I love comic books. I just do.

I love comic books and I love anime.

I'm more into graphic novels than comic books.

People underestimate the complexity of comic books.

Comic books have a long, fraught history with sexism.

Comic books have gone mainstream. The audience is there.

I don't really read magazines that much. I read comic books.

I've always been apprehensive about doing comic books, period.

I think that comic books have appealed to female readers for years.

But I read comic books. I read things like Richie Rich and Little Lulu.

I've got a stack of the 'Walking Dead' comic books next to my bed here.

I want to read a lot of comic books. I want to watch movies. I want to rest.

Comic books and graphic novels are a great medium. It's incredibly underused.

I feel sorry for people who only know comic books through movies. I really do.

I love written books and novels, but I really love graphic novels and comic books!

I read tons of comic books. My favourite is Grant Morrison, a Scottish comic writer.

I kind of backed into rap music. I thought I was going to do comic books or graphic art.

Personally, I really enjoy sci-fi. I watch it, I read comic books, and I play video games.

I grew up reading 'Lord of the Rings' and comic books, so that kind of epic quality I like.

When I was a kid, I used to send away for those ventriloquist kits on the back of comic books.

Look at comic books. It used to be something that only geeks were into. And now it's everywhere.

My overall artistic goal is to marry graphic design with comic books and traditional storytelling.

Ninety percent of the comic books I've written in the past had little or nothing to do with Islam.

Kids don't even read comic books anymore. They've got more important things to do - like video games.

I get inspired from all different kinds of places - cartoons, comic books, movies and things like that.

I grew up one of three girls, and none of them were into comic books, so I wasn't exposed to that world.

I grew up reading comic books. Super hero comic books, Archie comic books, horror comic books, you name it.

When I was a boy, I always saw myself as a hero in comic books and in movies. I grew up believing this dream.

I had to find my way of translating the excitement you get when you're reading comic books to the big screen.

I've always been an enormous fan of comic books and anything that captures the real in a surreal environment.

I'm constantly trying to mine the DNA of John Constantine and stay true to that character in the comic books.

I've always been a big fan of utopian, future, new-world stories - 'V For Vendetta,' comic books, graphic novels.

To paint comic books as childish and illiterate is lazy. A lot of comic books are very literate - unlike most films.

We can't really make a living doing comic books, despite the fact that would be an awfully fun way to make a living.

There is a religion around 'Star Wars' that is different than even the fanaticism around comic books and other media.

Superman was my first comic back in the '50s; that was me under the bedspread with the flashlight reading comic books.

I spent a lot of time drawing and writing little comic books, and my mom was a rapper, so I would steal her instrumentals.

I grew up as a fan of comic books, and I've been reading them for so long that I've never felt an affinity toward just one.

Since I was eight years old. I didn't have a TV, so comic books were definitely my television, my soap operas, and all that.

I grew up reading not-serious literature, like comic books and pulp novels, so my instinct is to amuse the reader and entertain.

I used to get a haircut every Saturday so I would never miss any of the comic books. I had practically no hair when I was a kid!

It was mostly through pop culture, through hip-hop, through Dungeons & Dragons and comic books that I acquired much of my vocabulary.

My wife could give a rip about comic books, but she loves 'Arrow,' and she loves 'The Flash,' and she likes them because of the characters.

The copycat effects of media violence, similar to those previously attributed to westerns, radio serials and comic books, are easy to exaggerate.

My hero in comic books is Jack Kirby: 'Spider-Man,' 'Fantastic Four,' 'Captain America,' Marvel Comics. He was really the basis for Marvel Comics.

My mother had all these maxims - like, classy girls never chew gum, never read comic books, never get their ears pierced, never get their hair dyed.

People have these ideas about comic books and their adaptations as flashy and sort of surface-y, broad-strokes-type projects, but they're not, really.

DC is the foundation of what we all know about comic books and heroes. They've had great storytellers, great illustrates, as a part of that tradition.

When I first heard of it, I thought it was a horror film. 'Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles' is such a strange name. I wasn't into the comic books at all.

Graphic novels and comic books, by and large, as you know, have cover art, and they have interior art. The interior art is never as detailed as the cover art.

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