The Phoenix (comics) explained

The Phoenix
Schedule:Weekly
Format:Weekly Story Comic
Publisher:David Fickling Comics Ltd
Date:7 January 2012–present
Issues:650+
Writers:Jamie Smart, Neil Cameron, Gary Northfield, etc.
Artists:Jamie Smart, Robert Deas, Adam Murphy, etc.
Pencillers:Jamie Smart, Gary Northfield, etc.

The Phoenix is a British weekly story comic for children aged 7–14, published by David Fickling Comics Ltd.[1] The comic was launched on 7 January 2012 with a preview issue which was released in late 2011.[2] The comic is often considered a successor to The DFC:[2] both are published by the same people and many of The Phoenix's creators had worked on The DFC.

Content of the comic

Unlike other British children's comics, such as The Beano and The Dandy, the magazine does not exclusively feature humour strips. It also features serialised adventure stories such as "The Lost Boy" and "Pirates of Pangaea", as well as humour strips such as Star Cat, Evil Emperor Penguin, "Looshkin" and "Bunny vs Monkey". The magazine features text stories (such as extracts from books like Charlie Small and Julius Zebra) and puzzles (which are also present in both the modern Beano and The Dandy). This makes The Phoenix more similar to the older Beano and Dandy than the modern ones as they once had a mixture of adventure and humour strips as well as text stories. There is also a non-fiction strip called Corpse Talk where the creator Adam Murphy interviews famous dead persons about their life. In 2022, Corpse Talk was adapted into an online webseries produced by Tiger Aspect.

The Phoenix also has a feature called "Star in a Comic". Each year, readers are encouraged to send in ideas for a new strip, and the winner gets their comic running in The Phoenix for about 3 weeks, written and illustrated by a Phoenix author, while the runner-ups get their ideas featured in the magazine. There are several other similar contests as well, normally as a tie-in to a book or Phoenix strip.

Strips

Like a number of comics (2000AD has Tharg the Mighty and Sparky had the Sparky People), The Phoenix features a fictional editorial team, a group of cartoon animals led by feline editor-in-chief Tabitha Inkspot. The main news reporters that are Bruno Barker, Ellie Waggins, Scoop Yapski and Iris Hasselblad, who have a big news page where they report on new comics, fictional news and other (real) information of note.The other strips include:

The Shorts

A collection of short comic strips including “Susie and Brad” and “Tooth and Claw Academy for Magical Creatures”. They are a relatively recent addition to the comic. Some of 'The Shorts' strips include:

Events

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BBC News - The Phoenix comic rises from recession flames . Bbc.co.uk . 2011-12-26 . 2012-02-10.
  2. Web site: Phoenix comic to launch with Waitrose . The Bookseller . 2012-02-10.