Boiled Angel
Boiled Angel | |
---|---|
Publication information | |
Publisher | Mike Diana |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre | |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) | Mike Diana, Paul Weinman, Gerard John Schaefer,[1] et al. |
Artist(s) | Mike Diana, Scott Cunningham, et al. |
Boiled Angel was an independent comic book by Florida-based underground comic book artist Mike Diana in the early 1990s. The comic contained graphic depictions of a variety of taboo and gory subject matters.[2][3]
In a 1990 review, Mike Gunderloy of Factsheet Five called Boiled Angel "a prime candidate for banning in the 90s."[2] In 1993, a copy of Boiled Angel #8 (or "Ate") found its way into the hands of Florida Assistant State's Attorney Stuart Baggish. Diana was subsequently charged with several counts of obscenity and fought a long legal battle with the aid of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, which he eventually lost.
References
- ↑ Schaefer, G. J. (1973), Diana, Mike, ed., "Satanic Sex Issue", Boiled Angel (Largo, FL: Mike Diana, published 1992) (7)
|contribution=
ignored (help). Reprinted from Killer Fiction, Media Queen Ltd. - 1 2 Factsheet Five (44), August 1990, p. 74, ISSN 0890-6823 Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ Gunderloy, Mike; Goldberg Janice, Cari (1992), "Splatter, Death & Other Good News", The World of Zines, New York: Penguin Group, p. 141, ISBN 0-14-016720-X
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