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Mike Mignola: Why I’m ending Hellboy to go paint watercolors instead

As the final Hellboy comic is published, Mike Mignola discusses how he started, how Hollywood didn’t kill his creation and why he is embracing ‘blur and mush’

Comic book superheroes: the gods of modern mythology

From primary-coloured, straight guys to tarnished beings in a revisionist world, superheroes are our cultural barometer

Captain America has gone from punching Hitler to fascist sympathies – is it time to panic?

Marvel’s reveal that Captain America is a sleeper agent for rightwing group Hydra feels like a betrayal of his Jewish creators – but nothing is set in stone in comics

DC Rebirth: Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman get rebooted … again

DC Comics is starting over to simplify storylines across seven decades and 52 worlds. With so many heroes, should DC be more careful with the reset button?

Real-life superhero? Marvel and DC comics back down against Londoner

Graham Jules wins two-and-a-half-year fight against comic giants over use of word ‘superhero’ in his book title

Preacher: is Seth Rogen’s new show the best comic book adaptation ever?

It came shrieking on to our screens this weekend with a healthy dollop of gore, daftness and – perhaps most importantly – respect for the source material’s tone

Seth Rogen’s Preacher to launch on Amazon UK next week

TV series based on cult comic book stars Dominic Cooper, Joseph Gilgun and Ruth Negga

Could Margot Robbie’s all-female superhero movie be DC’s trump card?

Harley Quinn-led followup to Suicide Squad would prove Warner’s slate of DC universe movies has upper hand over rival Marvel in terms of diversity

Munch by Steffen Kverneland review – a scrapbook drawn from life

The Norwegian graphic novelist’s biography of artist Edvard Munch is a digressive delight

How we made Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

‘The question was: if Bruce Lee was an animal, what’s the silliest one he would be?’

X-Men: Apocalypse review – lots of bangs for your bucks but loopiness is lost

The latest X-Men prequel goes back to the 1980s, but the now-regulation destruction is beginning to eclipse the series’ unique strangeness

Free Comic Book Day 2016: where to go in the UK

The annual bonanza of graphic giveaways is on Saturday 7 May. Here are some of the best stores to visit to get freebies and meet some artists

Harder, better, faster, stronger? Why comic book movies are growing longer

From stuffing in jokes to extended character explainers, new comic book movies are taking up more and more of our time. And I’m not sure it’s worth it

How superhero movies embraced wild west frontier libertarianism

Captain America: Civil War isn’t the only comic-book movie to champion the strong individual over unreliable authority figures when it comes to sorting good from bad. The tactic worked well before – in westerns

The best starter graphic novels for YA readers

The world of graphic novels can be hard to navigate, especially if you’re not a superhero fan. Here are seven of the best introductions to the genre for teens

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  • The Writer and the Traitor by Robert Verkaik review – the strange case of Graham Greene and Kim Philby
  • Two for two? Stella prize winner Evelyn Araluen nominated again for second poetry collection
  • My Lover, the Rabbi by Wayne Koestenbaum review – as fierce and strange as anything you’ll read this year
  • Stand By Me review – Rob Reiner’s nostalgic look at friendship and the loss of innocence still grips tight
  • The Black Death by Thomas Asbridge review – a medieval horror story
  • Modern heroes and a ravaged Earth: reboot of 1950s space comic Dan Dare has liftoff
  • ‘For leftist Jews, the Bund is a model’: the radical history behind one of Europe’s biggest socialist movements
  • Upward Bound by Woody Brown review – extraordinary debut from a non-speaking autistic author
  • London Falling by Patrick Radden Keefe review – a compulsive tale of money, lies and avoidable tragedy
  • The Stranger review – lustrously beautiful and superbly realised modern take on the Camus classic
  • The Hair of the Pigeon by Mohammed Massoud Morsi review – an epic tale of a refugee’s journey
  • Into the Wreck by Susannah Dickey review – an immersive exploration of grief
  • Jan Morris by Sara Wheeler review – masterly account of a flawed figure
  • How to use procrastination to your advantage
  • Life of Pi author Yann Martel: ‘I thought the Iliad was a book for old farts… then I started getting ideas’
  • ‘Enough of this me me me’: Blake Morrison on memoir in the age of oversharing
  • The Guide #237: Fab 5 Freddy, the street artist at the heart of New York’s creative zenith
  • The Guardian view on the Women’s Library at 100: a cause for celebration but not complacency
  • David Judge obituary
  • Clare Gittings obituary
  • The best recent poetry – review roundup
  • Sarah Hall: ‘Everyone wangs on about Anna Karenina – I’ve never been able to finish it’
  • Original Sin by Kathryn Paige Harden review – are criminals born or made?
  • Sororicidal by Edwina Preston review – a tale of two sisters tinged with danger
  • ‘Slavery bounded his life’: Thomas Jefferson’s views on race – in his own words
  • Death of an Ordinary Man by Sarah Perry audiobook review – an extraordinary chronicle of terminal illness
  • I did not tell my sister that our other sister was dying. Silence was the right choice, yet murky and painful
  • The Palm House by Gwendoline Riley review – the laureate of bad relationships
  • A feud ‘straight out of Succession’, a rental thriller and an ‘absolute ripper’: the best Australian books out in April
  • What we’re reading: writers and readers on the books they enjoyed in March

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