Punks Not Dead, Vol. 2: London Calling

Illustrated by Martin Simmonds
Introduction by Ian Rankin
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$17.99 US
IDW Publishing | Black Crown
36 per carton
On sale Sep 10, 2019 | 9781684054961
Sales rights: World

Teenage Fergie and his invisible sidekick, the ghost of a punk rocker named Sid, head to London to find Fergie's absent father while the Department of Extra-Usual Affairs, led by the irascible Dorothy Culpepper, and Fergie's mom face demons from hell both personal and literal.

Fergie and Sid have arrived in London... and a whole pile of trouble. All Fergie has to go on in the search for his father is an old photograph and some snippets of information that suggest "Billy" was involved in the music business in the Eighties and Nineties. Tracking down old contacts, Fergie and Sid find themselves getting mired in a shadowy undercurrent of the occult and whispers of entities not from our world. Meanwhile, back in Preston, Fergie's mum Julie forms an unlikely alliance with Natalie as they try to find the missing Fergie.
“(The) brilliantly realistic art of Martin Simmonds… is dripping in punk rock attitude and slightly reminiscent of Simon Bisley’s Slaine, (and) that pushes everything in London Calling up to eleven." -Tripwire

About

Teenage Fergie and his invisible sidekick, the ghost of a punk rocker named Sid, head to London to find Fergie's absent father while the Department of Extra-Usual Affairs, led by the irascible Dorothy Culpepper, and Fergie's mom face demons from hell both personal and literal.

Fergie and Sid have arrived in London... and a whole pile of trouble. All Fergie has to go on in the search for his father is an old photograph and some snippets of information that suggest "Billy" was involved in the music business in the Eighties and Nineties. Tracking down old contacts, Fergie and Sid find themselves getting mired in a shadowy undercurrent of the occult and whispers of entities not from our world. Meanwhile, back in Preston, Fergie's mum Julie forms an unlikely alliance with Natalie as they try to find the missing Fergie.

Praise

“(The) brilliantly realistic art of Martin Simmonds… is dripping in punk rock attitude and slightly reminiscent of Simon Bisley’s Slaine, (and) that pushes everything in London Calling up to eleven." -Tripwire