Detective, suspense, parlor game, crime, noir, police procedural… these are all different ways to slice the mystery genre. But how to organize the Mystery WEBCOMICS? Alphabetically by title? By author? By sub-genre? Or perhaps semi-randomly, as the whim takes me? Yep. That'll do.
Mystery Webcomics: A List
Odd Jobs by Tim Broderick: 1. "Company Man" – text only, online at Broderick's website 2. "Lost Child" – first graphic novel, online at Twilight Tales (free) 3. "Something to build upon" – second graphic novel, now in print format 4. "Cash and Carry" – third graphic novel, online at Modern Tales (subscription only) 5. "Children of the Revolution" – coming to Modern Tales in 2006 PLUS, the Odd Jobs blog
She's A Nightmare by Jesse Chen Book One – She's a Nightmare Book Two – She's a Nightmare: Accidents, Inc. Book Three – She's a Nightmare: Heart of Gold
Basil Flint, P.I. by John Troutman (Trout actually has several strips, most of them mysteries, but they rotate being live, dead, on-hold, etc. Check out the archives, though. Good stuff.)
About: Kelly J. Cooper is a long-time writer with a strange and trivia-stuffed brain that can recall obscure forensic facts and then forget words like "refrigerator." She regularly renders twisty, winding thought pieces, opinions, poetry, rude rants, and the occasional fiction story, most of which can be found on her website.\r\n\r\nHer addiction to comics dates back to the early 1990''s and extended into the online world of webcomics a few years ago now. It''s true love and the long haul.