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{{short description|British comics artist and cartoonist|bot=PearBOT 5}} {{For|the blues musician|Eddie C. Campbell}} {{other people|Edward Campbell|Edward Campbell (disambiguation)}} {{Use British English|date=March 2013}} {{Use dmy dates|date=May 2022}} {{Infobox comics creator |image = EddieCampbell.png |caption = Eddie Campbell at the 2008 San Diego Comicon |birth_name = |birth_date = {{birth date and age|df=yes|1955|08|10}} |birth_place = [[Glasgow]], Scotland, UK |death_date = |death_place = |nationality = Scottish |area = Artist |spouse = [[Audrey Niffenegger]] |children = 3 |alias = |signature = |notable works = ''[[Bacchus (comics)|Bacchus]]''<br />''[[From Hell]]''<br />''Alec'' |awards = [[UK Comic Art Award]], 1991<br />[[Eisner Award]], 1993, 2000<br />[[Harvey Award]], 1995<br />[[Ignatz Award]], 1997, 2010<br />[[Inkpot Award]], 1998<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.comic-con.org/awards/inkpot|title=Inkpot Award|date=6 December 2012|website=Comic-Con International: San Diego}}</ref><br />[[Eagle Award (comics)|Eagle Award]], 2000 |website = https://www.eddiecampbelldammit.com }} '''Eddie Campbell''' (born 10 August 1955) is a British comics artist and [[cartoonist]]. He was the [[illustrator]] and publisher of ''[[From Hell]]'' (written by [[Alan Moore]]), and the creator of the semi-autobiographical ''Alec'' stories collected in ''Alec: The Years Have Pants'', and ''[[Bacchus (comics)|Bacchus]]'' (a.k.a. ''Deadface''), a wry adventure series about the few [[Greek gods]] who have survived to the present day. His scratchy pen-and-ink style is influenced by the [[impressionists]], illustrators of the age of "liberated penmanship" such as [[Phil May (caricaturist)|Phil May]], [[Charles Dana Gibson]], [[John Leech (caricaturist)|John Leech]] and [[George du Maurier]], and cartoonists [[Milton Caniff]] and [[Frank Frazetta]] (particularly his ''[[Johnny Comet]]'' strip). Campbell's writing has been compared to that of [[Jack Kerouac]] and [[Henry Miller]].<ref>{{cite journal | last =Yang | first =Sam |date=October 1991 | title =A Loaf of Bread, A Jug of Wine and Eddie Campbell | journal =The Comics Journal | volume =1 | issue =145|pages =58β87}}</ref> Campbell has won almost every award the comics industry bestows, including the [[Eisner Award]], the [[Harvey Award]], the [[Ignatz Award]], the [[Eagle Award (comics)|Eagle Award]], and the [[UK Comic Art Award]]. ==Biography== ===''Alec'' and other autobiographical work=== [[File:Alec - the King Canute Crowd (front cover).jpg|thumb|right|200px|''Alec: The King Canute Crowd'' by Eddie Campbell]] Campbell made his earliest attempts at [[autobiographical comics]] in the late 1970s with ''In the Days of the Ace Rock 'n' Roll Club''<ref>Campbell, Eddie. [http://eddiecampbell.blogspot.com/2011/12/nd-here-it-is-this-exists-only-as-app.html "And here it is! This exists only as an app!"], personal blog (11 December 2011): "In the Days of the Ace Rock'n'Roll Club was a book, or an ongoing series of 7-page stories which I drew between March 1978 and March 1979."</ref> (1978β1979). This evolved into ''Alec'', with the character of Alec MacGarry standing in for the author. Campbell self-published these early comics in the [[amateur press association]] ''[[British Amateur Press Association (comics fandom)|BAPA]]'' and then as short-run photocopied pamphlets in London in the early 1980s, selling them at conventions and comic marts and via [[Paul Gravett]]'s "''Fast Fiction''" market stall. When Gravett founded ''[[Escape Magazine]]'', Campbell was one of the artists featured. In 1984 Escape published ''Alec'', a slim collection of his semi-autobiographical stories. This was followed by two further collections, ''Love and Beerglasses'' (1985) and ''Doggie in the Window'' (1986). While in [[Australia]] (where he moved in 1986), Campbell published a number of comics with the new British publisher [[Harrier Comics]]. These included the [[One-shot (comics)|one-shots]] ''By The Time I Get To Wagga Wagga'' (1987), and ''Ace'' (1988), as well as his first ''[[Bacchus (comics)|Bacchus]]'' comics (see below). With [[Glenn Dakin]] and [[Phil Elliott]], he helped found Harrier's alternative-flavored New Wave imprint.<ref name=Yang /> In 1990 all three ''Alec'' volumes were collected, together with some unpublished material, as ''The Complete Alec'' by [[Acme Press]]/[[Eclipse Comics]].<ref name=Yang>Yang, Sam. "A Loaf of Bread, A Jug of Wine and Eddie Campbell," ''The Comics Journal'' #145 (Oct. 1991), p. 59, 78.</ref> The collection won the 1991 [[UK Comic Art Award]] for Best Graphic Novel Collection.<ref name=TCJ142>"British Awards Announced," ''The Comics Journal'' #142 (June 1991), p. 17.</ref> In 2000 this material was republished as ''The King Canute Crowd''. Two further slim volumes, ''The Dead Muse'' (1990) and ''Little Italy'' (1991) appeared through [[Fantagraphics]] Books. ''Graffiti Kitchen'', which Campbell considers the highpoint of the series,{{citation needed|date=October 2018}} was published by [[Tundra Press|Tundra]] in 1993, and ''[[The Dance of Lifey Death]]'' followed in 1994 from [[Dark Horse Comics]]. Campbell then followed up these works by self-publishing two larger works. ''Alec: How To Be An Artist'' (2000), a study of the art form and of Campbell's own artistic journey, and ''After The Snooter'' (2002), in which Campbell appears to have laid Alec McGarry to rest. Both works were originally serialised within his ''[[Bacchus (comics)|Bacchus]]'' series, but were reworked upon collection. ''The Fate of the Artist'', in which Campbell's family and friends investigate his disappearance, undermining the image of himself he had presented in his previous autobiographical works, was published by [[First Second Books]] in 2006. ''Alec: How to Be an Artist'' was nominated for the [[Harvey Award]] for Best Graphic Album of Previously Published Work in 2000. In 2007 Campbell spent some time serving as a [[Courtroom sketch|court illustrator]] in Australia.<ref>Campbell, Eddie. [http://eddiecampbell.blogspot.com/2007_04_08_archive.html "Bastards I have drawn: (The Villains in my Home Town- part 4),"] personal blog (14 Apr. 2007).</ref> All the ''Alec'' stories, with the exception of ''The Fate of the Artist'', were published in one volume, ''Alec: The Years Have Pants'' by Top Shelf Productions in 2009 ({{ISBN|978-1-60309-025-4}}). this was followed in 2012 by the publication of ''The Lovely Horrible Stuff'' (Top Shelf), a continuation of the autobiographical theme which playfully investigates our relationship with money. ===Bacchus=== {{Main|Bacchus (comics)}} The success of [[Kevin Eastman]] and [[Peter Laird]]'s ''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles]]'' led to a short-lived explosion of black and white independent comics in the mid-1980s. Campbell joined in, creating the series ''Deadface'' for Harrier Comics, telling the story of [[Dionysus|Bacchus]], god of wine and revelry, and the few other Greek mythological figures who have survived to the present day. Harrier published eight issues of ''Deadface'' and two issues of a companion comic, ''[[Bacchus (comics)|Bacchus]]''. Campbell then began publishing short Bacchus stories in a number of anthologies, such as the British anthology ''Trident'' published by [[Trident Comics]], and the American anthology ''Dark Horse Presents'' published by [[Dark Horse Comics]]. Dark Horse reprinted the Harrier series as ''Immortality Isn't Forever'' in 1990 and a selection of the short stories as ''Doing the Islands With Bacchus'' in 1991. Campbell continued to produce Bacchus stories for Dark Horse until 1995 as a series of miniseries. The entire Bacchus saga is to be published in two 500-page volumes by Top Shelf Productions (Vol. 1 {{ISBN|978-1-60309-026-1}}, Vol. 2 {{ISBN|978-1-60309-027-8}}).<ref>{{cite web |last=Campbell |first=Eddie |title=A Big Spread-1 |url=http://eddiecampbell.blogspot.co.uk/2011/07/i-m-scanning-and-preparing-bacchus-for.html |publisher=Eddie Campbell (blog) |access-date=7 September 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131103110958/http://eddiecampbell.blogspot.co.uk/2011/07/i-m-scanning-and-preparing-bacchus-for.html |archive-date=3 November 2013 |date=15 July 2011 |url-status=live }}</ref> ===''From Hell''=== {{Main|From Hell}} Beginning in 1989, Campbell illustrated [[Alan Moore]]'s ambitious [[Jack the Ripper]] [[graphic novel]] ''[[From Hell]]'', serialised initially in [[Steve Bissette]]'s [[horror fiction|horror]] anthology ''Taboo''. Moore and Bissette chose Campbell as illustrator for his down-to-earth approach which gave the story a convincing realism and did not sensationalise the violence of the murders. After ''Taboo'' folded ''From Hell'' was published in instalments by Tundra and then [[Kitchen Sink Press]], until the epilogue ''Dance of the Gull-catchers'' saw print in 1998. ===Self-publishing=== Under the influence of [[Dave Sim]], Campbell founded '''Eddie Campbell Comics''' and began self-publishing in 1995, after the film rights to ''From Hell'' were optioned.{{fact|date=May 2023}} The monthly series ''Bacchus'' reprinted and completed the story begun in ''Deadface'', as well as carrying new and reprinted ''Alec'' stories. He went on to collect both ''Alec'' and ''Bacchus'' as a series of graphic novels. He also published the collected edition of ''From Hell'', and comics adaptations of two of Alan Moore's [[performance art]] pieces, ''The Birth Caul'' and ''Snakes and Ladders''. After the cancellation of ''Bacchus'', Campbell published two issues of ''Eddie Campbell's Egomania'' magazine, in which he began to serialise another work, ''The History of Humour''. Facing an increasingly indifferent market for his work, and the collapse of his US distributor, Campbell ended his publishing imprint in 2003 after releasing the second issue of ''Egomania''. ===First Second and Top Shelf=== After his self-publishing ceased, Campbell signed with [[First Second Books]]. As well as ''The Fate of the Artist'', a continuation of the Alec series, First:Second published two other works by Campbell. June 2007 saw the publication of ''[[The Black Diamond Detective Agency]]'', Campbell's adaptation of an as-yet unmade screenplay by C. Gaby Mitchell. Set in the closing months of 1899, it features the eponymous private detective agency investigating a conspiracy to blow up a train, and their prime suspect's efforts to find the truth. In January 2008, First Second Books published Campbell's collaboration with Dan Best, ''The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard''. The work follows the life of circus performers and historical figures as they wander in and out of history. It was enthusiastically received by critics with ''[[Ain't It Cool News]]'' saying "Something truly amazing and fun does indeed occur in this book."<ref>"Ambush Bug." [http://www.aintitcool.com/node/36654#12 "AICN COMICS CELEBRATES ITS 7TH BIRTHDAY BY DOING WHAT THEY DO BEST...REVIEWING MANY, MANY COMICS!"] ''Ain't It Cool News'' (7 May 2008) β review of ''The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard''.</ref> Campbell's next works were for Top Shelf. 2009 saw the publication of the life sized omnibus ''Alec: The Years Have Pants''. The book collected Campbell's Alec work to date with the exception of ''Fate of the Artist''. the omnibus edition also included new material. In 2010 ''The Playwright'', a collaboration with Daren White, was published. This reworked strips the pair had previously published in the Australian anthology ''[[Dee Vee]]'', expanding the scope of the story-line and bringing it to conclusion. In 2012 Top Shelf published ''The Lovely Horrible Stuff'' in collaboration with Knockabout Press, a continuation of Campbell's autobiographical works. Campbell has evolved his art style, using colour, collage and photo-shop to create art which ''[[The Guardian]]'' describe as having " a surreal, scruffy elegance".<ref>{{cite web |last=Mautner |first=Chris |title="The Only Thing That Matters is the Work on the Page": An Interview with Eddie Campbell |url=http://www.tcj.com/the-only-thing-that-matters-is-the-work-on-the-page-an-interview-with-eddie-campbell/ |publisher=The Comics Journal |access-date=7 September 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120901163104/http://www.tcj.com/the-only-thing-that-matters-is-the-work-on-the-page-an-interview-with-eddie-campbell/ |archive-date=1 September 2012 |date=29 May 2012 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Smart |first=James |title=The Lovely Horrible Stuff by Eddie Campbell β review |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jul/17/lovely-horrible-stuff-eddie-campbell-review |access-date=7 September 2012 |newspaper=The Guardian |date=17 July 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120720005229/http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/jul/17/lovely-horrible-stuff-eddie-campbell-review |archive-date=20 July 2012 |url-status=live }}</ref> ===iPad=== A collection of the "Dapper John" stories originally created in the late 1970s, along with an original cover, a new interview and other features, was published as an [[iPad]] app in December 2011 by digital publisher Panel Nine. In 2012 Top Shelf released two collections of ''Campbell's Bacchus'' series. ==Personal life== Campbell moved to [[Brisbane]], Australia in 1986 with his then-wife Annie where he lived for thirty years.<ref name=Gravatt>Gravatt, Paul. [http://www.paulgravett.com/profiles/creator/eddie_campbell "Creator Profile: Eddie Campbell,"] PaulGravatt.com. Accessed 13 October 2018</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=O'Brien|first=John|date=December 1, 2018|url=https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/qweekend/eddie-campbell-swaps-river-city-for-windy-city/news-story/b0f85d0bc2de2a2f272bcf7d2441cec5|title=Eddie Campbell swaps River City for Windy City|work=[[The Courier-Mail]]|access-date=May 17, 2023}}</ref> Campbell is married to author and artist [[Audrey Niffenegger]]<ref>Lehoczky, Etelka [https://www.npr.org/2018/03/20/593169090/bizarre-romance-finds-love-but-misses-that-perfect-moment "ARTS & LIFE: 'Bizarre Romance' Finds Love, But Misses That Perfect Moment,"] NPR (20 March 2018)</ref> and currently lives in Chicago.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://chimeraobscura.com/vm/covid-check-in-with-eddie-campbell | title=COVID Check-In with Eddie Campbell | date=29 May 2020 }}</ref> Campbell's adult daughter [[Hayley Campbell]] (from his previous marriage)<ref name=Gravatt/> is a writer and radio journalist.<ref>McMillan, Graeme, [http://comicsalliance.com/eddie-campbell-hayley-jack-the-ripper-comic/ "EDDIE CAMPBELL UNVEILS THE COMIC HIS DAUGHTER DREW WHILE HE WORKED ON βFROM HELLβ"] ''Comics Alliance'' (26 June 2012)</ref> == Awards == * 1991 [[UK Comic Art Award]] for Best Graphic Novel Collection for ''The Complete Alec'' * 1993 [[Eisner Award]] for Best Serialized Story for ''From Hell'' in ''[[Taboo (comics)|Taboo]]'' * 1995 [[Harvey Award]] for Best Continuing or Limited Series for ''[[From Hell]]'' * 1997 [[Ignatz Award]] for Outstanding Story for ''From Hell'' * 1999 [[Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Awards]] for Favorite Reprint Graphic Novel/Album for ''From Hell'' * 2000 [[Eagle Award (comics)|Eagle Award]] for Favourite Comic (Excluding North American and UK titles) for ''[[Bacchus (comics)|Bacchus]]''<ref name=Tart>[http://www.sequentialtart.com/award.php "Eagle Awards 2000: Sequential Tart Wins!"], ''Sequential Tart''. Accessed 15 Jan. 2020.</ref> * 2000 Eagle Award for Favourite Trade Paperback/Reprint Collection for ''[[From Hell|From Hell: To Hell]]'' * 2000 Eisner Award for Best Graphic Album: Reprint for ''From Hell'' * 2000 Harvey Award for Best Graphic Album of Previously Published Work for ''From Hell'' * 2000 (nomination) Ignatz Award for Outstanding Story for ''From Hell'' * 2010 Ignatz Award for Outstanding Artist for ''Alec: The Years Have Pants (A Life-Sized Omnibus)'' ==Bibliography== === ''Alec'' === * ''Alec'' ([[Escape (magazine)|Escape Publishing]], 1984) * ''Love and Beerglasses'' (Escape Publishing, 1985) * ''Doggie in the Window'' (Escape Publishing, 1986) * ''By The Time I Get To Wagga Wagga'' ([[Harrier Comics]], 1987) * ''Ace'' (Harrier/New Wave, 1988) * ''The Complete Alec'' (Acme Press/Eclipse Comics, 1990) ** republished in 2000 by Eddie Campbell Comics as ''The King Canute Crowd'' * The Dead Muse ([[Fantagraphics]] Books, 1990) * ''Eddie Campbell in Little Italy'' (Fantagraphics, 1991) * ''In The Days of the Ace Rock 'n' Roll Club'' (Fantagraphics, 1993) β originally produced in 1978β1979 * ''Graffiti Kitchen'' ([[Tundra Publishing]], 1993) * ''The Dance of Lifey Death'' ([[Dark Horse Comics]], 1994) * ''Three Piece Suit'' ([[Top Shelf Productions]], 2001) β collecting ''Graffiti Kitchen'', ''Little Italy,'' and ''The Dance of Lifey Death'' * ''How to be an Artist'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 2001) * ''After the Snooter'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 2002) * ''Alec: The Years Have Pants'' (Top Shelf Productions, 2009) β collecting all of the above, with extra shorts and a new Alec story, "The Years Have Pants" * ''The Fate of the Artist'' ([[First Second Books]], 2006) * ''The Lovely Horrible Stuff'' (Top Shelf Productions / Knockabout Comics, 2012) * ''The Second Fake Death of Eddie Campbell'' (Top Shelf Productions, 2023) === ''[[Bacchus (comics)|Bacchus]]'' === * ''Deadface'' (8 issues, [[Harrier Comics]], April 1987βOctober 1988) * ''Deadface: Doing the Islands with Bacchus'' (3 issues, [[Dark Horse Comics]], 1991) β mostly reprints of stories from [[Trident Comics]]' ''[[Trident (UK comics)|Trident]]'' and [[Atomeka Press]]' ''[[A1 (comics)|A1]]'' * ''The Eyeball Kid'' (3 issues, Dark Horse, April 1992βJune 1992) β reprints of stories from the Dark Horse anthology ''[[Cheval Noir (comics)|Cheval Noir]]'' * ''Deadface: Earth, Water, Air, and Fire'' (4 issues, Dark Horse, July 1992βOctober 1992) * ''The 1,001 Nights of Bacchus'' (Dark Horse, May 1993) * ''Hermes vs. The Eyeball Kid'' (3 issues, Dark Horse, December 1994βFebruary 1995) β reprints of stories from ''[[Dark Horse Presents]]'' * ''Eddie Campbell's Bacchus'' (60 issues, Eddie Campbell Comics, May 1995βMay 2001) * Collected volumes: ** ''Vol 1: Deadface: Immortality Isn't Forever'' (Dark Horse Comics, 1990) β reprints ''Deadface'' #1β8 ** ''Vol 2: The Gods of Business'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 1995) β with [[Ed Hillyer]] ** ''Vol 3: Doing the Islands with Bacchus'' (Dark Horse Comics, 1991) ** ''Vol 4: The Eyeball Kid β One Man Show'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 1998) β with Ed Hillyer; reprints from ''Cheval Noir'' ** ''Vol 5: Earth, Water, Air, Fire'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 1998) β with Wes Kublick; reprints from ''Deadface: Earth, Water, Air, and Fire'' ** ''Vol 6: The 1,001 Nights of Bacchus'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 2000) β reprints the 1993 Dark Horse TPB of the same name ** ''Vol 7/8: The Eyeball Kid Double Bill'' Eddie Campbell Comics, 2002) β with Wes Kublick; reprints "The Eyeball Kid" stories from ''[[Dark Horse Presents]]'' #76-84, 94-99 (Aug. 1993βJuly 1995) ** ''Vol 9: King Bacchus'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 1996) β with Pete Mullins ** ''Vol 10: Banged Up'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 2001) β with Pete Mullins and [[Marcus Moore (writer)|Marcus Moore]] * ''Bacchus Omnibus Volume 1'' (Top Shelf Productions, 2015) * ''Bacchus Omnibus Volume 2'' (Top Shelf Productions, 2016) === Other work === * ''[[Catalyst: Agents of Change]]'' (5 issues, Dark Horse Comics, 1994) β writer, with Pete Ford * ''[[Hellblazer]]'' ([[Vertigo Comics]]) ** Issues 85β88 (1995) β writer, with [[Sean Phillips]] as artist ** Issue #250 (2008) β short story artist, with [[Peter Milligan]] as writer of "The Curse of Christmas" * ''[[From Hell]]'' (originally serialized from 1989 to 1996; Top Shelf Productions, 1999) β with [[Alan Moore]] * ''The Devils Footprints'' ([[Heavy Metal (magazine)|Heavy Metal Magazine]]) 20th Anniversary Hardcover 1997) β with [[Alan Moore|Marcus Moore]] (script) * ''[[Spirit (comics character)|The Spirit: The New Adventures]]''<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Spirit: The New Adventures #7 - Tricks or Treats in Central City (Issue) |url=https://comicvine.gamespot.com/the-spirit-the-new-adventures-7-tricks-or-treats-i/4000-145237/ |access-date=2023-12-18 |website=Comic Vine |language=en}}</ref> Issue #7; ''The Pacifist ([[Kitchen Sink Press|Kitchen Sink]], 1998)'' β with [[Alan Moore|Marcus Moore]] (script) and Pete Mullins (art) * ''[[The Birth Caul]]'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 1999) β adaptation of an Alan Moore performance art piece * ''[[Snakes and Ladders (comic)|Snakes and Ladders]]'' (Eddie Campbell Comics, 2001) β with Michael Evans; adaptation of an Alan Moore performance art piece * ''Egomania'' (2 issues, Eddie Campbell Comics, 2002) * ''Batman: The Order of Beasts'' (DC Comics, 2004) β with Daren White * ''[[Captain America]]: Homeland'' (Marvel Comics, 2004) β pencils and inks, two-part "Requiem" story with writer [[Robert Morales]] and inks by [[Stewart McKenny]] * ''[[A Disease of Language]]'' (Palmano Bennett / [[Knockabout Comics]], 2005) β hardcover reprinting ''The Birth Caul'' and ''Snakes and Ladders'' plus miscellany * ''The Black Diamond Detective Agency'' (First Second, 2007) * ''The Amazing Remarkable Monsieur Leotard'' (First Second, 2008) * ''The Playwright'' (Top Shelf / Knockabout, 2010) β with Daren White * ''Dapper John'': ** "Dapper John: In the Days of the Ace Rock 'n' Roll Club", iPad app collecting all of the "Dapper John" stories (2011, orig. 1978βc. 1993) * ''The From Hell Companion'' (Top Shelf Productions, 2013) β with [[Alan Moore]] * ''Bizarre Romance'' (Abrams, 2018) β with [[Audrey Niffenegger]] * ''The Goat Getters'' (IDW and the Library of American Comics, 2018) * ''From Hell: Master Edition'' (colourized and revised; Top Shelf Productions, 2020) * ''Kate Carew: America's First Great Woman Cartoonist'' (Fantagraphics, 2024) ==Notes== {{Reflist}} ==References== {{Refbegin}} * {{cite web | title=The Comics Journal Message Board Thread | work=The Comics Journal Message Board: NYTimes Mag Article 7/11/04 β within which Eddie Campbell formulated his Graphic Novel Manifesto) | url=http://www.tcj.com/messboard/ubb/Forum1/HTML/007792-2.html | access-date=1 May 2005 }} {{Dead link|date=September 2010|bot=H3llBot}} * {{cite web | title=The Eddie Campbell Interview | work=(September, 2004) Graphic Novel Review in Depth β The Eddie Campbell Interview β Sidebar β Eddie Campbell's (Revised) Graphic Novel Manifesto | url=http://www.graphicnovelreview.com/issue1/campbell_interview.php | access-date=1 May 2005 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20050404060151/http://www.graphicnovelreview.com/issue1/campbell_interview.php |archive-date = 4 April 2005}} * {{cite web | title=The Eddie Campbell Interview | work=(January, 2005) Campbell and Dirk Deppey discuss "comic book culture" vs. "graphic novel culture"| url=http://tcj.com/273/i_campbell.html | access-date=17 April 2006 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060505021331/http://www.tcj.com/273/i_campbell.html |archive-date = 5 May 2006}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20070424184459/http://users.rcn.com/aardy/comics/awards/index.html Comic Book Awards Almanac] * {{gcdb|type=credit|search=Eddie+Campbell|title=Eddie Campbell}} * {{comicbookdb|type=creator|id=1846|title=Eddie Campbell}} * [https://web.archive.org/web/20120614180537/http://www.comicus.it/interviste/item/46398-eddie-campbell Eddie Campbell interviewed] by Italian comics' website Comicus in November 2009 (interview both in Italian and English) {{Refend}} ==External links== * [https://www.eddiecampbelldammit.com/ Eddie Campbell, Dammit! β Official page] * [http://eddiecampbell.blogspot.com/ Eddie Campbell's Blog] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20070313122100/http://marvel.com/catalog/?artist=Eddie%20Campbell Eddie Campbell] at Marvel.com * [https://web.archive.org/web/20140515132640/https://itunes.apple.com/gb/app/dapper-john-in-days-ace-rock/id484862579?mt=8/ Eddie Campbell] on iTunes {{s-start}} {{s-bef|before=[[Jamie Delano]]}} {{s-ttl|title=''[[Hellblazer]]'' writer|years=1994}} {{s-aft|after=[[Paul Jenkins (writer)|Paul Jenkins]]}} {{s-end}} {{Inkpot Award 1990s}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Campbell, Eddie}} [[Category:1955 births]] [[Category:Living people]] [[Category:Alternative cartoonists]] [[Category:Australian people of Scottish descent]] [[Category:Scottish graphic novelists]] [[Category:Scottish comics artists]] [[Category:Scottish comics writers]] [[Category:Australian comics artists]] [[Category:Australian comics writers]] [[Category:Comic book letterers]] [[Category:Scottish expatriates in Australia]] [[Category:Artists from Glasgow]] [[Category:Ignatz Award winners for Outstanding Artist]] [[Category:Inkpot Award winners]]
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