Introducing the cool and sexy graffiti/manga inspired art of Brandon Graham in an off-the-wall tongue-in-cheek SF spoof sure to get your rockets in full blast! Old perv Walt is called upon a mission with hot porn chick Stix to create the orgasm to end all climaxes to save... well, some important thing or other. Hey, it's not the end, it's the means! These punks really are steaming!
Brandon Graham (born 1976) is an American comic book creator.
Born in Oregon, Graham grew up in Seattle, Washington, where he was a graffiti artist. He wrote and illustrated comic books for Antarctic Press and Radio Comix, but got his start drawing pornographic comics like Pillow Fight and Multiple Warheads (Warheads would go on to become its own comic published by Oni Press in 2007). In 1997, he moved to New York City where he found work with NBM Publishing and became a founding member of comics collective Meathaus. His book Escalator was published by Alternative Comics in January 2005, when he returned to Seattle. His book King City was published by Tokyopop in 2007 and was nominated for an Eisner Award. In May 2009 Graham announced that King City would continue publication at Image Comics and his Oni Press title Multiple Warheads would resume publication after a delay, this time in color. Also at Image he is the writer on Prophet, the return of a 1990s series, with the rotating roster of artists Giannis Milonogiannis, Farel Dalrymple, Simon Roy, and himself.
I thought this early Brandon Graham porno book was lost forever, an out of print treasure. So I was surprised to see Amazon turn copies up in regular stock, instead of the $200 marketplace copies that show up occasionally. I bought it mostly to fill in a gap in my Graham collection, and that's... about what it's good for. While his other big porn book "Pillow Fight" maybe has a few good gags, this one really seems to fade away before it hits the... hmmm... climax. Oh well - I really can't say I expected much more - "Perverts of the Unknown" isn't a title that resonates with the power of high literature. Entertaining enough, I guess, but it doesn't even seem like even Graham had enough interest to see this one through.