220:, where the Swamp Thing had to solve the battle between Good (Light) and Evil (Darkness). He also met the 972:
Pasko left the book with issue #19, which featured the (third) death of Arcane, the second of which, from
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wife by killing Nathan Ellery. The full Wein 13-issue run was released in hardcover by DC in June 2009 as
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Best Individual Story (Dramatic Division) – "A Clockwork Horror", by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson, from
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story "Foxes and Hounds" in issues #42–43, a fact that was later touched upon by the 2000 special issue
1514: 1382: 1301: 1296:; Vertigo titles were written with adults in mind and often contained material unsuitable for children. 1280: 753: 953:, had been ghosting various pages for Yeates, and were given the assignment on Pasko's recommendation. 4362: 4048: 3899: 2923: 2724: 2202: 1430:, to fill the series hiatus, which led into the run of the new Swamp Thing writer, Doug Wheeler. The 1061:(at the time a relatively unknown writer in America whose previous work included several stories for 685:
titles. The series found immense popularity upon its 1970s debut and during the mid-late 1980s under
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Best Individual Story (Dramatic Division) – "Dark Genesis", by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson, from
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From March to August 2016, a six-issue miniseries was published, written by Swamp Thing co-creator
1805: 1730: 1504:#7, published around this time, was the final annual issue as part of the Vertigo crossover event " 1457: 1221: 1144: 1106: 942: 860: 816: 757: 3755: 2703: 917:'s main arc depicted the Swamp Thing roaming the globe, trying to stop a young girl (and possible 3848: 3799: 2862: 2621: 2428: 1689: 1655: 1292: 835: 1099:
Moore would later reveal, in an attempt to connect the original one-off Swamp Thing story from
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having pointed out that there were probably several non-humans, such as Superman, Metamorpho,
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Alec Holland. He's just a ghost. A ghost dressed in weeds. Yeah, I wonder how he'll take it?"
4128: 4118: 4082: 1764: 1685: 1648: 1476: 1354: 1271: 1181: 1148: 1126: 1069: 1063: 922: 509: 484: 413: 395: 352: 145: 3062:#92, 1st series #1–24, 2nd series #1–19, and Saga of The Swamp Thing Annual #1 (hardcover: 3903: 3860: 3811: 2835: 2433: 1795: 1748: 1611: 1405: 1109:, an elemental community also known as "the Green" that connects all plant life on Earth. 949:(who began by inking Yeates' pencils). Bissette and Totleben, who had known Yeates at the 929:, which led to a collaboration between the Swamp Thing and the Stranger in a guest run by 840: 812: 719: 564: 551: 4145: 1693: 1692:(issues #12 – #20) in 2001, the third series focused on the daughter of the Swamp Thing, 1453: 1578:(vol. 2) #171. John Totleben would return to illustrate the covers for issues #160–171. 1460:
and the Gray, a fungus-themed elemental realm in opposition to the Parliament of Trees.
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Meanwhile, a rogue consciousness, calling itself the Holland Mind, was living in the
1718: 1464: 1415: 1344:(vol. 2) #67, and the two series had storylines which crossover to each other during 1333: 1316:
Moore's final issue, #64, was dated September 1987. At that point, regular penciller
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Despite Wein's writing the first 13 issues, only the first 10 issues of the original
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town. Swamp Thing returned to the swamps of Louisiana, and encountered Jason Blood (
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this section contains a significant amount of repetition of the same information.
4071: 3008: 2912: 2901: 2840: 2797: 2746: 2689: 2658: 2606: 2542: 1768: 1710: 1637: 1622: 1602: 1591: 1552: 1539: 1377: 1373: 1317: 1267: 1263: 930: 756:. Also involved in the conflict was the Swamp Thing's close friend-turned-enemy 678: 422: 403: 387: 3967: 3957: 3947: 3937: 3927: 2213:. The Swamp Thing later makes reference to having seen the movie and hating it. 1143:, the Swamp Thing followed Abigail, encountering classic DC characters such as 4246: 2871: 2855: 2851: 2730: 2585: 2570: 2538: 2506: 2448: 2206: 1786: 1756: 1518:
series writer Dick Foreman wrote a two-part crossover between the two titles,
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The Floronic Man returned in #27–29, his mind splintered in the aftermath of
1609:, the Swamp Thing reappeared in the coda for the DC Universe crossover event 1555:, in a failed attempt to resolve the character's ongoing storyline in 1995's 4261: 2978: 2964: 2820: 2409: 1114: 1074: 745: 682: 519: 467: 101: 1057:
was heading for cancellation due to low sales, DC editorial agreed to give
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produced by the Swamp Thing's body (this served as a segment in the film
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The arrival of Bissette and Totleben came as Pasko, who wrote the second
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Legends of the DC Universeβ€”Crisis on Infinite Earths: "The Untold Story"
1180:. Before that, the "American Gothic" storyline introduced the character 4123: 2918: 2792: 1784:
The Swamp Thing was relaunched as an ongoing series in 2011 as part of
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Millar was given the job to wrap up the series, which would end with
1508:". Collins also wrote a Swamp Thing story for the anthology one-shot 1300:
was the first mainstream comic book series to completely abandon the
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has so far been collected in the following collections published by
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and the Patchwork Man (Arcane's brother Gregori Arcane who, after a
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Seeking to revive interest in the series, DC brought horror writer
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It was during this time that the Swamp Thing first encountered the
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The relationship between the Swamp Thing and Abby deepened, and in
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was promised for the next issue, but no such battle occurred until
2955: 1400: 1167: 1134: 597: 1863:, started March 2021 and being written by Ram V and pencilled by 733:
The Swamp Thing has since fought many villains, most notably the
1587: 1324:#3 was produced, this time focusing on DC's super-apes, such as 918: 4044: 4040: 3896: 991: 18: 2229:#59: Stephen Bissette, John Totleben, Alan Moore, Rick Veitch 2009:#2, by Alan Moore, Stephen Bissette, and John Totleben (1985) 937:
creature. The primary artist for the bulk of Pasko's run was
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Best Penciller (Dramatic Division) – Bernie Wrightson, for
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Best Penciller (Dramatic Division) – Bernie Wrightson, for
2079:, by Alan Moore, Stephen Bissette, and John Totleben (1987) 2051:, by Alan Moore, Stephen Bissette, and John Totleben (1986) 2016:, by Alan Moore, Stephen Bissette, and John Totleben (1985) 1534:
With issue #140 (March 1994), the title was handed over to
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Best Writer/Artist – Alan Moore and Stephen Bissette, for
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The fourth series began in 2004, with rotating writers of
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and attended the funeral for the ghost of Jim Corrigan in
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Swamp Thing: The Bronze Age Vol. 1, House of Secrets #92,
2424:#81–87 (#81, bits only/#82, flashback only): Gerry Conway 933:
that featured a scientist who transformed himself into a
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Comic book titles featuring the character the Swamp Thing
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Swamp Thing (2016) Digital Comics – Comics by comiXology
2089:
Best Art Team – Stephen Bissette and John Totleben, for
2068:
Best Art Team – Stephen Bissette and John Totleben, for
2026:
Best Art Team – Stephen Bissette and John Totleben, for
726:
drew a further 13 issues, the last issue being drawn by
3828:
Swamp Thing To Get Second Season From DC Comics In 2022
2333:
Brightest Day Aftermath: The Search for the Swamp Thing
2152:
Best Inker (Dramatic Division) – Bernie Wrightson, for
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Arcane Knowledge: A Guide To The Swamp Thing TV Series
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The Swamp Thing by Mark Millar and Phil Hester Omnibus
1995:#32, by Alan Moore and Shawn McManus (1985, nominated) 2473:#5: Marv Wolfman (simultaneous with pp. 8–10 of 1967:, by Rick Veitch and Alfredo Alcala (1988, nominated) 1590:, who greeted the Swamp Thing into their number, and 1538:
for a four-issue arc, co-written by the then-unknown
980:(vol. 2) #18. He would be replaced by British writer 1361:(vol. 2) #79 and a confrontation with the Batman in 1348:
s first year under writer Jamie Delano. In Veitch's
1155:, and Etrigan en route, and eventually rescued her. 4239: 4213: 4190: 4154: 4096: 638: 596: 466: 332: 327: 234: 155: 141: 131: 107: 95: 90: 83: 2305:#1: Brian K. Vaughan, Michael Zulli, Alisa Kwitney 2044:#43, by Alan Moore and Stan Woch (1986, nominated) 1895:Favorite Character – Swamp Thing (1986, ranked #6) 1688:and drawn by Roger Petersen (issues #1 – #11) and 1601:After being overlooked for inclusion in countless 941:; towards the end of the run he was replaced with 876:In an issue dated May 1982, DC Comics revived the 3661:The entire Alan Moore run (save his first issue, 2037:#34, by Stephen Bissette and John Totleben (1985) 1121:), then gave a final burial for Holland's bones. 782:David Michelinie/Gerry Conway/David Anthony Kraft 2138:Best Writer (Dramatic Division) – Len Wein, for 2110:Best Writer (Dramatic Division) – Len Wein, for 1380:'s three-part graphic novel. Later, during the 4023:Consideration of Moore's tenure on Swamp Thing 722:drew the first 10 issues of the series, while 171:October–November 1972 – August–September 1976 4056: 2757:Underworld Unleashed: Abyss - Hell's Sentinel 1940:Swamp Thing: Vertigo Secret Files and Origins 714:series ran for 24 issues, from 1972 to 1976. 8: 3779:Swamp Thing Returns in New Ongoing DC Series 2303:Swamp Thing Vertigo Secret Files and Origins 1665:Swamp Thing Vertigo Secret Files and Origins 1633:, which was the final issue of that series. 1596:Swamp Thing Vertigo Secret Files and Origins 1113:stop Woodrue after Woodrue killed an entire 951:Joe Kubert School of Cartoon and Graphic Art 2944:(vol. 3) #23: "The Brave and the Mold!" by 2654:(vol. 2) #117–118; continuity questionable) 1228:Although Abby was eventually released (the 772:, volume 4 of the 9-volume book series the 4063: 4049: 4041: 3910:Swamp Thing Annotations (Moore/Veitch Era) 3726:Buffy The Vampire Slayer: The Monster Book 3604:Swamp Thing by Scott Snyder Deluxe Edition 3257:Absolute Swamp Thing by Alan Moore, Vol. 3 3243:Absolute Swamp Thing by Alan Moore, Vol. 2 3225:Absolute Swamp Thing by Alan Moore, Vol. 1 3007:, published under the DC imprint in manga 880:series to try to capitalize on the summer 80: 3876:(vol. 2) #117, and one earlier reference. 3688:American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1970s 1479:on board to write the series, first with 1336:. The Batman guest-starred in issue #66. 1041:Learn how and when to remove this message 69:Learn how and when to remove this message 2280:#140–143: Grant Morrison and Mark Millar 32:This article includes a list of general 3678: 3321:Swamp Thing by Nancy A. Collins Omnibus 650: 608: 478: 342: 247: 165: 3856: 3846: 3807: 3797: 3786:from the original on December 21, 2020 3776:Jennings, Collier (December 5, 2020). 3728:. New York: Simon Pulse. p. 324. 3534:, 5th series #19–23, 23.1 (paperback: 3056:Swamp Thing: The Bronze Age Omnibus HC 1274:from Moore's series gave rise to DC's 1166:experience brought on when Abby ate a 3835:from the original on November 3, 2021 3690:. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 84. 3245:, 2nd series #34–50 (2020 hardcover: 3036:#92 and 1st series #1–13 (hardcover: 2995:#92 and 1st series #1–10 (paperback: 2188:#24: Gerry Conway/David Anthony Kraft 1909:#75, by Rick Veitch (1989, nominated) 1396:by Neil Gaiman as Matthew the Raven. 7: 3966:at the Comic Book DB (archived from 3956:at the Comic Book DB (archived from 3946:at the Comic Book DB (archived from 3936:at the Comic Book DB (archived from 3926:at the Comic Book DB (archived from 3686:Sacks, Jason; Dallas, Keith (2014). 3402:, 3rd series #1–10 and a story from 1963:Best Continuing or Limited Series – 1512:. Shortly after Collins' departure, 544:Roger Petersen, Giuseppe Camuncoli 3825:Johnston, Rich (November 3, 2021). 3626:Swamp Thing: Protector of the Green 3514:Vol. 3: Rotworld: The Green Kingdom 3119:Swamp Thing: The Bronze Age Vol. 3, 3088:Swamp Thing: The Bronze Age Vol. 2, 1956:Best Letterer – John Costanza, for 3383:, 2nd series #140-171 (hardcover: 3369:, 2nd series #161–171 (paperback: 3355:, 2nd series #151–160 (paperback: 3341:, 2nd series #140–150 (paperback: 2828:#184–185, 189, 192–193, 200, 215: 2513:(vol. 2) #50–51) (one-panel cameo) 1977:Best Colorist – Tatjana Wood, for 1743:) provided covers for the series. 1448:From September 1989 to July 1991, 1262:Moore began a trend (continued by 805:During the short-lived revival of 38:it lacks sufficient corresponding 14: 3645:Swamp Thing: The Dead Don't Sleep 3100:Challengers of the Unknown #81-87 1755:The Dysart series deals with the 1636:Early 1998 saw the production of 3462:, 4th series #15–20 (paperback: 3420:, 3rd series #11–20 (paperback: 3291:, 2nd series #71–76 (paperback: 3277:, 2nd series #65–70 (paperback: 3213:, 2nd series #57–64 (paperback: 3199:, 2nd series #51–56 (paperback: 3185:, 2nd series #43–50 (paperback: 3171:, 2nd series #35–42 (paperback: 3139:, 2nd series #20–27 (paperback: 2270:#6, #110–115, 117–125, 127–138, 1875: 1255:'s funny animal comic character 1184:(later to star in his own comic 996: 23: 3628:, 5th series #1-11 (paperback: 3448:, 4th series #9–14 (paperback: 2529:(vol. 2) #56–57) (October 1999) 2182:#14–18, 21–22: David Michelinie 1970:Best Writer – Rick Veitch, for 1934:Best Cover Artist – Phil Hale, 1876:Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Awards 847:(using a compound developed by 3647:, miniseries #1–6 (paperback: 3484:, 5th series #1–7 (paperback: 3434:, 4th series #1–6 (paperback: 2716:#1: Nancy A. Collins (between 2261:#88–100, 102–109: Doug Wheeler 2082:Best Writer – Alan Moore, for 2054:Best Writer – Alan Moore, for 2019:Best Writer – Alan Moore, for 1266:, among others) of mining the 235: 1: 2557:#8: Steve Englehart (between 2236:#3, 65–76, 79–87: Rick Veitch 1912:Best Single Issue or Story – 1798:. Taking off from the end of 1483:#6 before moving on to write 1411:The Last Temptation of Christ 398:(#110-115, 117-125, 127-138, 3724:Golden, Christopher (2000). 3096:#176, DC Comics Presents #8, 3076:1st series #1–13 (paperback 2807:(vol. 3) #62: John Ostrander 2277:#116, 126, 139: Dick Foreman 1919:Best Editor – Stuart Moore, 1881:Favorite Comic Book Story – 1859:The new series, retitled as 1816:to Yanick Paquette drawing. 1287:John Constantine, Hellblazer 1198:(the same clan he fought in 1187:John Constantine, Hellblazer 1087:(Jason Woodrue), perform an 748:explosion, was rebuilt as a 188:August 1985 – October 1996 4338:Comics by Tom King (writer) 3092:The Brave and the Bold #122 2963:paperback cover, copyright 2961:Swamp Thing: Earth to Earth 2255:Neil Gaiman's Midnight Days 1463:Wheeler's run was drawn by 1437:Neil Gaiman's Midnight Days 1306:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 1302:Comics Code Authority (CCA) 1298:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 1200:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 1081:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 1016:. The specific problem is: 978:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 893:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 655:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 613:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 496:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 382:Alan Moore (#20-61, 63-64, 365:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 258:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 202:May 2004 – September 2006 177:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 119:The Saga of the Swamp Thing 4381: 4318:Comics by David Michelinie 4018:Don Markstein's Toonopedia 3964:Swamp Thing (Alan Hallman) 3954:Swamp Thing (Aaron Hayley) 3944:Swamp Thing (TefΓ© Holland) 3934:Swamp Thing (Alec Holland) 3552:2nd series #2 (paperback: 3546:Vol. 5: The Killing Field 3502:2nd series #1 (paperback: 3498:, 5th series #8–11, 0 and 3323:, 2nd series #110-139 and 2643:Ambush Bug Nothing Special 2421:Challengers of the Unknown 2216:#1–13, 16–19: Martin Pasko 2124:Best Continuing Feature – 1705:Andy Diggle / Will Pfeifer 1012:to meet Knowledge (XXG)'s 959:Challengers of the Unknown 901:Challengers of the Unknown 808:Challengers of the Unknown 775:DC Comics Classics Library 209:September 2011 – May 2015 195:May 2000 – December 2001 4204:The Return of Swamp Thing 4078: 3570:(vol. 7) #31 (paperback: 3005:Secret of the Swamp Thing 2773:#39: Beau Smith (between 2495:Crisis on Infinite Earths 2471:Crisis on Infinite Earths 2456:Crisis on Infinite Earths 2451:(between (vol. 2) #39–40) 2385:Future State: Swamp Thing 2353:(vol. 2) #1: Scott Snyder 2075:Best Continuing Series – 2047:Best Continuing Series – 2012:Best Continuing Series – 1640:'s Vertigo graphic novel 1308:to the CCA for approval. 1278:comic book line, notably 1217:Crisis on Infinite Earths 1173:The Return of Swamp Thing 291:: 42 (#1–40, plus #0 and 227:March 2021 – August 2022 216:January 2016 – June 2016 4036:Roots of the Swamp Thing 3924:Swamp Thing (Alex Olsen) 3669:#20 for the first time. 3590:Swamp Thing: Futures End 3548:, 5th series #24–27 and 3482:Vol. 1: Raise Them Bones 3305:, 2nd series #77–81 and 3259:, 2nd series #51–64 and 3227:, 2nd series #20–34 and 3153:, 2nd series #28–34 and 3030:Roots of the Swamp Thing 2483:: Marv Wolfman (between 2289:: Jon J. Muth (one-shot) 2185:#19–20, 23: Gerry Conway 895:, featured in its first 872:Martin Pasko/Dan Mishkin 770:Roots of the Swamp Thing 298:Swamp Thing: Futures End 4231:2019 live-action series 4221:1990 live-action series 3893:at the Continuity Pages 3606:, 5th series #0–18 and 3137:Saga of the Swamp Thing 2299:#1–20: Brian K. Vaughan 2179:#92 and #1–13: Len Wein 1563:(vol. 2) #159-160, and 91:Publication information 53:more precise citations. 4348:Science fiction comics 4333:Comics by Scott Snyder 4323:Comics by Gerry Conway 3897:Swamp Thing Chronology 3404:Vertigo: Winter's Edge 3289:Spontaneous Generation 2967: 2850:(as Alec Holland) #3: 2439:The Brave and the Bold 2405:The Brave and the Bold 2360:(vol. 2) #2–3, #23.1: 2222:#20–58, 60–61, 63–64, 1888:Favorite Comic Book – 1871:Awards and nominations 1506:The Children's Crusade 1428:Brother Power the Geek 1340:also began soon after 976:#10, was reprinted in 909:The Brave and the Bold 839:#8. In the latter, by 829:#122 and 176 and with 826:The Brave and the Bold 3919:Grand Comics Database 3584:, 5th series #35–40, 3566:, 5th series #28–34; 3516:, 5th series #12–18; 3263:#85 (2022 hardcover: 3121:2nd series #1-19 and 3003:) (also available as 2959: 2339:#1–3: Jonathan Vankin 2283:#144–171: Mark Millar 2201:#1 (non-continuity): 1946:#11 (2001, nominated) 1885:#53 (1986, ranked #6) 1565:The Batman Chronicles 889:film of the same name 182:May 1982 – July 1985 4313:Comics by Alan Moore 4226:1990 animated series 3614:#12, 17 (hardcover: 3582:Vol. 7: Season's End 3520:#12, 17 (paperback: 3339:The Root of All Evil 3231:#2 (2020 hardcover: 3157:#2 (2011 paperback: 2771:Guy Gardner, Warrior 2379:DC Infinite Frontier 2327:#9–29: Joshua Dysart 2274:#7: Nancy A. Collins 2246:#4: Stephen Bissette 2135:#6 (1973, nominated) 2040:Best Single Issue – 2005:Best Single Issue – 1998:Best Single Issue – 1991:Best Single Issue – 1905:Best Single Issue – 1194:monsters, including 1023:improve this section 891:. The title, called 750:Frankenstein Monster 390:(#62, 65–76, 79–87, 4172:Sargon the Sorcerer 4114:Justice League Dark 3496:Vol. 2: Family Tree 3090:1st series #13-24, 2505:#11: Marv Wolfman, 2264:#101: Andrew Helfer 2219:#14–15: Dan Mishkin 1806:Parliament of Trees 1621:(vol. 5) #32–33 by 1458:Parliament of Trees 1222:Parliament of Trees 1107:Parliament of Trees 943:Stephen R. Bissette 394:#3), Doug Wheeler, 301:one-shot and three 4328:Comics by Len Wein 4308:2011 comics debuts 4303:2004 comics debuts 4298:2000 comics debuts 4293:1982 comics debuts 4288:1972 comics debuts 3906:at DC Cosmic Teams 3902:2011-03-03 at the 3588:2nd series #3 and 3564:Vol. 6: The Sureen 3460:Healing the Breach 3418:Swamp Thing Vol. 2 3400:Swamp Thing Vol. 1 3303:Infernal Triangles 3261:DC Comics Presents 2968: 2952:Collected editions 2863:JLA: Created Equal 2777:(vol. 2) #163–164) 2767:(vol. 2) #162–163) 2753:(vol. 2) #159–160) 2737:(vol. 2) #150–151) 2720:(vol. 2) #139–140) 2710:(vol. 2) #138–139) 2696:(vol. 2) #126–127) 2682:(vol. 2) #126–127) 2611:Swamp Thing Annual 2445:DC Comics Presents 2441:#176: Martin Pasko 2429:DC Comics Presents 2324:#7–8: Will Pfeifer 2311:: Brian K. Vaughan 2007:Swamp Thing Annual 1690:Giuseppe Camuncoli 1656:Caitlin R. Kiernan 1654:#22–24 written by 1642:Swamp Thing: Roots 1502:Swamp Thing Annual 1481:Swamp Thing Annual 1424:Swamp Thing Annual 1363:Swamp Thing Annual 1322:Swamp Thing Annual 1293:The Books of Magic 1212:DC Comics Presents 1131:Swamp Thing Annual 966:Brave and the Bold 905:DC Comics Presents 836:DC Comics Presents 677:The character the 518:Stephen Bissette, 4275: 4274: 3327:#6-7 (hardcover: 3183:A Murder of Crows 3050:978-1-4012-3287-0 3024:978-1-4012-0798-4 2796:(vol. 5) #32–33: 2624:, the Nuclear Man 2518:Martian Manhunter 2497:#10: Marv Wolfman 2398:Guest appearances 2321:#1–6: Andy Diggle 2309:Winter's Edge III 2287:Swamp Thingβ€”Roots 2252:#5 (reprinted in 2239:#77: Jamie Delano 2156:(1973, nominated) 2142:(1973, nominated) 2093:(1987, nominated) 2086:(1986, nominated) 2072:(1986, nominated) 2065:(1986, nominated) 1986:Jack Kirby Awards 1981:(1989, nominated) 1974:(1989, nominated) 1960:(1988, nominated) 1892:(1986, ranked #1) 1842:and pencilled by 1761:Hurricane Katrina 1605:crossovers since 1434:was reprinted in 1119:Etrigan the Demon 1051: 1050: 1043: 1014:quality standards 1005:This section may 675: 674: 504:, Fred Carrillo, 355:(#14-18, 21-22), 79: 78: 71: 4370: 4343:DC Comics titles 4119:John Constantine 4083:Bernie Wrightson 4065: 4058: 4051: 4042: 3993: 3991: 3989: 3877: 3871: 3865: 3864: 3858: 3854: 3852: 3844: 3842: 3840: 3822: 3816: 3815: 3809: 3805: 3803: 3795: 3793: 3791: 3773: 3767: 3766: 3764: 3763: 3754:. Archived from 3746: 3740: 3739: 3721: 3715: 3708: 3702: 3701: 3683: 3641:2016 miniseries 3060:House of Secrets 3034:House of Secrets 2993:House of Secrets 2880:House of Mystery 2638:(vol. 2) #90–91) 2581:(vol. 2) #74–75) 2561:(vol. 2) #69–70) 2549:(vol. 2) #69–70) 2467:(vol. 2) #43–44) 2177:House of Secrets 1765:Lower Ninth Ward 1686:Brian K. Vaughan 1680:Brian K. Vaughan 1629:(vol. 3) #62 by 1477:Nancy A. Collins 1471:Nancy A. Collins 1355:John Constantine 1202:(vol. 2) #3), a 1182:John Constantine 1149:Phantom Stranger 1102:House of Secrets 1046: 1039: 1035: 1032: 1026: 1000: 999: 992: 923:Phantom Stranger 691:Stephen Bissette 631:, Kim de Mulder 530:, Mike Hoffman, 510:Stephen Bissette 485:Bernie Wrightson 414:Brian K. Vaughan 396:Nancy A. Collins 359:(#19-20, 23-24) 353:David Michelinie 270:: 133, plus six 237: 156:Publication date 81: 74: 67: 63: 60: 54: 49:this article by 40:inline citations 27: 26: 19: 4380: 4379: 4373: 4372: 4371: 4369: 4368: 4367: 4278: 4277: 4276: 4271: 4235: 4209: 4186: 4150: 4092: 4074: 4069: 4032: 4027: 3987: 3985: 3981: 3904:Wayback Machine 3886: 3881: 3880: 3872: 3868: 3855: 3845: 3838: 3836: 3824: 3823: 3819: 3806: 3796: 3789: 3787: 3775: 3774: 3770: 3761: 3759: 3748: 3747: 3743: 3736: 3723: 3722: 3718: 3709: 3705: 3698: 3685: 3684: 3680: 3675: 3610:2nd series #1; 3592:#1 (paperback: 3406:#3 (paperback: 3396:2000s material 3309:#3 (paperback: 3115:1980s material 2985:1970s material 2954: 2836:Infinite Crisis 2434:Steve Englehart 2400: 2391:The Swamp Thing 2381: 2371: 2364:: Charles Soule 2346: 2336: 2318: 2296: 2195: 2173: 2168: 2163: 2100: 1988: 1953: 1902: 1878: 1873: 1861:The Swamp Thing 1857: 1852: 1836: 1831: 1822: 1796:Yanick Paquette 1782: 1777: 1749:Infinite Crisis 1727: 1707: 1702: 1682: 1677: 1612:The Final Night 1548: 1532: 1473: 1446: 1406:Martin Scorsese 1314: 1133:#2, modeled on 1047: 1036: 1030: 1027: 1020: 1001: 997: 990: 884:release of the 874: 869: 853:Solomon Grundys 841:Steve Englehart 813:self-medicating 784: 720:Berni Wrightson 708: 703: 671: 667: 663: 659: 649: 648: 634: 627:John Totleben, 626: 617: 607: 606: 592: 586: 582:The Swamp Thing 573: 565:Yanick Paquette 563: 552:Enrique Breccia 550: 543: 522:, Rick Veitch, 517: 500: 483: 477: 476: 462: 458: 454:The Swamp Thing 447: 434: 421: 412: 381: 377: 369: 347: 341: 340: 323: 316:The Swamp Thing 266: 246: 245: 230: 226: 222:The Swamp Thing 215: 208: 201: 194: 187: 183: 181: 170: 164: 163: 123:The Swamp Thing 115: 75: 64: 58: 55: 45:Please help to 44: 28: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 4378: 4377: 4374: 4366: 4365: 4360: 4358:Fantasy comics 4355: 4350: 4345: 4340: 4335: 4330: 4325: 4320: 4315: 4310: 4305: 4300: 4295: 4290: 4280: 4279: 4273: 4272: 4270: 4269: 4264: 4259: 4254: 4249: 4243: 4241: 4237: 4236: 4234: 4233: 4228: 4223: 4217: 4215: 4211: 4210: 4208: 4207: 4200: 4194: 4192: 4188: 4187: 4185: 4184: 4179: 4177:Solomon Grundy 4174: 4169: 4164: 4158: 4156: 4152: 4151: 4149: 4148: 4143: 4138: 4133: 4132: 4131: 4126: 4121: 4111: 4106: 4100: 4098: 4094: 4093: 4091: 4090: 4085: 4079: 4076: 4075: 4070: 4068: 4067: 4060: 4053: 4045: 4039: 4038: 4031: 4030:External links 4028: 4026: 4025: 4020: 4012:2024-05-25 at 4001:2012-09-12 at 3976: 3971: 3961: 3951: 3941: 3931: 3921: 3912: 3907: 3894: 3887: 3885: 3882: 3879: 3878: 3866: 3857:|website= 3817: 3808:|website= 3768: 3741: 3734: 3716: 3703: 3697:978-1605490564 3696: 3677: 3676: 3674: 3671: 3659: 3658: 3657: 3656: 3639: 3638: 3637: 3634:978-1401290986 3623: 3620:978-1401258702 3601: 3598:978-1401257705 3579: 3576:978-1401254902 3561: 3558:978-1401250522 3543: 3540:978-1401246396 3532:Vol. 4: Seeder 3529: 3526:978-1401242640 3511: 3493: 3473: 3472: 3471: 3457: 3443: 3429: 3415: 3394: 3393: 3392: 3378: 3364: 3353:Darker Genesis 3350: 3336: 3333:978-1401297091 3318: 3300: 3286: 3272: 3269:978-1779512192 3254: 3251:978-1779502827 3240: 3237:978-1779506955 3222: 3208: 3197:Earth to Earth 3194: 3180: 3166: 3151:Love and Death 3148: 3134: 3131:978-1779507167 3113: 3112: 3111: 3108:978-1401294229 3085: 3082:978-1401284404 3071: 3053: 3044:) (paperback: 3027: 2953: 2950: 2949: 2948: 2937: 2935:Meredith Finch 2933:(vol. 4) #36: 2926: 2922:(vol. 7) #31: 2915: 2911:(vol. 2) #12: 2904: 2893: 2890:Jack of Fables 2884:(published in 2875: 2868:Fabian Nicieza 2859: 2843: 2832: 2823: 2808: 2800: 2789: 2785:(vol. 3) #81: 2778: 2768: 2761:Scott Peterson 2754: 2738: 2721: 2711: 2697: 2683: 2676:Elizabeth Hand 2655: 2639: 2628:John Ostrander 2618: 2598: 2582: 2562: 2550: 2534:Infinity, Inc. 2530: 2523:John Ostrander 2514: 2498: 2492: 2478: 2468: 2452: 2442: 2436: 2425: 2417: 2399: 2396: 2395: 2394: 2388: 2380: 2377: 2376: 2375: 2374:#1-6: Len Wein 2370: 2367: 2366: 2365: 2354: 2345: 2342: 2341: 2340: 2335: 2330: 2329: 2328: 2325: 2322: 2317: 2314: 2313: 2312: 2306: 2300: 2295: 2292: 2291: 2290: 2284: 2281: 2278: 2275: 2265: 2262: 2259: 2258:): Neil Gaiman 2247: 2240: 2237: 2230: 2227: 2226:#2: Alan Moore 2220: 2217: 2214: 2194: 2191: 2190: 2189: 2186: 2183: 2180: 2172: 2169: 2167: 2166:Series writers 2164: 2162: 2159: 2158: 2157: 2150: 2143: 2136: 2129: 2122: 2115: 2108: 2099: 2096: 2095: 2094: 2087: 2080: 2073: 2066: 2059: 2052: 2045: 2038: 2031: 2024: 2017: 2010: 2003: 1996: 1987: 1984: 1983: 1982: 1975: 1968: 1961: 1952: 1949: 1948: 1947: 1932: 1925:The Invisibles 1917: 1910: 1901: 1898: 1897: 1896: 1893: 1886: 1877: 1874: 1872: 1869: 1856: 1853: 1851: 1850:Seventh series 1848: 1835: 1832: 1830: 1827: 1821: 1818: 1781: 1778: 1776: 1773: 1726: 1723: 1706: 1703: 1701: 1698: 1681: 1678: 1676: 1673: 1631:John Ostrander 1547: 1544: 1536:Grant Morrison 1531: 1530:Grant Morrison 1528: 1472: 1469: 1445: 1442: 1426:#5, featuring 1313: 1310: 1164:hallucinogenic 1049: 1048: 1004: 1002: 995: 989: 986: 873: 870: 868: 865: 855:living in the 802:(vol. 2) #58. 783: 780: 754:Abigail Arcane 724:Nestor Redondo 707: 704: 702: 699: 673: 672: 670: 669: 668:Alex Sinclair 646: 645: 644: 642: 636: 635: 633: 632: 629:Alfredo Alcala 621: 604: 603: 602: 600: 594: 593: 591: 590: 577: 568: 558: 556:Richard Corben 545: 538: 512: 491: 489:Nestor Redondo 474: 473: 472: 470: 464: 463: 461: 460: 449: 442: 429: 416: 407: 360: 338: 337: 336: 334: 330: 329: 325: 324: 322: 321: 311: 305: 286: 280: 274: 262:: 38 plus one 253: 243: 242: 241: 239: 232: 231: 229: 228: 217: 210: 203: 196: 189: 172: 161: 160: 159: 157: 153: 152: 143: 139: 138: 136:Ongoing series 133: 129: 128: 109: 105: 104: 99: 93: 92: 88: 87: 77: 76: 31: 29: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 4376: 4375: 4364: 4361: 4359: 4356: 4354: 4353:Horror comics 4351: 4349: 4346: 4344: 4341: 4339: 4336: 4334: 4331: 4329: 4326: 4324: 4321: 4319: 4316: 4314: 4311: 4309: 4306: 4304: 4301: 4299: 4296: 4294: 4291: 4289: 4286: 4285: 4283: 4268: 4265: 4263: 4260: 4258: 4255: 4253: 4250: 4248: 4245: 4244: 4242: 4238: 4232: 4229: 4227: 4224: 4222: 4219: 4218: 4216: 4212: 4206: 4205: 4201: 4199: 4196: 4195: 4193: 4189: 4183: 4180: 4178: 4175: 4173: 4170: 4168: 4165: 4163: 4160: 4159: 4157: 4153: 4147: 4144: 4142: 4139: 4137: 4136:Matthew Cable 4134: 4130: 4127: 4125: 4122: 4120: 4117: 4116: 4115: 4112: 4110: 4107: 4105: 4102: 4101: 4099: 4095: 4089: 4086: 4084: 4081: 4080: 4077: 4073: 4066: 4061: 4059: 4054: 4052: 4047: 4046: 4043: 4037: 4034: 4033: 4029: 4024: 4021: 4019: 4015: 4014:archive.today 4011: 4008: 4004: 4003:archive.today 4000: 3997: 3984: 3980: 3977: 3975: 3972: 3969: 3965: 3962: 3959: 3955: 3952: 3949: 3945: 3942: 3939: 3935: 3932: 3929: 3925: 3922: 3920: 3916: 3913: 3911: 3908: 3905: 3901: 3898: 3895: 3892: 3889: 3888: 3883: 3875: 3870: 3867: 3862: 3850: 3834: 3830: 3829: 3821: 3818: 3813: 3801: 3785: 3781: 3780: 3772: 3769: 3758:on 2020-11-15 3757: 3753: 3752: 3745: 3742: 3737: 3731: 3727: 3720: 3717: 3713: 3707: 3704: 3699: 3693: 3689: 3682: 3679: 3672: 3670: 3668: 3664: 3654: 3653:9781401270018 3650: 3646: 3643: 3642: 3640: 3635: 3631: 3627: 3624: 3621: 3617: 3613: 3609: 3605: 3602: 3599: 3595: 3591: 3587: 3583: 3580: 3577: 3573: 3569: 3565: 3562: 3559: 3555: 3551: 3547: 3544: 3541: 3537: 3533: 3530: 3527: 3523: 3519: 3515: 3512: 3509: 3508:1-4012-3843-2 3505: 3501: 3497: 3494: 3491: 3490:1-4012-3462-3 3487: 3483: 3480: 3479: 3477: 3474: 3469: 3468:1-4012-0934-3 3465: 3461: 3458: 3455: 3454:1-4012-0493-7 3451: 3447: 3444: 3441: 3440:1-4012-0421-X 3437: 3433: 3430: 3427: 3426:1-4012-4598-6 3423: 3419: 3416: 3413: 3412:1-4012-4304-5 3409: 3405: 3401: 3398: 3397: 3395: 3390: 3386: 3382: 3379: 3376: 3375:1-4012-6337-2 3372: 3368: 3367:Trial By Fire 3365: 3362: 3361:1-4012-5828-X 3358: 3354: 3351: 3348: 3347:1-4012-5241-9 3344: 3340: 3337: 3334: 3330: 3326: 3322: 3319: 3316: 3315:1-4012-1008-2 3312: 3308: 3304: 3301: 3298: 3297:1-4012-0793-6 3294: 3290: 3287: 3284: 3283:1-4012-0267-5 3280: 3276: 3273: 3270: 3266: 3262: 3258: 3255: 3252: 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2818: 2817: 2813: 2809: 2806: 2805: 2801: 2799: 2795: 2794: 2790: 2788: 2784: 2783: 2782:Green Lantern 2779: 2776: 2772: 2769: 2766: 2762: 2758: 2755: 2752: 2748: 2744: 2743: 2739: 2736: 2732: 2728: 2726: 2722: 2719: 2715: 2712: 2709: 2705: 2702:(vol. 2) #5: 2701: 2698: 2695: 2691: 2687: 2684: 2681: 2677: 2673: 2672:Paul Witcover 2669: 2667: 2662: 2660: 2656: 2653: 2649: 2645: 2644: 2640: 2637: 2633: 2629: 2625: 2623: 2619: 2617:(vol. 2) #79) 2616: 2612: 2608: 2605:(vol. 1) #3: 2604: 2603: 2599: 2597:(vol. 2) #76) 2596: 2593:(surrounding 2592: 2588: 2587: 2583: 2580: 2576: 2572: 2568: 2567: 2563: 2560: 2556: 2555: 2551: 2548: 2544: 2540: 2536: 2535: 2531: 2528: 2524: 2520: 2519: 2515: 2512: 2508: 2504: 2503: 2499: 2496: 2493: 2491:(vol. 2) #46) 2490: 2486: 2482: 2479: 2477:(vol. 2) #46) 2476: 2472: 2469: 2466: 2462: 2458: 2457: 2453: 2450: 2446: 2443: 2440: 2437: 2435: 2431: 2430: 2426: 2423: 2422: 2418: 2415: 2411: 2407: 2406: 2402: 2401: 2397: 2392: 2389: 2386: 2383: 2382: 2378: 2373: 2372: 2368: 2363: 2359: 2355: 2352: 2348: 2347: 2343: 2338: 2337: 2334: 2331: 2326: 2323: 2320: 2319: 2316:Fourth series 2315: 2310: 2307: 2304: 2301: 2298: 2297: 2293: 2288: 2285: 2282: 2279: 2276: 2273: 2269: 2266: 2263: 2260: 2257: 2256: 2251: 2248: 2245: 2241: 2238: 2235: 2231: 2228: 2225: 2221: 2218: 2215: 2212: 2208: 2204: 2200: 2197: 2196: 2193:Second series 2192: 2187: 2184: 2181: 2178: 2175: 2174: 2170: 2165: 2160: 2155: 2151: 2148: 2144: 2141: 2137: 2134: 2130: 2127: 2123: 2120: 2116: 2113: 2109: 2106: 2102: 2101: 2098:Shazam Awards 2097: 2092: 2088: 2085: 2081: 2078: 2074: 2071: 2067: 2064: 2060: 2057: 2053: 2050: 2046: 2043: 2039: 2036: 2033:Best Cover – 2032: 2029: 2025: 2022: 2018: 2015: 2011: 2008: 2004: 2001: 1997: 1994: 1990: 1989: 1985: 1980: 1976: 1973: 1969: 1966: 1962: 1959: 1955: 1954: 1951:Harvey Awards 1950: 1945: 1941: 1937: 1933: 1930: 1926: 1922: 1918: 1915: 1911: 1908: 1904: 1903: 1900:Eisner Awards 1899: 1894: 1891: 1887: 1884: 1880: 1879: 1870: 1868: 1866: 1862: 1854: 1849: 1847: 1845: 1841: 1833: 1828: 1826: 1820:Charles Soule 1819: 1817: 1813: 1811: 1807: 1803: 1802: 1801:Brightest Day 1797: 1794:and drawn by 1793: 1789: 1788: 1779: 1774: 1772: 1770: 1766: 1762: 1758: 1753: 1751: 1750: 1744: 1742: 1741: 1736: 1732: 1725:Joshua Dysart 1724: 1722: 1720: 1719:Joshua Dysart 1716: 1712: 1704: 1700:Fourth series 1699: 1697: 1695: 1691: 1687: 1679: 1674: 1672: 1670: 1666: 1662: 1657: 1653: 1650: 1647: 1643: 1639: 1634: 1632: 1628: 1624: 1620: 1619: 1614: 1613: 1608: 1604: 1599: 1597: 1593: 1589: 1583: 1579: 1577: 1572: 1568: 1566: 1562: 1558: 1554: 1545: 1543: 1541: 1537: 1529: 1527: 1525: 1521: 1517: 1516: 1511: 1507: 1503: 1499: 1497: 1493: 1488: 1486: 1482: 1478: 1470: 1468: 1466: 1465:Pat Broderick 1461: 1459: 1455: 1451: 1443: 1441: 1439: 1438: 1433: 1429: 1425: 1421: 1417: 1416:Michael Zulli 1413: 1412: 1407: 1402: 1397: 1395: 1394: 1389: 1385: 1384: 1379: 1375: 1371: 1366: 1364: 1360: 1356: 1351: 1347: 1343: 1339: 1335: 1334:Gorilla Grodd 1331: 1327: 1323: 1319: 1311: 1309: 1307: 1303: 1299: 1295: 1294: 1289: 1288: 1283: 1282: 1277: 1273: 1269: 1265: 1260: 1258: 1254: 1248: 1245: 1243: 1239: 1235: 1231: 1226: 1223: 1219: 1218: 1213: 1209: 1205: 1201: 1197: 1193: 1189: 1188: 1183: 1179: 1175: 1174: 1169: 1165: 1161: 1156: 1154: 1150: 1146: 1142: 1141: 1136: 1132: 1128: 1122: 1120: 1116: 1110: 1108: 1104: 1103: 1097: 1095: 1090: 1086: 1082: 1078: 1076: 1072: 1071: 1066: 1065: 1060: 1056: 1045: 1042: 1034: 1024: 1019: 1015: 1011: 1010: 1003: 994: 993: 987: 985: 983: 979: 975: 970: 967: 962: 960: 954: 952: 948: 947:John Totleben 944: 940: 936: 932: 928: 924: 920: 916: 912: 910: 906: 902: 898: 894: 890: 887: 883: 879: 871: 867:Second series 866: 864: 862: 858: 854: 850: 849:S.T.A.R. Labs 846: 842: 838: 837: 832: 828: 827: 822: 818: 814: 810: 809: 803: 801: 797: 793: 788: 781: 779: 777: 776: 771: 766: 761: 759: 758:Matthew Cable 755: 751: 747: 743: 739: 736: 735:mad scientist 731: 729: 728:Fred Carrillo 725: 721: 717: 713: 705: 700: 698: 696: 695:John Totleben 692: 688: 684: 680: 666: 662: 658: 656: 651: 643: 641: 637: 630: 625: 622: 620: 619:John Totleben 616: 614: 609: 601: 599: 595: 589: 585: 583: 578: 576: 572: 569: 567:, Jesus Saiz 566: 562: 559: 557: 553: 549: 546: 542: 539: 537: 533: 529: 528:Pat Broderick 525: 521: 516: 513: 511: 507: 503: 499: 497: 492: 490: 486: 482: 479: 471: 469: 465: 457: 455: 450: 446: 443: 441: 440:Charles Soule 437: 433: 430: 428: 427:Joshua Dysart 424: 420: 417: 415: 411: 408: 405: 401: 397: 393: 389: 385: 380: 376: 372: 368: 366: 361: 358: 354: 350: 346: 343: 335: 331: 328:Creative team 326: 319: 317: 312: 309: 306: 304: 300: 299: 294: 290: 287: 284: 281: 278: 275: 273: 269: 265: 261: 259: 254: 251: 248: 240: 233: 225: 223: 218: 214: 211: 207: 204: 200: 197: 193: 190: 186: 180: 178: 173: 169: 166: 158: 154: 151: 147: 144: 140: 137: 134: 130: 126: 124: 120: 114:: Bi-monthly 113: 110: 106: 103: 100: 98: 94: 89: 86: 82: 73: 70: 62: 52: 48: 42: 41: 35: 30: 21: 20: 4251: 4202: 4167:Floronic Man 4162:Anton Arcane 4146:TefΓ© Holland 4109:Alec Holland 4104:Abby Holland 3986:. Retrieved 3968:the original 3958:the original 3948:the original 3938:the original 3928:the original 3873: 3869: 3837:. Retrieved 3827: 3820: 3788:. Retrieved 3778: 3771: 3760:. Retrieved 3756:the original 3750: 3744: 3725: 3719: 3711: 3706: 3687: 3681: 3666: 3662: 3660: 3644: 3625: 3611: 3607: 3603: 3589: 3585: 3581: 3567: 3563: 3549: 3545: 3531: 3517: 3513: 3499: 3495: 3481: 3475: 3459: 3446:Love in Vain 3445: 3431: 3417: 3403: 3399: 3380: 3366: 3352: 3338: 3324: 3320: 3306: 3302: 3288: 3274: 3260: 3256: 3242: 3228: 3224: 3210: 3196: 3182: 3168: 3154: 3150: 3136: 3125:(paperback: 3122: 3118: 3099: 3095: 3091: 3087: 3073: 3059: 3055: 3033: 3029: 3004: 2992: 2989:Dark Genesis 2988: 2970: 2969: 2960: 2939: 2930:Wonder Woman 2928: 2917: 2906: 2895: 2889: 2885: 2877: 2861: 2845: 2834: 2825: 2810: 2802: 2791: 2780: 2774: 2770: 2764: 2756: 2750: 2740: 2734: 2723: 2717: 2713: 2707: 2704:Dick Foreman 2700:Black Orchid 2699: 2693: 2685: 2679: 2664: 2657: 2651: 2648:Keith Giffen 2641: 2635: 2632:Tom Mandrake 2620: 2614: 2610: 2602:Black Orchid 2600: 2594: 2591:Jamie Delano 2584: 2578: 2575:Greg Weisman 2566:Captain Atom 2564: 2558: 2552: 2546: 2532: 2526: 2516: 2510: 2502:DC Challenge 2500: 2494: 2488: 2484: 2480: 2474: 2470: 2464: 2461:Marv Wolfman 2454: 2444: 2438: 2427: 2419: 2413: 2403: 2393:#1-16: Ram V 2390: 2384: 2369:Sixth Series 2362:Anton Arcane 2361: 2357: 2350: 2344:Fifth series 2332: 2308: 2302: 2294:Third series 2286: 2271: 2267: 2253: 2249: 2243: 2233: 2223: 2198: 2176: 2171:First series 2153: 2146: 2139: 2132: 2125: 2118: 2111: 2104: 2090: 2083: 2076: 2069: 2062: 2055: 2048: 2041: 2034: 2027: 2020: 2013: 2006: 1999: 1992: 1978: 1971: 1964: 1957: 1943: 1939: 1935: 1928: 1924: 1920: 1913: 1906: 1889: 1882: 1865:Mike Perkins 1860: 1858: 1844:Kelley Jones 1837: 1829:Sixth series 1823: 1814: 1810:Anton Arcane 1799: 1792:Scott Snyder 1785: 1783: 1780:Scott Snyder 1775:Fifth series 1754: 1747: 1745: 1738: 1728: 1715:Will Pfeifer 1708: 1694:TefΓ© Holland 1683: 1675:Third series 1668: 1664: 1661:The Dreaming 1660: 1652:The Dreaming 1651: 1645: 1641: 1635: 1626: 1616: 1610: 1606: 1600: 1595: 1584: 1580: 1575: 1573: 1569: 1564: 1560: 1556: 1549: 1533: 1523: 1520:Black Orchid 1519: 1515:Black Orchid 1513: 1509: 1501: 1500: 1495: 1492:Anton Arcane 1489: 1484: 1480: 1474: 1462: 1454:TefΓ© Holland 1450:Doug Wheeler 1447: 1444:Doug Wheeler 1435: 1431: 1423: 1420:Jamie Delano 1409: 1398: 1391: 1387: 1381: 1370:Black Orchid 1367: 1362: 1358: 1349: 1345: 1341: 1337: 1321: 1315: 1305: 1297: 1291: 1285: 1279: 1261: 1249: 1246: 1238:Dick Grayson 1227: 1215: 1211: 1199: 1185: 1171: 1159: 1157: 1138: 1130: 1123: 1111: 1100: 1098: 1093: 1085:Floronic Man 1080: 1079: 1068: 1062: 1054: 1052: 1037: 1031:January 2014 1028: 1021:Please help 1017: 1006: 977: 973: 971: 965: 963: 958: 955: 927:Mike W. Barr 915:Martin Pasko 913: 908: 904: 900: 896: 892: 877: 875: 834: 824: 806: 804: 799: 791: 789: 785: 773: 769: 764: 762: 738:Anton Arcane 732: 711: 709: 701:First series 676: 664: 661:Tatjana Wood 654: 652: 623: 612: 610: 588:Mike Perkins 581: 579: 575:Kelley Jones 570: 560: 547: 540: 524:Tom Mandrake 514: 495: 493: 480: 468:Penciller(s) 453: 451: 444: 436:Scott Snyder 431: 418: 409: 399: 391: 383: 378: 371:Martin Pasko 364: 362: 357:Gerry Conway 344: 315: 313: 307: 302: 296: 288: 282: 276: 271: 267: 263: 257: 255: 249: 221: 219: 212: 205: 198: 191: 184: 176: 174: 167: 122: 118: 116: 111: 84: 65: 56: 37: 4363:Swamp Thing 4252:comic books 4072:Swamp Thing 3979:Swamp Thing 3915:Swamp Thing 3891:Swamp Thing 3874:Swamp Thing 3667:Swamp Thing 3663:Swamp Thing 3102:(paperback 3009:digest size 2971:Swamp Thing 2924:Jeff Parker 2913:Jeff Lemire 2902:Geoff Johns 2841:Geoff Johns 2804:The Spectre 2798:Peter David 2775:Swamp Thing 2765:Swamp Thing 2751:Swamp Thing 2747:Doug Moench 2735:Swamp Thing 2725:Guy Gardner 2718:Swamp Thing 2714:Vertigo Jam 2708:Swamp Thing 2694:Swamp Thing 2690:Garth Ennis 2680:Swamp Thing 2652:Swamp Thing 2636:Swamp Thing 2615:Swamp Thing 2607:Neil Gaiman 2595:Swamp Thing 2579:Swamp Thing 2559:Swamp Thing 2547:Swamp Thing 2543:Dann Thomas 2527:Swamp Thing 2511:Swamp Thing 2489:Swamp Thing 2475:Swamp Thing 2465:Swamp Thing 2414:Swamp Thing 2387:#1-2: Ram V 2205:, based on 2203:Bruce Jones 2161:Publication 2154:Swamp Thing 2147:Swamp Thing 2140:Swamp Thing 2133:Swamp Thing 2126:Swamp Thing 2119:Swamp Thing 2112:Swamp Thing 2105:Swamp Thing 2091:Swamp Thing 2084:Swamp Thing 2077:Swamp Thing 2070:Swamp Thing 2063:Swamp Thing 2056:Swamp Thing 2049:Swamp Thing 2042:Swamp Thing 2035:Swamp Thing 2028:Swamp Thing 2021:Swamp Thing 2014:Swamp Thing 2000:Swamp Thing 1993:Swamp Thing 1979:Swamp Thing 1972:Swamp Thing 1965:Swamp Thing 1958:Swamp Thing 1936:Swamp Thing 1931:(1996, tie) 1921:Swamp Thing 1914:Swamp Thing 1907:Swamp Thing 1890:Swamp Thing 1883:Swamp Thing 1769:New Orleans 1735:Eric Powell 1717:(#7–8) and 1711:Andy Diggle 1684:Written by 1638:Jon J. Muth 1627:The Spectre 1623:Peter David 1603:DC Universe 1576:Swamp Thing 1561:Swamp Thing 1553:Killer Croc 1546:Mark Millar 1540:Mark Millar 1524:Swamp Thing 1510:Vertigo Jam 1496:Swamp Thing 1485:Swamp Thing 1393:The Sandman 1388:Swamp Thing 1378:Dave McKean 1374:Neil Gaiman 1359:Swamp Thing 1350:Swamp Thing 1346:Hellblazer' 1342:Swamp Thing 1318:Rick Veitch 1312:Rick Veitch 1281:The Sandman 1268:DC Universe 1264:Neil Gaiman 1160:Swamp Thing 1055:Swamp Thing 1025:if you can. 974:Swamp Thing 931:Dan Mishkin 878:Swamp Thing 800:Swamp Thing 792:Swamp Thing 765:Swamp Thing 712:Swamp Thing 679:Swamp Thing 640:Colorist(s) 536:Phil Hester 423:Andy Diggle 406:(#144-171) 404:Mark Millar 388:Rick Veitch 121:vols. 2–6, 85:Swamp Thing 51:introducing 4282:Categories 4257:video game 4247:Alan Moore 4141:Poison Ivy 4097:Characters 3884:References 3762:2017-10-25 3735:0671042599 3612:Animal Man 3518:Animal Man 3476:The New 52 3389:1779528078 2908:Animal Man 2872:Elseworlds 2856:Elseworlds 2852:Alan Davis 2830:Mike Carey 2826:Hellblazer 2745:#521–522: 2731:Beau Smith 2686:Hellblazer 2668:: Outbreak 2666:Bloodlines 2659:New Titans 2646:one-shot: 2586:Hellblazer 2571:Cary Bates 2554:Millennium 2539:Roy Thomas 2507:Cary Bates 2449:Alan Moore 2211:screenplay 2207:Wes Craven 1787:The New 52 1559:#521–522, 1487:#110–138. 1338:Hellblazer 1330:Sam Simeon 1326:Congorilla 1253:Walt Kelly 1242:Lex Luthor 1059:Alan Moore 988:Alan Moore 982:Alan Moore 939:Tom Yeates 886:Wes Craven 861:Metropolis 710:The first 687:Alan Moore 532:Scot Eaton 506:Bo Hampton 502:Tom Yeates 375:Alan Moore 333:Written by 34:references 4262:Man-Thing 4214:TV series 4198:1982 film 3996:Man-Thing 3983:"Unknown" 3859:ignored ( 3849:cite book 3810:ignored ( 3800:cite book 3275:Regenesis 3169:The Curse 3123:Annual #1 2979:DC Comics 2965:DC Comics 2821:Tom Peyer 2763:(between 2749:(between 2733:(between 2727:: Warrior 2706:(between 2692:(between 2678:(between 2650:(between 2634:(between 2622:Firestorm 2609:(between 2577:(between 2545:(between 2525:(between 2509:(between 2463:(between 2412:(between 2410:Bob Haney 2107:#1 (1972) 1757:aftermath 1607:Invasion! 1414:. Artist 1383:Invasion! 1115:Louisiana 1075:Marvel UK 823:twice in 746:land mine 683:DC Comics 657:, vol. 2) 520:Stan Woch 448:Len Wein 351:(#1-13), 238:of issues 146:Superhero 127:: Monthly 102:DC Comics 97:Publisher 59:June 2010 4088:Len Wein 4010:Archived 4007:The Heap 3999:Archived 3988:June 19, 3900:Archived 3833:Archived 3784:Archived 3432:Bad Seed 2946:Tom King 2900:#23–24: 2888:#72 and 2787:Ron Marz 2626:#90–93: 2569:#16–17: 2356:#19–40, 1929:Preacher 1840:Len Wein 1834:Len Wein 1740:The Goon 1713:(#1–6), 1649:spin-off 1272:spun off 1234:Starfire 1204:werewolf 1196:vampires 1007:require 907:#8, and 903:#81-87, 851:) on 60 845:genocide 831:Superman 716:Len Wein 706:Len Wein 665:(vol. 3) 624:(vol. 2) 598:Inker(s) 571:(vol. 6) 561:(vol. 5) 548:(vol. 4) 541:(vol. 3) 515:(vol. 2) 481:(vol. 1) 445:(vol. 6) 432:(vol. 5) 419:(vol. 4) 410:(vol. 3) 379:(vol. 2) 349:Len Wein 345:(vol. 1) 308:(vol. 6) 289:(vol. 5) 283:(vol. 4) 277:(vol. 3) 268:(vol. 2) 250:(vol. 1) 213:(vol. 6) 206:(vol. 5) 199:(vol. 4) 192:(vol. 3) 185:(vol. 2) 168:(vol. 1) 112:(vol. 1) 108:Schedule 4155:Enemies 4129:Deadman 4124:Zatanna 3917:at the 3839:May 21, 3790:May 21, 3568:Aquaman 3478:series 3211:Reunion 2975:Vertigo 2919:Aquaman 2882:Preview 2793:Aquaman 2613:#4 and 2589:#9–10: 2487:#5 and 2416:#18–19) 2349:#1–18, 1646:Sandman 1618:Aquaman 1522:#5 and 1276:Vertigo 1208:zombies 1153:Spectre 1145:Deadman 1140:Inferno 1089:autopsy 1070:Warrior 1064:2000 AD 1009:cleanup 935:silicon 817:Deadman 796:Hawkman 459:Ram V. 402:#6-7), 303:Annuals 272:Annuals 47:improve 4182:Un-Men 3732:  3694:  3651:  3632:  3618:  3608:Annual 3596:  3586:Annual 3574:  3556:  3550:Annual 3538:  3524:  3506:  3500:Annual 3488:  3466:  3452:  3438:  3424:  3410:  3387:  3373:  3359:  3345:  3331:  3325:Annual 3313:  3307:Annual 3295:  3281:  3267:  3249:  3235:  3229:Annual 3217:  3203:  3189:  3175:  3161:  3155:Annual 3143:  3129:  3106:  3080:  3066:  3048:  3040:  3022:  3014:  2999:  2941:Batman 2886:Fables 2816:Totems 2742:Batman 2661:Annual 2485:Crisis 2408:#122: 2358:Annual 2351:Annual 2272:Annual 2268:Annual 2250:Annual 2244:Annual 2234:Annual 2224:Annual 2199:Annual 2149:(1973) 2128:(1973) 2121:(1972) 2114:(1972) 2058:(1986) 2030:(1985) 2023:(1985) 1944:Flinch 1669:Totems 1644:. 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Index

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introducing
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Publisher
DC Comics
Ongoing series
Superhero
horror
23.1
Swamp Thing: Futures End
Len Wein
David Michelinie
Gerry Conway
Martin Pasko
Alan Moore
Rick Veitch
Nancy A. Collins
Mark Millar
Brian K. Vaughan
Andy Diggle
Joshua Dysart
Scott Snyder
Charles Soule
Penciller(s)
Bernie Wrightson
Nestor Redondo
Tom Yeates
Bo Hampton

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