Top 4 Comic Book Series Worth Writing An Essay About

With all the legacy of the comic book industry that has made its way into TV and movies over the past decade, it can easily be tempting to immerse yourself in this culture and read everything you can reach. This can be a problem as the comic industry releases dozens of new titles a week and thousands a year. In this regard, it becomes almost impossible for beginners to understand where to start reading. Only on rare occasions can you come to a comic store and buy one episode of Batman or the Avengers without having to know what happened before and have a good understanding of what is happening at the moment. Comics can also be a great topic for your university essay, as it’s original and interesting. Don’t believe me? We’ve put together a list of the best comics for you so you can choose one or two for your essay topic.

  1. Watchmen

At first glance, this is a simple story about former “superheroes” and the events surrounding the mysterious murder of one of them. In fact, behind the ridiculous names and costumes hides an epoch-making work that has influenced not only the comic book industry but also modern cinema. Watchmen is the only comic to be included in TIME Magazine’s 100 Best Literary Works of the 20th century.

This work uses 100% of the potential of the comic as a form of presentation. The history of the Watchmen is so multi-layered and detailed that all other forms will simply kill one or another aspect or plan laid down by the authors. The comic is literally packed with metaphors, allegories, symbols, references to real events and personalities. Since the release of the film, the view that this comic cannot be filmed has become even stronger, so take the challenge and write an essay about it. If you have doubts or you are not sure that your essay will be worthy of the original, then just buy essays online.

  1. DC: The New Frontier

This is not the first or the last comic on our list, which takes place in an alternate universe. Specifically, in this story, Darwin Cook encroaches on the laurels of Alan Moore, since here, like the Watchmen, the heroes live in a universe as close as possible to the real one. Events unfold around Green Lantern Hal Jordan, Martian Hunter John Jones, and Flash Barry Allen, who are just starting their superhero careers. Retired Justice Society, Superman, and Wonder Woman work for the government, and Batman is hiding from the authorities. In this world, superheroes are one of the most discussed topics since the whole world is closely watching them.

Drawing is the hallmark of this comic. The style of the artist Darwin Cook is somewhat reminiscent of the cult Bruce Timm and Jack Kirby. The drawing is perfect for the atmosphere of the comic; you can even believe that it has illustrations from posters from the 60s. Isn’t that what you want to write about immediately?

  1. Maus by Art Spiegelman

Art Spiegelman’s Maus is the only comic strip to win a Pulitzer Prize. Jews are mice; Germans are cats. The artist Spiegelman used a drawn comic strip to depict the Holocaust story he heard from his own father. On a global scale, the book has not so much thematic as a breakthrough value. After being awarded the 1992 Pulitzer Prize to Maus, comics were no longer perceived as color pictures for children’s entertainment. And now such things are respectfully called graphic novels.

Spiegelman is shocking that he talks about fascism without exploiting the techniques and plots that have already become standard in the literature on the Second World War. You can use this comic strip for history or sociology essays.

  1. Daredevil

After the end of the previous episode, Daredevil moves to live in California and starts a new life there with a new lawyer job. In case you don’t know, Daredevil is a blind superhero who sees the world around him in a completely different way from everyone else. Both Mark Wade and artist Chris Samnee use it brilliantly: their comics are full of smells and sounds that convey exactly how a person “sees” everything around without sight, but with additional abilities. Chris Samnee is also a great painter: comics are very clean, clear, and detailed, in the best traditions of the 60s, but with strange acidic pop-art inserts in suitable places. The interweaving of styles is exactly what can be discussed in an essay.


Comics have long become an independent literary genre – important and noteworthy. Serious writers and talented artists use the graphic novel format (yes, that’s what comics are now called) to tell the most incredible or, conversely, completely real stories. And you can use comics for your writing, and you won’t regret it!

Don Draper
Don Draper
Donald Francis "Don" Draper is a founding partner and the Creative Director at Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce Advertising Agency in Manhattan, NY. Prior to that position, he was the Director of the Creative Department at the Sterling Cooper Advertising Agency. He is regarded among his colleagues as the best to ever pitch copy.