"Roscoe Moscow: Who Killed Rock n' Roll?" (script and art, 1979–1980)
"The Stars My Degradation" (script and art, for a period with Pedro Henry, 1980–1983) — Axel Pressbutton
"Ten Little Liggers" (script and art, 1980)
"The Rock and Roll Zoo" (script and art, 1981)
"Christmas on Depravity" (script and art, with Pedro Henry, 1981) — Axel Pressbutton
"The Bride of Pressbutton" (script and art, 1982) — Axel Pressbutton
Maxwell the Magic Cat (as Jill de Ray, script and art, strip in Northampton Post, 1979–1986, plus a new episode for the Post's final edition in December 2016)[1]
In 2009, Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? was reprinted in a Deluxe Edition HC, which also contains "For the Man Who Has Everything" and "The Jungle Line".
In 2008, The Killing Joke was recolored and reprinted in a 20th Anniversary HC, and this collection was revised to remove the story.
In 2012, a hardcover entitled DC Universe by Alan Moore (464 pages,
ISBN1-4012-3339-2) was released. This volume included all the stories from DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore and Alan Moore: Wild Worlds except for Batman: The Killing Joke and the Spawn/WildC.A.T.s miniseries.
"A Hypothetical Lizard" (in Liavek: Wizard's Row, Ace Books, 1987; The Year's Best Fantasy, 1989; Demons and Dreams, 1989; Words Without Pictures, 1990)
"Alphabets of Desire" (limited print designed and lettered by
Todd Klein, available only from Klein's website)
Voice of the Fire, 1996, Victor Gollancz; 1997, Orion Books; republished 2003, Top Shelf Productions. This new edition features a
dust jacket designed by
Chip Kidd, an introduction by
Neil Gaiman and thirteen colour plates by
José Villarrubia. Paperback edition released 15 July 2009, Top Shelf Productions.
Show Pieces (2012), short film anthology directed by Mitch Jenkins, written by Alan Moore
The Show (2021), feature film adaptation of and sequel to Show Pieces, directed by Mitch Jenkins, written by Moore[8]
Non-fiction
As well as his run on Captain Britain in The Daredevils Moore contributed text Night Raven stories, fanzine reviews and a number of long articles (writing up to 24 pages out of the 54, for example in issue #5). The non-fiction pieces include:
"The Importance of Being Frank" (The Daredevils #1, about
Frank Miller, 1983)[9]
"Stan Lee: Blinded by the Hype – An Affectionate Character Assassination" (The Daredevils #3–4, 1983)
"Invisible Girls and Phantom Ladies" (The Daredevils #4–6, about sexism in comics, 1983)
"O Superman: Music & comics" (The Daredevils #5, 1983)
"About the Special Executive" (The Daredevils #5, 1983)
Other work includes:
"C.B.? – That's a Big Ten-Four!" and "Bear's Monkey Business" in B.J. and the Bear Annual 1982 (1981), article and illustrations
"Too Avant Garde for the Mafia?" (in Infinity #7–8, 1984–1985)
Alan Moore's The Courtyard Companion (2004), Avatar Press; reprints
Antony Johnston's script for Alan Moore's The Courtyard with annotations by NG Christakos, Moore's original short story (from which the series was adapted), new pinups/art by
Jacen Burrows, and a new essay by Antony Johnson.
Alan Moore's The Courtyard (Color Edition) (Avatar Press, 56 pages, 11 March 2009) This is a coloured version to the 2003 release.
Alan Moore's Hypothetical Lizard, 4 issues (2005), Avatar Press. Collected in 2007. Adapted by Antony Johnston (writer) and Lorenzo Lorente (artist) from Moore's novelette
Constantine, 2005, based on the character
John Constantine, created by Moore with Steve Bissette, John Totleben and Rick Veitch in Swamp Thing
V For Vendetta, 2006, adaptation written by
the Wachowskis; directed by
James McTeigue (Moore had his name removed from the film, which is credited to "Based on the graphic novel illustrated by David Lloyd")
Watchmen, 2009, adaptation written by David Hayter and Alex Tse; directed by Zack Snyder (Moore refused to be credited)
The
Constantine TV series, 2014–2015, and the
animated web series. 2018–, based on the character John Constantine, created by Moore with Steve Bissette, John Totleben and Rick Veitch in Swamp Thing.
Alan Moore's Exit Interview (by Bill Baker, Airwave Publishing, August 2007,
ISBN978-0-9724805-9-8)
Impossible Territories: An Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen The Black Dossier (by Jess Nevins, paperback, 304 pages,
MonkeyBrain, forthcoming July 2008,
ISBN1-932265-24-4)
The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore – Indispensable Edition (by George Khoury, 240 pages, TwoMorrows Publishing, 2009,
ISBN978-1-60549-009-0)
Alan Moore: Conversations (by Eric L. Berlatsky, 240 pages, University Press of Mississippi, September 2011,
ISBN978-1617031588)
Sexual Ideology in the Works of Alan Moore: Critical Essays on the Graphic Novels (edited by Todd A. Comer and Joseph Michael Sommers, 234 pages, McFarland, February 2012,
ISBN978-0786464531)
Magic Words: the Extraordinary Life of Alan Moore (by Lance Parkin, 432 pages, Aurum, 2014)[18]
Alan Moore and the Gothic Tradition (edited by Matthew J. A. Green, 306 pages, Manchester University Press, August 2016,
ISBN978-1784993634)
The British Invasion: Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, Grant Morrison, and the Invention of the Modern Comic Book Writer (by Greg Carpenter, 490 pages, Sequart, August 2016,
ISBN978-1940589077)
Alan Moore, Out from the Underground: Cartooning, Performance, and Dissent (by Maggy Gray, 311 pages, Palgrave Macmillan, November 2017,
ISBN978-3319665078)
The Last War in Albion Volume 1: The Early Work of Alan Moore and Grant Morrison (by Elizabeth Sandifer, 803 pages, Eruditorum Press, October 2019,
ISBN978-1699270967)
Alan Moore: A Critical Guide (by Jackson Ayres, 240 pages, Bloomsbury USA Academic, April 2021,
ISBN978-1350060463)
"Roscoe Moscow: Who Killed Rock n' Roll?" (script and art, 1979–1980)
"The Stars My Degradation" (script and art, for a period with Pedro Henry, 1980–1983) — Axel Pressbutton
"Ten Little Liggers" (script and art, 1980)
"The Rock and Roll Zoo" (script and art, 1981)
"Christmas on Depravity" (script and art, with Pedro Henry, 1981) — Axel Pressbutton
"The Bride of Pressbutton" (script and art, 1982) — Axel Pressbutton
Maxwell the Magic Cat (as Jill de Ray, script and art, strip in Northampton Post, 1979–1986, plus a new episode for the Post's final edition in December 2016)[1]
In 2009, Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? was reprinted in a Deluxe Edition HC, which also contains "For the Man Who Has Everything" and "The Jungle Line".
In 2008, The Killing Joke was recolored and reprinted in a 20th Anniversary HC, and this collection was revised to remove the story.
In 2012, a hardcover entitled DC Universe by Alan Moore (464 pages,
ISBN1-4012-3339-2) was released. This volume included all the stories from DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore and Alan Moore: Wild Worlds except for Batman: The Killing Joke and the Spawn/WildC.A.T.s miniseries.
"A Hypothetical Lizard" (in Liavek: Wizard's Row, Ace Books, 1987; The Year's Best Fantasy, 1989; Demons and Dreams, 1989; Words Without Pictures, 1990)
"Alphabets of Desire" (limited print designed and lettered by
Todd Klein, available only from Klein's website)
Voice of the Fire, 1996, Victor Gollancz; 1997, Orion Books; republished 2003, Top Shelf Productions. This new edition features a
dust jacket designed by
Chip Kidd, an introduction by
Neil Gaiman and thirteen colour plates by
José Villarrubia. Paperback edition released 15 July 2009, Top Shelf Productions.
Show Pieces (2012), short film anthology directed by Mitch Jenkins, written by Alan Moore
The Show (2021), feature film adaptation of and sequel to Show Pieces, directed by Mitch Jenkins, written by Moore[8]
Non-fiction
As well as his run on Captain Britain in The Daredevils Moore contributed text Night Raven stories, fanzine reviews and a number of long articles (writing up to 24 pages out of the 54, for example in issue #5). The non-fiction pieces include:
"The Importance of Being Frank" (The Daredevils #1, about
Frank Miller, 1983)[9]
"Stan Lee: Blinded by the Hype – An Affectionate Character Assassination" (The Daredevils #3–4, 1983)
"Invisible Girls and Phantom Ladies" (The Daredevils #4–6, about sexism in comics, 1983)
"O Superman: Music & comics" (The Daredevils #5, 1983)
"About the Special Executive" (The Daredevils #5, 1983)
Other work includes:
"C.B.? – That's a Big Ten-Four!" and "Bear's Monkey Business" in B.J. and the Bear Annual 1982 (1981), article and illustrations
"Too Avant Garde for the Mafia?" (in Infinity #7–8, 1984–1985)
Alan Moore's The Courtyard Companion (2004), Avatar Press; reprints
Antony Johnston's script for Alan Moore's The Courtyard with annotations by NG Christakos, Moore's original short story (from which the series was adapted), new pinups/art by
Jacen Burrows, and a new essay by Antony Johnson.
Alan Moore's The Courtyard (Color Edition) (Avatar Press, 56 pages, 11 March 2009) This is a coloured version to the 2003 release.
Alan Moore's Hypothetical Lizard, 4 issues (2005), Avatar Press. Collected in 2007. Adapted by Antony Johnston (writer) and Lorenzo Lorente (artist) from Moore's novelette
Constantine, 2005, based on the character
John Constantine, created by Moore with Steve Bissette, John Totleben and Rick Veitch in Swamp Thing
V For Vendetta, 2006, adaptation written by
the Wachowskis; directed by
James McTeigue (Moore had his name removed from the film, which is credited to "Based on the graphic novel illustrated by David Lloyd")
Watchmen, 2009, adaptation written by David Hayter and Alex Tse; directed by Zack Snyder (Moore refused to be credited)
The
Constantine TV series, 2014–2015, and the
animated web series. 2018–, based on the character John Constantine, created by Moore with Steve Bissette, John Totleben and Rick Veitch in Swamp Thing.
Alan Moore's Exit Interview (by Bill Baker, Airwave Publishing, August 2007,
ISBN978-0-9724805-9-8)
Impossible Territories: An Unofficial Companion to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen The Black Dossier (by Jess Nevins, paperback, 304 pages,
MonkeyBrain, forthcoming July 2008,
ISBN1-932265-24-4)
The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore – Indispensable Edition (by George Khoury, 240 pages, TwoMorrows Publishing, 2009,
ISBN978-1-60549-009-0)
Alan Moore: Conversations (by Eric L. Berlatsky, 240 pages, University Press of Mississippi, September 2011,
ISBN978-1617031588)
Sexual Ideology in the Works of Alan Moore: Critical Essays on the Graphic Novels (edited by Todd A. Comer and Joseph Michael Sommers, 234 pages, McFarland, February 2012,
ISBN978-0786464531)
Magic Words: the Extraordinary Life of Alan Moore (by Lance Parkin, 432 pages, Aurum, 2014)[18]
Alan Moore and the Gothic Tradition (edited by Matthew J. A. Green, 306 pages, Manchester University Press, August 2016,
ISBN978-1784993634)
The British Invasion: Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, Grant Morrison, and the Invention of the Modern Comic Book Writer (by Greg Carpenter, 490 pages, Sequart, August 2016,
ISBN978-1940589077)
Alan Moore, Out from the Underground: Cartooning, Performance, and Dissent (by Maggy Gray, 311 pages, Palgrave Macmillan, November 2017,
ISBN978-3319665078)
The Last War in Albion Volume 1: The Early Work of Alan Moore and Grant Morrison (by Elizabeth Sandifer, 803 pages, Eruditorum Press, October 2019,
ISBN978-1699270967)
Alan Moore: A Critical Guide (by Jackson Ayres, 240 pages, Bloomsbury USA Academic, April 2021,
ISBN978-1350060463)