‘Crucifix … argues that the top notch of comic art today, perhaps some lower notches as well, has become a history machine at large. The case for comic masters as simultaneous comic historians aka archivists of the apparently obscure pulp past, is a strong one.’
Paul Buhle
Source: Comics Grinder
‘Crucifix's work more than fulfills the objective he sets himself … It is a very well planned, executed and organized work.’
Enrique del Rey Cabero
Source: Cuadernos de Comic
‘It is a compliment to [this book] that it highlights such profound issues at such a timely moment in the history of comics, I struggle to think of a book that has made me think about my drawing practice as much as it has made me think about comics history. I would therefore recommend this book as essential and deserving of the widest possible readership.’
Gareth Brookes
Source: Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics
‘A book with which every future study of this subject will have to reckon, building a foundation for new work in comics studies that traces the various genealogies of comics memory and transmission across the medium’s long and evolving history.’
Matthew Levay
Source: INKS
‘A most welcome incursion into the history of the post-2000 North American graphic novel. … Crucifix’s work achieves the objective that every monograph on the comics medium endeavors to fulfill: expanding the definition of what is encompassed by the term “comics” by bringing to light the incredibly diverse formats of the medium …’
Élizabeth Moulin
Source: Transatlantica
‘Ultimately, Crucifix’s work achieves the objective that every monograph on the comics medium endeavors to fulfill: expanding the definition of what is encompassed by the term 'comics' by bringing to light the incredibly diverse formats of the medium …’
Élizabeth Moulin
Source: Transatlantica