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Cerebus the Aardvark

Cerebus (/ˈsɛrəbəs/;[1] also Cerebus the Aardvark) is a comic book series created by Canadian cartoonist Dave Sim, which ran from December 1977 until March 2004. The title character of the 300-issue series is an anthropomorphic aardvark who takes on a number of roles throughout the series—barbarian, prime minister, and Pope among them. The series stands out for its experimentation in form and content, and for the dexterity of its artwork, especially after background artist Gerhard joined with the 65th issue. As the series progressed, it increasingly became a platform for Sim's controversial beliefs.

Cerebus the Aardvark
Cover to Cerebus issues 112 and 113, from 1988 by Dave Sim and Gerhard
Publication information
PublisherAardvark-Vanaheim
ScheduleInitially bimonthly, then monthly
FormatLimited series
GenreParody of sword and sorcery (early issues),
fantasy, comedy, political satire, drama (mid-period issues),
theology (later issues)
Publication dateDecember 1977 – March 2004
No. of issues300
Main character(s)Cerebus
ISSN0712-7774
Creative team
Created byDave Sim
Written byDave Sim
Artist(s)Dave Sim
Gerhard

The comic began as a parody of sword and sorcery comics, primarily Marvel's version of Conan the Barbarian.[2] However, it evolved to explore a variety of other topics, including politics, religion, and gender issues. At a total of 6,000 pages, it progressively became more serious and ambitious than its parodic roots. Sim announced early on that the series would end with the death of the title character. The story has a large cast of characters, many of which began as parodies of characters from comic books and popular culture.

Starting with the "High Society" storyline, the series became divided into self-contained "novels", which form parts of the overall story. The ten "novels" of the series have been collected in 16 books, known as "Cerebus phonebooks" for their resemblance, by way of their thickness, to telephone directories. At a time when the series was about 70% completed, celebrated comic book writer Alan Moore wrote: "Cerebus, as if I need to say so, is still to comic books what Hydrogen is to the Periodic Table".[3]

Publication history

Cerebus was self-published by Dave Sim under his Aardvark-Vanaheim, Inc. publishing banner. For the first few years the company's publisher was Deni Loubert, Sim's girlfriend (the two married and divorced during the comic's run). Sim's position as a pioneering self-publisher in comics inspired numerous writer/artists after him, most notably Jeff Smith (Bone), Terry Moore (Strangers in Paradise), and Martin Wagner (Hepcats).

In 1979, Sim, who was at the time a frequent marijuana user, began using LSD, taking the drug with such frequency that he was eventually hospitalized.[4] It was this incident that Sim claims led to the inspiration to produce Cerebus for 300 monthly issues.[4]

When Sim published the first Cerebus "phone book", a paperback collection of the High Society graphic novel (issues #26–50), he angered distributors—who felt that their support had been instrumental in his series' success in an industry generally indifferent to small publishers—by offering the first printing via mail order only.[5][6] The decision was a financial windfall for Sim, however, grossing over $150,000 in sales (equivalent to $371,000 in 2021).[6] Sim became known for picking up hotel tabs for self-publishers and helping other self-publishers by paying for meals and limo service between stops.[7] Negotiations regarding DC buying Cerebus took place over the course of 1985 to 1988, offering $100,000 ($229,000 today) and 10% of all licensing and merchandising, which Sim rejected.[6]

The series hit a personal sales record with issue #100 which, despite being a normal issue in the middle of a story arc, had a print run of 36,000 copies. Sales took a substantial drop over the next 50 issues, however, and Sim commented that the fact that readers could not simply "jump in" to Cerebus, and had to read the entire series in order to be able to understand the current issue, was a major reason for the sales drop.[8]

In July 1984, Cerebus publisher Aardvark-Vanaheim was threatened with possible legal action by Marvel Comics over a parody of Wolverine in Cerebus.[9]

When Sim guest-wrote the 10th issue of Todd McFarlane's comics series Spawn, he donated his entire fee—over $100,000—to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.[10]

"Jaka's Story," a tragic character study dealing with gender roles and the political suppression of art, is generally cited as the series' pinnacle of narrative achievement.[who?] Later issues of the series became highly personal, and began to alienate many long-time fans, female readers especially.[citation needed] Issue #186 (collected in Reads) contained a lengthy prose section that was attacked by some readers and critics for what they perceived as overt misogyny, and which Sim describes as "anti-feminism". During this part of the story, the storyline consisted of a textual treatise written by Viktor Davis, a fictional "Reads" author, interspersed with the main Cerebus storyline. In Davis's material, he refers to the "creative male light" and the "emotional female void," a reversal of the gender-based view of creation espoused by the Judge at the end of Church and State (in which the "female light" is raped by the "male void" and shatters into the physical universe). As Sim himself says in an interview with The Comics Journal, "Cerebus #1–200 [is] the completion of the story. The yin and yang. The ultra-female reading. The ultra-male reading. I'm attaching an allegory to the Big Bang. You make up your mind which one's the pit and which one's the top of the mountain."[11] By the end of the series, the Void is again male and identified as God, and the Light is female, now identified with YHWH. Issue #186 was followed by another essay in the back of issue #265 called "Tangent," in which Sim identified a "feminist/homosexualist axis" that opposed traditional and rational societal values. This material appeared as Sim was retreating from public life and becoming more marginalized by his peers in the industry.

Sim himself appeared as a character in Cerebus, as when he berated the title character in the "Minds" story arc.

Sim's religious beliefs heavily influenced the last third of Cerebus's storyline. Once an atheist, Sim became a believer in God while gathering research material for "Rick's Story". However, rather than following an established religion, Sim follows his own personal belief system cobbled together from elements of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam,[12] although he described himself in issue #8 of Following Cerebus as "mostly Muslim." A 2003 magazine interview describes Sim as reciting a prayer of his own devising five times a day (which was published in the back of issue #300), and as having sold much of his furniture to donate the money to charity as an act of religious asceticism. In an editorial contained in issue #297, Sim stated that he regards the production of Cerebus as of secondary importance to his religious practice. Sim's religious beliefs tie into his views on gender, and the bulk of the Cerebus storyline after "Guys" deals with this, especially "Rick's Story," "Latter Days," and "The Last Day."[citation needed]

A quarterly publication, Following Cerebus, followed in August 2004, featuring correspondence, essays, and previously unpublished artwork from Sim, as well as interviews with other comic writers and artists.

Sim was rumored to have said that had he died or otherwise chosen not to complete Cerebus prior to issue 300, the remaining issues were to either consist of blank pages or Gerhard was to have drawn his backgrounds only, leaving Sim's contribution blank. It is not known if this plan was ever serious, since it was never put into effect. At the completion of the series, Sim directed that upon his and Gerhard's death, Cerebus would enter into the public domain.[13][14] Effective 31 December 2006, Sim purchased Gerhard's share of the company.[15] Sim has already granted a general license for other creators to use his characters in their own works, stating that he is trying to be consistent with his own appropriation of others' works.[16][17]

In early 2009, Sim launched the bimonthly series Cerebus Archive. It was translated into Italian;[18] and in 2011, Church and State Vol. I was published in Spanish.[19]

Published volumes

Cerebus

Issues #1–25.

This first story arc, uniquely in this series, consists of one to three-issue storylines with only occasional back-references. Cerebus is introduced as an amoral barbarian mercenary, fighting (and betraying) for money and drinking it away. During his adventures, he encounters the warrior Pigts (whose religion reveres aardvarks) and the insane wizard Necross, who turns himself into a giant stone Thrunk (visually similar to Marvel Comics' The Thing). Most of the series' prominent characters are introduced (or at least mentioned) in these issues, including Elrod of Melvinbone (a parodic representation of Michael Moorcock's Elric of Melniboné), Lord Julius, a character based upon Groucho Marx, Artemis Roach (a.k.a. The Roach, who would evolve into an all-purpose parody of Marvel and DC superhero characters) and Jaka. The series takes a sharp change in direction with issue #20 which is the first of the "Mind Games" issues that are a feature of the comic and introduces the philosophical Suenteus Po and the ultra-matriarchial Cirinists.

High Society

Issues #26–50.

Cerebus comes to the wealthy city-state of Iest as the representative of Lord Julius's city-state of Palnu. He quickly finds himself enmeshed in the fast-paced world of high finance and politics, and comic tension is built through his ignorance of the "high society" machinations going on around him. Cerebus is befriended by the legendary Regency Elf as he adjusts to his new circumstances. He meets and soon finds himself maneuvered into a political campaign by the mysterious Astoria, who is also manipulating Artemis into pseudo-super hero identities that are parodies of Moon Knight and later Sergeant Preston of the Mounties. Cerebus recognizes that he is a pawn in a political game between Lord Julius and Astoria, but he struggles to assert himself and ultimately confounds the expectations of everyone attempting to use him. Cerebus is eventually elected Prime Minister of Iest, but launches an unnecessary war of conquest that causes him to lose everything.

Church & State I

Issues #52–80.

After some travels, Cerebus returns to Iest and is manipulated by Weisshaupt, who wants to use Cerebus's popularity with the masses, into again becoming Prime Minister of Iest. Weisshaupt has maneuvered himself into the tenuous presidency of a federation of states (including Iest, Palnu and New Sepra) as a bulwark against the Cirinists. Weisshaupt lures Cerebus into a drunken marriage to Red Sophia, but ultimately loses his influence over Cerebus when Weisshaupt's rival, Bishop Powers, appoints Cerebus Pope of the Eastern Church of Tarim. Finally out from under anyone else's control, Cerebus lets absolute power go to his head and demands that all the citizens must give him all their gold or face the end of the world. Sophia walks out on Cerebus, and then he discovers that Jaka is married and pregnant. Cerebus is threatened by Weisshaupt's secret invention of cannons, but Weisshaupt suffers a heart attack and Cerebus continues his papal reign of terror. He is finally ejected from the Upper City by the sudden invasion of the giant stone Thrunk, who claims to be the God Tarim.

Church & State II

Issues #81–111.

Cerebus returns to Iest's Upper City and uses Weisshaupt's cannons to destroy Thrunk and reclaim the papacy. Astoria has mysteriously killed the Western pope ("the Lion of Serrea"), and Cerebus must execute her for the crime in order to retain his papacy. Cerebus confronts her in a dungeon, and after being taunted by Astoria, he grants himself a divorce from Red Sophia, marries himself to Astoria, rapes her, and then divorces himself from her. Astoria's trial, which echoes with similarities to a repeating pattern of historical executions of reformers, is interrupted when Cerebus makes the predicted Ascension to the Moon that is the culmination of the land's religious prophecy. There, Cerebus meets the Judge, a timeless, godlike being who has watched over history from the very beginning. (Sim had based the personality of this character on cartoonist and playwright Jules Feiffer.) The Judge explains his version of the creation myth of Cerebus's universe, before warning Cerebus that he will live only a few more years before dying "alone, unmourned and unloved." The Judge tells Cerebus that if the Aardvark ever questions his suffering, he should remember his "second marriage" to Astoria. Cerebus then falls back to earth, where he discovers that the Cirinists have invaded, and his empire has collapsed.

Jaka's Story

Issues #114–136.

Cerebus returns to Iest, now under a brutal Cirinist dictatorship, and runs into Jaka again. She is illegally working as a dancer in her landlord's tavern. The landlord/barman, Pud, treats Jaka kindly but secretly spends his days lusting after her. Cerebus agrees to live with Jaka and her husband Rick as their houseguest. That story is interwoven with unreliable tales of Jaka's childhood told by a writer, representing Oscar Wilde, using notes and stories provided by Rick. In the end Cerebus disguises himself and travels to the Lower City to buy a jar of paint. While he is gone, the Cirinists find the tavern, kill Pud and arrest Jaka, Rick, and Oscar. Jaka is made to sign a confession of immoral behavior, and is reunited with Rick; however, the Cirinists reveal to Rick that Jaka aborted the son that Rick always wanted. He lashes out at Jaka and is allowed to divorce her (although he is maimed for striking her). Jaka returns to Palnu, and Cerebus returns to the inn to find it in ruins.

Melmoth

Issues #139–150.

This story arc concentrates on the last days and death of Oscar Wilde (who is attended to by his trusted companion Robbie Ross) rather than on Cerebus himself, who appears in only a few pages. (The title refers to the gothic novel Melmoth the Wanderer by Charles Robert Maturin, a relative of Wilde's. Wilde adopted this alias during this period of his life.) Meanwhile, a catatonic Cerebus, believing Jaka to be dead, spends his days mourning on the patio of a café. In the last few pages of the story, after the main action had concluded, Cerebus overhears a conversation by two Cirinist jailers insulting Jaka. Enraged, Cerebus murders one of the guards and then springs into action.

Flight

Issues #151–162.

First part of the "Mothers & Daughters" story arc. Cerebus's return to Iest and slaughter of Cirinsts leads to a very brief failed revolution. Cerebus descends into darkness and speaks with Suenteus Po. Meanwhile, Cirin works to manage her sect and arrange her own Ascension. Artemis, with Elrod as his sidekick, also stages his own impromptu revolution under his new persona "PunisherRoach", a parody of the Marvel comics character the Punisher.

Women

Issues #163–174.

Second part of the story-arc "Mothers & Daughters". Cerebus crashes back to earth. He is assisted by a mysterious old woman who is being openly spied upon by the Cirinists; she sends him to a bar to hide. This story arc includes a parody of Neil Gaiman's The Sandman in which the Roach plays "Swoon" (a parody of Dream) and Elrod plays "Snuff" (a trans person parody of Death). Astoria and Cirin symbolically duel in a dream realm. The book includes excerpts from books written by Astoria and Cirin that describe their differing beliefs. Cerebus flies across the city to slay Astoria, but is interrupted by the arrival of Suenteus Po.

Reads

Issues #175–186.

Third part of the "Mothers & Daughters" story arc. This book primarily consists of two long text pieces. The first revolves around an author of Reads, heavily illustrated books in Cerebus's world. In this story, there is a strong thread about the dangers of commercial success and "selling out". The series moves from this storyline to a long essay attributed to Viktor Davis, a fictional Reads author. This essay puts forth a theory on the nature of the sexes, describing the "Female Void" focused on feeling, and the "Male Light" focused on reason. These two stories are accompanied by a long discussion between Cirin, Astoria, Cerebus, and Suenteus Po. Po gives information about aardvarks, including that all aardvarks have Cerebus's "magnifier" quality, and attempts to convince each of the others to abandon their pursuits of power and return to what they enjoy doing most, then leaves them to their fates. Astoria is convinced and also leaves, but not before giving Cerebus information about her history with Cirin and also informing him of his hermaphrodite nature. Cerebus and Cirin then engage in a long and brutal fight, which leads to the beginning of another ascension.

Minds

Issue #187–200.

Fourth and concluding part of the "Mothers & Daughters" story arc. Cerebus and Cirin ascend, then are separated by a mysterious force. As Cerebus flies through the solar system, he is shown images from his past and is forced to reconsider his actions and his faith. He then encounters a disembodied voice calling itself "Dave" that acknowledges itself as Cerebus's creator. "Dave" shows Cerebus the history of the Cirinist movement, revealing that Cirin is actually named Serna and was the best friend of the real Cirin (the old woman Cerebus encountered in Women), but usurped Cirin's leadership and effectively exchanged identities with her. "Dave" then gives Cerebus information about his past, showing that Cerebus unwittingly ruined his original destiny, causing chaotic repercussions which have influenced most of his adventures. Cerebus demands that "Dave" make Jaka love him; in response, "Dave" shows Cerebus visions of possible futures between himself and Jaka, all of which are disastrously flawed for both of them due to Cerebus's nature. After a period of penance and self-reflection on Pluto, Cerebus asks "Dave" to place him in a bar he remembers from his mercenary days.

Guys

Issues #201–219.

Cerebus spends time, and eventually becomes bartender, in one of the Cirinists' bars where "degenerate" men are essentially quarantined from the female citizens. Described in the trade paperback's introduction as based on a bar that Sim frequented during a near-alcoholic stint between relationships, the series features various parodic characters who come and go while Cerebus remains stationary. Cerebus begins a somewhat reluctant relationship with a woman named Joanne, who was first introduced in one of the possible futures with Jaka that "Dave" showed Cerebus in Minds.

Rick's Story

Issues #220–231.

Eventually Jaka's ex-husband Rick arrives at the bar. He has significantly aged, become a heavy drinker (having barely been able to tolerate alcohol in "Jaka's Story"), and it is gradually revealed that the mental and emotional scars from the events at the end of "Jaka's Story" have left him mildly insane. Rick is working on a book about his life, which gradually becomes a religious work in which Cerebus is a holy figure and Rick his follower. Joanne returns and taunts Cerebus by courting Rick. At the end of the book, Rick departs, for reasons not entirely clear, and tells Cerebus that he will see Rick only once more in his life. After Rick has left, Jaka shows up at the bar, and she and Cerebus depart together, heading for Cerebus's childhood home of Sand Hills Creek.

Going Home

Issues #232–250.

First part of the "Going Home" story arc. Cerebus and Jaka travel across land, then on a river boat. Cerebus is eager to make as much time as possible, as he fears being trapped in the mountains near Sand Hills Creek by winter, but instead he indulges Jaka's desire for shopping and public appearances. Along the way, they encounter veiled hostility from the Cirinists. Cerebus and Jaka's relationship begins to show signs of deterioration, and Jaka is almost tempted away by F. Stop Kennedy (a fictional version of F. Scott Fitzgerald), a writer who has accompanied them on their river boat.

Form & Void

Issues #251–265.

Second and concluding part of the story arc "Going Home". Cerebus and Jaka continue their journey towards Sand Hills Creek, in the company of Ham and Mary Ernestway, analogues to Ernest Hemingway and his fourth wife, Mary. On the trip, Mary tells them about some of her and Ham's journeys. This material is based on Mary Hemingway's journals about Ernest's last African safaris prior to his death. Ham dies in what appears to be suicide, but Cerebus becomes convinced Mary murdered him and flees in panic, taking Jaka with him. They discover that they have been traveling in circles without making any significant progress toward Sand Hills Creek, and nearly die in a blizzard. They finally arrive in Sand Hills Creek only to find that Cerebus's parents are dead and the rest of the community has shunned Cerebus for his perceived abandonment of his family. Cerebus drives Jaka away, blaming her for keeping him away too long.

Latter Days

Issues #266–288.

First part of the story arc "Latter Days". After a prodigious leap in time over two issues, Cerebus returns from the north intent on provoking the Cirinists into killing him. Instead, he is captured by a trio of characters based on the Three Stooges, who await a religious revelation from him. While Cerebus was in the north, a religious movement developed out of the teachings of Rick and his writings about Cerebus. Once Cerebus supplies the required revelation, he inspires a successful anti-Cirinist rebellion and a subsequent reordering of society. Much of the second half of this chapter consists of Cerebus giving a highly idiosyncratic analysis of the Torah. Published over the course of nearly a year, this section, called "Chasing YHWH", was presented almost entirely in text format, with minimal art. This story arc is unusual in that disembodied thought balloons give the impression that Cerebus is speaking directly to the reader at times. It is revealed in the last issue of the arc that Cerebus has been talking to a female reporter who bears a striking resemblance to Jaka. He eventually falls in love with the woman and marries her.

The Last Day

Issues #289–300.

The second and concluding part of "Latter Days", and the conclusion of the series as a whole. In the first 40 pages Cerebus has a dream or vision in which cosmology is seen as a reflection of theology, complete with explanatory footnotes by Sim. Upon waking Cerebus—now incredibly aged, decrepit, pain-wracked, and mildly senile—makes the laborious trek to his writing desk to write down his new revelation. He then hides the manuscript, and it is implied that nobody will find it for two thousand years.

Cerebus spends most of the rest of the book trying to persuade his chief of security, Walter O'Reilly (named after Corporal Walter (Radar) O'Reilly from M*A*S*H), to admit his son, Shep-Shep, with whom he remembers sharing an idyllic father–son relationship. However, the Sanctuary is under lockdown due to opposition from a new and even more rabidly "feminist-homosexualist" group led by Shep-Shep's mother, whom Cerebus refers to as "New Joanne", which favors such "rights" as pedophilia, zoophilia, juvenile recreational drug use and lesbian motherhood. As a result, social values have undergone a complete breakdown.

Cerebus finally goes to bed despairing of seeing his son again, but Shep-Shep manages to sneak into Cerebus's room late that night. Their subsequent conversation shatters Cerebus's last illusions about his son. Shep-Shep has aligned himself with his mother, who has been conducting genetic engineering experiments, partly with knowledge gained from Cirin's earlier experimentation. Cerebus is disgusted and horrified when Shep-Shep shows him the results of one of the experiments, a lion cub with a human baby's head, and explains his mother's plans.

As Shep-Shep leaves, Cerebus grabs a knife, intending to kill him, but falls out of bed and breaks his neck, alone, unmourned, and unloved, just as the Judge had predicted. His life flashes before his eyes in a series of flashback panels and his ghost sees many of his old friends and enemies waiting for him in "the Light." Jaka, Bear, and Ham beckon to him, and he eagerly rushes to join them, thinking they are in Heaven, but then he notices the absence of Rick and realizes that the Light may in fact be Hell. He calls out to God for help, but is dragged into the Light nonetheless.

Other appearances

Comics Buyer's Guide

Swords of Cerebus

Each of the six issues includes one or two Cerebus stories not all of which are included in the "phone books".

Swords of Cerebus Vol. 1, January 1981

  • "The Name of the Game Is Diamondback", 7 pages, layouts by Marshall Rogers, story and art by Sim, January 1981

Swords of Cerebus Vol. 2, June 1981

  • "Demonhorn" (first appeared in Nucleus #1), 5 pages, story and art by Sim
  • "The Morning After", 6 pages, inks by Josef Rubinstein

Swords of Cerebus Vol. 3, Fall 1981

  • "What Happened Between Issues 20 and 21", 8 pages

Swords of Cerebus Vol. 4, Fall 1982

  • "Magiking", 10 pages
  • "Silverspoon", (first appeared in Comics Buyer's Guide), 11 pages,

Swords of Cerebus Vol 5, Summer 1983

Swords of Cerebus Vol 6, Fall 1984

  • "A Night on the Town"

All of the stories above except "Demonhorn" were reprinted in "Cerebus World Tour Book 1995"

Epic Illustrated

  • "His First Fifth", 9 color pages, October 1984
  • "A Friendly Reminder", 3 color pages, February 1985
  • "Selling Insurance", 2 color pages, June 1985
  • "The Girl Next Door", 3 color pages, June 1985

AV in 3D

  • "Cerebus Dreams II", 4 3D pages, December 1984

Cerebus Jam #1, April 1986

  • "The Defense of Fort Columbia", by Sim, Gerhard, Scott and Bo Hampton, 6 pages
  • "The First Invention of Armour, 1404" by Sim, Gerhard, and Murphy Anderson, 6 pages
  • "Squinteye the Sailor" by Sim, Gerhard, and Terry Austin, 5 pages
  • "Cerebus versus the Spirit", Sim, Gerhard, and Will Eisner, 4 pages

Anything Goes!

  • "Breaking Up is Hard to Do", 3 color pages plus cover, March 1986

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #8

  • "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Cerebus the Aardvark", by Eastman, Laird, Sim and Gerhard, 43 pages plus cover, 1986

Spawn

Spawn #10, May 1993

  • "Crossing Over", 22 color pages plus cover, story by Sim, art by Todd McFarlane

Glamourpuss

The March 2011 (incorrectly dated March 2010 on the reverse cover) issue of Glamourpuss #18, written and drawn by Sim

  • "What if Cerebus had lived in the age of Mad Men", 10 pages.

Cerebus in Hell?

In 2017, Sim started publishing a new series, Cerebus in Hell?, with issues #0 and #1 through #4. Cerebus, having died in Cerebus #300, is now in what appears to be Hell, wandering—and, as usual, badmouthing—his way, with art by Gustave Doré swiped from that artist's famous illustrations for Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. Small pictures of Cerebus, copied from the Cerebus comic book, with only a few poses repeated throughout, are added to the art.[20]

Cerebus #1s

Starting in August 2017, Dave Sim began to write and publish a series of monthly comic books, all numbered "#1", and all satires of various classic comic books. The first, Batvark #1, is a satire of Batman #1, the second, Aardvark Comics #1, a satire of Action Comics #1. As with Cerebus in Hell, the artwork is by Gustave Doré with small pictures of Cerebus added.

Cerebus in Hell? Presents

  • #1 Cerebus in Hell? No. 0, November 2016
  • #2 Cerebus in Hell? No. 1 (1/4), January 2017
  • #3 Cerebus in Hell? No. 2 (2/4), February 2017
  • #4 Cerebus in Hell? No. 3 (3/4),March 2017
  • #5 Cerebus in Hell? No. 4 (4/4), April 2017
  • #6 Batvark #1, August 2017
  • #7 Aardvark Comics #1, September 2017
  • #8 Strange Cerebus #1, October 2017
  • #9 Death of Cerebus in Hell #1, November 2017
  • #10 Cerebus: The Vark Knight Returns #1, December 2017
  • #11 Watchvark #1, January 2018
  • #12 The Amazing Cerebus #1, February 2018
  • #13 World's Finite Cerebus #1, March 2018
  • #14 Love and Aardvarks #1, April 2018
  • #15 The Undateable Cerebus #1, May 2018
  • #16 The Un-Bedable Vark #1, June 2018
  • #17 Teenage Mutant Ninja Cerebi #1, July 2018
  • #18 Nick Calm, Agent of C.O.D.P.I.E.C.E. #1, August 2018
  • #19 Crisis of Infinite Cerebi #1, September 19, 2018
  • #20 The League of Extraordinary Cerebi #1, October 2018
  • #21 Cerberus in Hell? #1, November 2018
  • #22 Canadian Vark! #1, December 2018
  • #23 Giant-Size Jingles #1, January 2019
  • #24 Cerebus the Aardvark In: Sim City - A Dave to Kill For #1, February 2019
  • #25 Cerebus the Aardvark In: Sim City - That Issue After #1 / Teenage Money-Nabbing Cerebi #0, March 2019
  • #26 Super Cerebus Annual #1, April 2019
  • #27 Cerebus Woman #1, May 2019
  • #28 LGBTQ etc. People #1, June 2019
  • #29 Fornicators inc. #1, July 2019
  • #30 Tales of Sophistication #1, August 2019
  • #31 The Iron Manticore #1, September 2019
  • #32 Colour Your Own Cerebus in Hell? #1, October 2019
  • #33 Vark Wars #1, November 2019
  • #34 Vark Thing #1, December 2019
  • #35 The House of Cerebus #1, January, 2020
  • #36 The Silver Cerebus #1, February 2020
  • #37 The Varking Dead #1, March 2020
  • #38 Green Dante/Green Virgil #1, April 2020
  • #39 Vark Wars: Walt's Empire Strikes Back #1, May 2020
  • #40 Attractive Cousins #1, July 2020
  • #41 The Amicable Spider-Vark Annual #1, August 2020
  • #42 Batvark Penis #1, September 2020
  • #42 Batvark Penis #1 Virgin Cover Variant, September 2020
  • #42 Batvark XXXXX #1 <Censored-for-Grandma Variant>, September 2020
  • #42 Batvark XXXXX #1 <Censored-for-Grandma Variant> (Second Printing), January 2021
  • #43 The Vault of Cerebus #1, Octoberish 2020
  • #44 Spider-Whore #1, November 2020
  • #45 Hermann #1, December 2020
  • #45 Hermann #1 Virgin Cover Variant, December 2020
  • #46 Cerebus in Hell? 2021 #1, January 2021
  • #47 The Amazing Batvark #1, February 2021
  • #48 Flaming Cerebus Comics #1, March 2021
  • #49 Cerebus The Duck #1, April 2021
  • #50 Baby Yoda Cerebus #1, May 2021
  • #51 Strangers in Cerebus #1, June 2021
  • #52 The Unethical Spider-Vark #1, July 2021
  • #53 Crisis In Infinite Quarantine #1, August 2021
  • #54 Batvark: Coronavirus - There Are No Comics #1, September 2021
  • #54 Batvark: Coronavirus - While Diamond Slept: 2020 #1, September 2021
  • #55 Super-Cerebus VS. Covid-19 #1, October 2021
  • #55 Super-Cerebus VS. Covid-19 #1 Wraparound Cover Variant , October 2021
  • #56 The League of Extraordinary Corona #1, November 2021
  • #57 Coronavirus Book #1, December 2021
  • #58 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #58 Cerebus in Hell? 2022 #1, January 2022
  • #59 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #59 Defective Comics Annual #1, February 2022
  • #60 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #60 Cerebus the Emily #1, March 2022
  • #60 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #60 Cerebus the Emily #1 Harpies' Bizzaarre Variant, March 2022
  • #61 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #61 Batvark: A Poet in the Family #1, April 2022
  • #61 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #61 Batvark: A Poet in the Family #1 Batvark-Girl Variant, April 2022
  • #62 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #62 Grey A.L.@. #1, May 2022
  • #63 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #63 Giant-Size Public Defenders #1, June 2022
  • #63 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #63 Giant-Size Public Defender: Varkdevil Variant #1, June 2022
  • #64 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #64 The Uncrucifiable Cerebus Goes To A Gay Bar #1, July 2022
  • #65 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #65 Kurtz VZ Kurtz #1, August 2022
  • #66 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #66 Flailing at Love #1, September 2022
  • #67 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #67 Hell 'O Dali #1, October 2022
  • #68 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #68 BTVRK #1, November 2022
  • #69 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #69 Giant-Size Aardvark Vanaheim Three-Wheel #1, December 2022
  • #70 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #70 Cerebus in Hell? 2023 #1, January 2023
  • #71 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #71 Cancel America Comics #1, February 2023
  • #72 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #72 AV Team-Up #1, March 2023
  • #73 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #73 New Varks #1, April 2023
  • #74 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #74 Aversions #1, May 2023
  • #75 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #75 She-Aversions #1, June 2023
  • #76 Cerebus in Hell? Presents #76 War In Hell? #1, July 2023

Characters

Cerebus

Cerebus is a misanthropic anthropomorphic 3-foot-tall (91 cm) bipedal gray aardvark, although like other anthropomorphic characters in the series, he was born to ordinary human parents.[21]

Supporting characters

Jaka Tavers
The love of Cerebus's life. A dancer by profession, she is the niece of Lord Julius and (ex-)wife of Rick Nash.
Lord Julius
Grandlord of the city-state of Palnu, who exercises control by making the bureaucracy incredibly dense and incomprehensible. Julius is crafty and intelligent, but often plays the fool to confuse and baffle opponents. His character design and behavior is based on Groucho Marx, including snappy insults, a constant cigar, the chicken walk, and a painted-on mustache.
Astoria
A beautiful political manipulator, Lord Julius' ex-wife, and the main driving force behind Cerebus's campaign to become Prime Minister in High Society. She is the leader of the Kevillists, a feminist sect which opposes Cirin. The Kevillists mirror the Cirinists' philosophy, but would prefer power in the hands of daughters instead of mothers. She is named for actress Mary Astor, and may be inspired in some ways by Sim's ex-wife Deni Loubert, though Sim himself denies this in issue 298.[citation needed]
Cirin
Leader of the Cirinists, a matriarchal fascist sect which conquers Estarcion at the conclusion of the Church and State storyline. Originally named Serna, she took the name and effectively exchanged identities with the real Cirin, whose views were much less militaristic. The sect honors mothers primarily, also giving high honors to daughters (potential mothers) and children. Men are tolerated. Like Cerebus, she is an aardvark.
Elrod the Albino (Elrod of Melvinbone)
Essentially Michael Moorcock's Elric of Melnibone with the voice and personality of Senator Claghorn (or Foghorn Leghorn), Elrod is an almost purely comic character whose main purpose is to frustrate and enrage Cerebus. In Reads it is revealed that he was created by Cerebus's proximity to a magic gem, and after learning this he vanishes from existence. However, Joanne tells Cerebus she and her husband used to live next door to Elrod, who was married at the time to Red Sophia.
Roach (Artemis)
An incompetent superhero character. Sim used the Roach to satirize popular mainstream comic characters or industry publishing trends, beginning with Batman. His other guises have included Captain Cockroach (Captain America), Moonroach (Moon Knight), Wolveroach (Wolverine), the Secret Sacred Wars Roach (Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars series and Frank Miller's Batman from The Dark Knight Returns), normalroach (Valentino's normalman), Punisherroach (the Punisher), Swoon (The Sandman), and Sergeant Preston of the Royal Mounted Iestan police (the main character of the radio series Challenge of the Yukon).
Adam Weisshaupt
Introduced in Cerebus, he is a ruthless political opponent of Cerebus throughout the Church & State storyline. His manipulations of both Cerebus and the Roach lead to his pawns eventually growing more powerful than he ever hoped to be. Weisshaupt is named after the historical Adam Weishaupt but drawn to look like George Washington (a connection well known to Illuminati conspiracy theorists).
Bear
Cerebus's best friend from his mercenary days and main drinking buddy. In "Guys" there are hints Cerebus is suppressing an attraction to him.
Joanne
Introduced in a possible future for Cerebus and Jaka by "Dave" in "Minds", Joanne is a bored housewife who has an affair with Cerebus, prompting Jaka's suicide. After Cerebus returns to Estarcion, Joanne reappears and becomes Cerebus's lover, only to be spurned by Cerebus. She later seduces Rick as a way to taunt Cerebus. Joanne is in many ways an opposite of Jaka, and Cerebus bases much of his post-Guys views on how to deal with women on his experience with her. After Shep-shep's mother leaves Cerebus, he labels her "New Joanne."
Bran Mac Mufin
Originally a barbarian warlord whose people worshiped an idol who looked remarkably like Cerebus (and which the aardvark destroyed). He later turns up quite unexpectedly, in civilized clothing, to act as an adviser to Cerebus in two separate occasions, first in Cerebus's campaign and first reign as Prime Minister of Iest and then arriving after Cerebus is Pope to observe the miracles and give Cerebus advice, though he seems to have a hidden agenda. During the Iest campaign Cerebus states that he trusts Mac Mufin's military advice more than anyone else's. When Thrunk deposes Cerebus, Mac Mufin commits suicide by stabbing himself in the chest with a sword. Mac Mufin is a parody of Robert E. Howard's Celtic barbarian Bran Mak Morn. In his first appearance in issue 5 his name was spelled Bran Mak Mufin, but in subsequent appearances he goes by Bran Mac Mufin.
Rick Nash
First introduced as Jaka's husband in Jaka's Story, Rick is a friendly, gentle ne'er-do-well, whom Sim described in the introduction to the "phonebook" of Jaka's Story as "the nearest I will ever come to the portrayal of a good and thoroughly decent human being; completely without guile or malice". After his marriage to Jaka is dissolved, he becomes mildly insane. He eventually goes on to become the prophet of a religion centered on Cerebus.
Suenteus Po
Estarcion's third aardvark, who has lived several lifetimes and has shaped the history of Estarcion. It is also a very common name and several people named "Suenteus Po" appear in the story in various roles—one as an enigmatic illusionist and another as a historian who narrates a sizable portion of Cerebus's first reign as Prime Minister of Iest (though it is very strongly implied that both these Pos are the aardvark). It is mentioned in High Society that some of the followers of the original Suenteus Po named their children after him. The name may be a playful misspelling of the name of Roman historian Suetonius. There was a rock band on San Francisco label Solana Records named Suenteus Po that released an album in 2000.
The Regency Elf
A childlike, playful spirit who inhabits Cerebus's rooms at the Regency Hotel in High Society; at first, only Cerebus can see her. She helps Cerebus with some of his political scheming, though, as innocent as she seems, it's all just a game to her. It is discovered later that the Regency Elf who appears to Cerebus is a fake created by Cerebus's subconscious. The Regency Elf is inspired in part by Elfquest and its creator Wendy Pini. Visually, the Regency Elf is inspired by Debbie Harry.[22]

Various other characters in the series were designed to resemble famous actors, politicians, and other personalities and comic in-jokes, including British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Professor X (with a bit of Chris Claremont thrown in), Canadian Member of Parliament Sheila Copps, director Woody Allen, Alan Moore, Rick Veitch, Oscar Wilde, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Norman Mailer, Rodney Dangerfield, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and Chico Marx.[citation needed]

Collections

The first 25 issues of Cerebus were collected in six issues of Swords of Cerebus, plus one supplement to volume six, and these stories were then collected in the Cerebus trade paperback. Swords of Cerebus also published several new short Cerebus stories, listed under "Other appearances" above, which were not reprinted in the "phone books"

All of the story arcs from the Cerebus comic book have been reprinted in collected omnibus editions of 240–630 pages each, all of which are presently still in print. They are generally referred to by fans and retailers as Cerebus "phone books" due to their size; also, they use the same newsprint paper as the original comics.

Sim has released two collections of his responses to readers' letters (the original letters are not included) after the publication of Cerebus #300. Collected Letters 2004 (ISBN 0-919359-23-X) was released in 2005, and Collected Letters vol. 2 was released in 2007.

Miscellaneous stories not appearing in the above collections have been reprinted in the short collections Cerebus World Tour Book and in Cerebus Number Zero, which reprints issues #51, 112/113 and parts of issues #137–138. A few standalone, uncollected stories have appeared in various collections and magazines over the years, and Cerebus has made cameo appearances on the covers of magazines such as Comics Revue. Sim also marketed a set of "Diamondback" cards (based upon a game seen in early issues) in the 1980s. All of the material in the Cerebus arc was reprinted in smaller collections called Swords of Cerebus before Sim decided on the "phonebook" format.[23]

The phonebooks themselves tie into ideas presented in the series. Although grammatically incorrect, the titles of books 8 through 11 could be read as a sentence ("women read minds, guys"—the concept of women reading minds is a key plot point).[24] Also, beginning with Going Home (the first storyline begun after Sim's religious conversion), the covers of each "phone book" are printed in full color, with Going Home and Form and Void using Gerhard's scenic nature photography as covers, rather than the drawings used on past books.

Novels and collections

# Title[25] Issues[25] Orig.
dates[25]
Storyline[26][25] Year ISBN Notes
1 Cerebus 1–25 1977–1981 Cerebus 1987 0-919359-08-6 Third published volume[27]
From 11th printing, also contains "Silverspoon" strips
2 High Society 26–50 1981–1983 High Society 1986 0-919359-07-8 First published volume[25][27]
3 Church and State I 52–80 1983–1985 Church & State 1987 0-919359-09-4 Second published volume[27]
4 Church and State II 81–111 1985–1988 1988 0-919359-11-6
5 Jaka's Story 114–136 1988–1990 Jaka's Story 1990 0-919359-12-4
6 Melmoth 139–150 1990–1991 Melmoth 1991 0-919359-10-8
7 Flight 151–162 1991–1992 Mothers & Daughters 1993 0-919359-13-2 first volume published with a volume number
8 Women 163–174 1992–1993 1994 0-919359-14-0
9 Reads 175–186 1993–1994 1995 0-919359-15-9
10 Minds 187–200 1994–1995 1996 0-919359-16-7
11 Guys 201–219 1995–1997 Guys 1997 0-919359-17-5
12 Rick's Story 220–231 1997–1998 Rick's Story 1998 0-919359-18-3
13 Going Home 232–250 1998–2000 Going Home 2000 0-919359-19-1
14 Form and Void 251–265 2000–2001 2001 0-919359-20-5
15 Latter Days 266–288 2001–2003 Latter Days 2003 0-919359-22-1
16 The Last Day 289–300 2003–2004 2004 0-919359-21-3

Reception and legacy

Cerebus has been rated to be one of the greatest characters in comics history. Wizard rated him as the 63rd-greatest comic book character,[28] while Empire rated him as the 38th-greatest comic book character, describing him as a character born of bizarre brilliance.[29] IGN placed Cerebus as the 91st-greatest comic book hero of all time, stating that "few names hold as much sway in the independent comics scene as Cerebus" and "Cerebus' mark on the industry will be everlasting".[30]

The term "Cerebus Syndrome" has come to commonly describe developments where initially comedic or superficial works in any medium gradually become more serious, complex, and dramatic.[31]

References

  1. ^ Interview with Dave Sim Sim says the name Cerebus at 3:58 into the interview
  2. ^ Uzumeri, David (May 5, 2020). . Comics Alliance. Archived from the original on September 4, 2014. Retrieved July 15, 2020.
  3. ^ Moore, Alan (April 1997). . Archived from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  4. ^ a b Shulgan, Christopher (November 2003), "Comic Book Anti-Hero!", Saturday Night ,
  5. ^ ComicCon September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ a b c Coville, Jamie. Collector Times June 16, 2005
  7. ^ Comicon board posting by Colleen Doran[permanent dead link] Colleen talks about Dave's support of self-publishers
  8. ^ Grant, Paul J. (January 1993). "A Boy & his Aardvark". Wizard (17): 56–59.
  9. ^ Heintjes, Tom; Thompson, Kim (July 1984). "Marvel Threatens Aardvark-Vanaheim Over Cerebus Wolverine Parody". The Comics Journal (91).
  10. ^ David, Peter (November 20, 1992). But I Digress... Comics Buyer's Guide. Krause Publications. Reprinted in But I Digress... (1994), pp. 70–71.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-03-24. Retrieved 2012-03-05.
  12. ^ "Just to be clear on the subject of what I consider scripture: the Torah, that is, the Law and the Prophets as held by Orthodox Judaism (i.e. no Ruth, no Esther, no Daniel, no Job, no Song of Songs, etc.), the First Book of Moshe through to Malachi, the four Gospels, Acts and John's Apocalypse, and all of the Koran." Sim, Dave. (2007) Collected Letters Volume 2, p. 90.
  13. ^ "CFG: Cerebus Mailing List 'talk' with Dave Sim". Cerebusfangirl.com. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  14. ^ Grady Hendrix (2004-03-23). . The Village Voice. Archived from the original on 2008-06-13. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  15. ^ Tundis, Jeff. "Gerhard and Aardvark-Vanaheim have parted ways". Cerebus Yahoo! Group. Retrieved 2007-02-28.
  16. ^ "Dave Sim's blog, July 10, 2007". Davesim.blogspot.com. 2007-07-10. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  17. ^ CFG Archive of Newsarama discussion, Feb 6, 2008
  18. ^ . Blackvelveteditrice.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  19. ^ Product page 2011-06-15 at the Wayback Machine at Ponent Mon 2011-06-15 at the Wayback Machine 's website
  20. ^ Cerebus Returns In September With A New Series In 2017 – Cerebus In Hell By Dave Sim And Friends. June 22, 2016. Retrieved June 29, 2018.
  21. ^ "Cerebus, like Howard the Duck, is a funny animal in the world of humans". Dave Sim, from the "Notes From The President" section in Cerebus Number Zero, June 1993
  22. ^ . Beguiling.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-07. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  23. ^ Cerebus #189 Note From The President "With Cerebus, we did the Swords collections first (four issues in each) until it became unwieldy to keep a half-dozen collections in print, so we switched to the phone-book format." Dave Sim, from the "Notes From The President" section in Cerebus # 189, December 1994
  24. ^ "Letter from Dave Sim". Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  25. ^ a b c d e Weiner, Robert G; Weiner, Stephen; Figa, Elizabeth (FRW); Royal, Derek Parker (FRW). Graphic Novels and Comics in Libraries and Archives, page 13. McFarland, 2010. ISBN 978-0-786-44302-4
  26. ^ Griggs, Henry. "Cerebus the Aardvark". Henry Griggs Ramblings. Retrieved 2011-05-02.
  27. ^ a b c Liss, Margaret (2009-10-17). "Cerebus phonebooks part two". CerebusFanGirl. Retrieved 2011-05-30.
  28. ^ . Wizard. Archived from the original on June 8, 2011. Retrieved May 7, 2011.
  29. ^ "Cerebus is number 38". Empire. Retrieved May 9, 2011.
  30. ^ "#91: Cerebus". IGN. Retrieved May 9, 2011.
  31. ^ Turner-Maier, Jason (2004-02-22). . Stanford University. Archived from the original on March 23, 2009. Retrieved 2011-05-31.

External links

  • "The Aardvark Hero: Dave Sim's Cerebus" from Emma Tinker's thesis, Identity and Form in Alternative Comics, 1967–2007, University College London, 2008, OCLC 829958496

cerebus, aardvark, cerebus, redirects, here, confused, with, cerberus, cerebus, also, comic, book, series, created, canadian, cartoonist, dave, which, from, december, 1977, until, march, 2004, title, character, issue, series, anthropomorphic, aardvark, takes, . Cerebus redirects here Not to be confused with Cerberus Cerebus ˈ s ɛr e b e s 1 also Cerebus the Aardvark is a comic book series created by Canadian cartoonist Dave Sim which ran from December 1977 until March 2004 The title character of the 300 issue series is an anthropomorphic aardvark who takes on a number of roles throughout the series barbarian prime minister and Pope among them The series stands out for its experimentation in form and content and for the dexterity of its artwork especially after background artist Gerhard joined with the 65th issue As the series progressed it increasingly became a platform for Sim s controversial beliefs Cerebus the AardvarkCover to Cerebus issues 112 and 113 from 1988 by Dave Sim and GerhardPublication informationPublisherAardvark VanaheimScheduleInitially bimonthly then monthlyFormatLimited seriesGenreParody of sword and sorcery early issues fantasy comedy political satire drama mid period issues theology later issues Publication dateDecember 1977 March 2004No of issues300Main character s CerebusISSN0712 7774Creative teamCreated byDave SimWritten byDave SimArtist s Dave SimGerhardThe comic began as a parody of sword and sorcery comics primarily Marvel s version of Conan the Barbarian 2 However it evolved to explore a variety of other topics including politics religion and gender issues At a total of 6 000 pages it progressively became more serious and ambitious than its parodic roots Sim announced early on that the series would end with the death of the title character The story has a large cast of characters many of which began as parodies of characters from comic books and popular culture Starting with the High Society storyline the series became divided into self contained novels which form parts of the overall story The ten novels of the series have been collected in 16 books known as Cerebus phonebooks for their resemblance by way of their thickness to telephone directories At a time when the series was about 70 completed celebrated comic book writer Alan Moore wrote Cerebus as if I need to say so is still to comic books what Hydrogen is to the Periodic Table 3 Contents 1 Publication history 2 Published volumes 2 1 Cerebus 2 2 High Society 2 3 Church amp State I 2 4 Church amp State II 2 5 Jaka s Story 2 6 Melmoth 2 7 Flight 2 8 Women 2 9 Reads 2 10 Minds 2 11 Guys 2 12 Rick s Story 2 13 Going Home 2 14 Form amp Void 2 15 Latter Days 2 16 The Last Day 3 Other appearances 3 1 Comics Buyer s Guide 3 2 Swords of Cerebus 3 3 Epic Illustrated 3 4 AV in 3D 3 5 Cerebus Jam 1 April 1986 3 6 Anything Goes 3 7 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 8 3 8 Spawn 3 9 Glamourpuss 3 10 Cerebus in Hell 3 11 Cerebus 1s 4 Characters 4 1 Cerebus 4 2 Supporting characters 5 Collections 5 1 Novels and collections 6 Reception and legacy 7 References 8 External linksPublication history EditCerebus was self published by Dave Sim under his Aardvark Vanaheim Inc publishing banner For the first few years the company s publisher was Deni Loubert Sim s girlfriend the two married and divorced during the comic s run Sim s position as a pioneering self publisher in comics inspired numerous writer artists after him most notably Jeff Smith Bone Terry Moore Strangers in Paradise and Martin Wagner Hepcats In 1979 Sim who was at the time a frequent marijuana user began using LSD taking the drug with such frequency that he was eventually hospitalized 4 It was this incident that Sim claims led to the inspiration to produce Cerebus for 300 monthly issues 4 When Sim published the first Cerebus phone book a paperback collection of the High Society graphic novel issues 26 50 he angered distributors who felt that their support had been instrumental in his series success in an industry generally indifferent to small publishers by offering the first printing via mail order only 5 6 The decision was a financial windfall for Sim however grossing over 150 000 in sales equivalent to 371 000 in 2021 6 Sim became known for picking up hotel tabs for self publishers and helping other self publishers by paying for meals and limo service between stops 7 Negotiations regarding DC buying Cerebus took place over the course of 1985 to 1988 offering 100 000 229 000 today and 10 of all licensing and merchandising which Sim rejected 6 The series hit a personal sales record with issue 100 which despite being a normal issue in the middle of a story arc had a print run of 36 000 copies Sales took a substantial drop over the next 50 issues however and Sim commented that the fact that readers could not simply jump in to Cerebus and had to read the entire series in order to be able to understand the current issue was a major reason for the sales drop 8 In July 1984 Cerebus publisher Aardvark Vanaheim was threatened with possible legal action by Marvel Comics over a parody of Wolverine in Cerebus 9 When Sim guest wrote the 10th issue of Todd McFarlane s comics series Spawn he donated his entire fee over 100 000 to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund 10 Jaka s Story a tragic character study dealing with gender roles and the political suppression of art is generally cited as the series pinnacle of narrative achievement who Later issues of the series became highly personal and began to alienate many long time fans female readers especially citation needed Issue 186 collected in Reads contained a lengthy prose section that was attacked by some readers and critics for what they perceived as overt misogyny and which Sim describes as anti feminism During this part of the story the storyline consisted of a textual treatise written by Viktor Davis a fictional Reads author interspersed with the main Cerebus storyline In Davis s material he refers to the creative male light and the emotional female void a reversal of the gender based view of creation espoused by the Judge at the end of Church and State in which the female light is raped by the male void and shatters into the physical universe As Sim himself says in an interview with The Comics Journal Cerebus 1 200 is the completion of the story The yin and yang The ultra female reading The ultra male reading I m attaching an allegory to the Big Bang You make up your mind which one s the pit and which one s the top of the mountain 11 By the end of the series the Void is again male and identified as God and the Light is female now identified with YHWH Issue 186 was followed by another essay in the back of issue 265 called Tangent in which Sim identified a feminist homosexualist axis that opposed traditional and rational societal values This material appeared as Sim was retreating from public life and becoming more marginalized by his peers in the industry Sim himself appeared as a character in Cerebus as when he berated the title character in the Minds story arc Sim s religious beliefs heavily influenced the last third of Cerebus s storyline Once an atheist Sim became a believer in God while gathering research material for Rick s Story However rather than following an established religion Sim follows his own personal belief system cobbled together from elements of Judaism Christianity and Islam 12 although he described himself in issue 8 of Following Cerebus as mostly Muslim A 2003 magazine interview describes Sim as reciting a prayer of his own devising five times a day which was published in the back of issue 300 and as having sold much of his furniture to donate the money to charity as an act of religious asceticism In an editorial contained in issue 297 Sim stated that he regards the production of Cerebus as of secondary importance to his religious practice Sim s religious beliefs tie into his views on gender and the bulk of the Cerebus storyline after Guys deals with this especially Rick s Story Latter Days and The Last Day citation needed A quarterly publication Following Cerebus followed in August 2004 featuring correspondence essays and previously unpublished artwork from Sim as well as interviews with other comic writers and artists Sim was rumored to have said that had he died or otherwise chosen not to complete Cerebus prior to issue 300 the remaining issues were to either consist of blank pages or Gerhard was to have drawn his backgrounds only leaving Sim s contribution blank It is not known if this plan was ever serious since it was never put into effect At the completion of the series Sim directed that upon his and Gerhard s death Cerebus would enter into the public domain 13 14 Effective 31 December 2006 Sim purchased Gerhard s share of the company 15 Sim has already granted a general license for other creators to use his characters in their own works stating that he is trying to be consistent with his own appropriation of others works 16 17 In early 2009 Sim launched the bimonthly series Cerebus Archive It was translated into Italian 18 and in 2011 Church and State Vol I was published in Spanish 19 Published volumes EditCerebus Edit Issues 1 25 This first story arc uniquely in this series consists of one to three issue storylines with only occasional back references Cerebus is introduced as an amoral barbarian mercenary fighting and betraying for money and drinking it away During his adventures he encounters the warrior Pigts whose religion reveres aardvarks and the insane wizard Necross who turns himself into a giant stone Thrunk visually similar to Marvel Comics The Thing Most of the series prominent characters are introduced or at least mentioned in these issues including Elrod of Melvinbone a parodic representation of Michael Moorcock s Elric of Melnibone Lord Julius a character based upon Groucho Marx Artemis Roach a k a The Roach who would evolve into an all purpose parody of Marvel and DC superhero characters and Jaka The series takes a sharp change in direction with issue 20 which is the first of the Mind Games issues that are a feature of the comic and introduces the philosophical Suenteus Po and the ultra matriarchial Cirinists High Society Edit Issues 26 50 Cerebus comes to the wealthy city state of Iest as the representative of Lord Julius s city state of Palnu He quickly finds himself enmeshed in the fast paced world of high finance and politics and comic tension is built through his ignorance of the high society machinations going on around him Cerebus is befriended by the legendary Regency Elf as he adjusts to his new circumstances He meets and soon finds himself maneuvered into a political campaign by the mysterious Astoria who is also manipulating Artemis into pseudo super hero identities that are parodies of Moon Knight and later Sergeant Preston of the Mounties Cerebus recognizes that he is a pawn in a political game between Lord Julius and Astoria but he struggles to assert himself and ultimately confounds the expectations of everyone attempting to use him Cerebus is eventually elected Prime Minister of Iest but launches an unnecessary war of conquest that causes him to lose everything Church amp State I Edit Issues 52 80 After some travels Cerebus returns to Iest and is manipulated by Weisshaupt who wants to use Cerebus s popularity with the masses into again becoming Prime Minister of Iest Weisshaupt has maneuvered himself into the tenuous presidency of a federation of states including Iest Palnu and New Sepra as a bulwark against the Cirinists Weisshaupt lures Cerebus into a drunken marriage to Red Sophia but ultimately loses his influence over Cerebus when Weisshaupt s rival Bishop Powers appoints Cerebus Pope of the Eastern Church of Tarim Finally out from under anyone else s control Cerebus lets absolute power go to his head and demands that all the citizens must give him all their gold or face the end of the world Sophia walks out on Cerebus and then he discovers that Jaka is married and pregnant Cerebus is threatened by Weisshaupt s secret invention of cannons but Weisshaupt suffers a heart attack and Cerebus continues his papal reign of terror He is finally ejected from the Upper City by the sudden invasion of the giant stone Thrunk who claims to be the God Tarim Church amp State II Edit Issues 81 111 Cerebus returns to Iest s Upper City and uses Weisshaupt s cannons to destroy Thrunk and reclaim the papacy Astoria has mysteriously killed the Western pope the Lion of Serrea and Cerebus must execute her for the crime in order to retain his papacy Cerebus confronts her in a dungeon and after being taunted by Astoria he grants himself a divorce from Red Sophia marries himself to Astoria rapes her and then divorces himself from her Astoria s trial which echoes with similarities to a repeating pattern of historical executions of reformers is interrupted when Cerebus makes the predicted Ascension to the Moon that is the culmination of the land s religious prophecy There Cerebus meets the Judge a timeless godlike being who has watched over history from the very beginning Sim had based the personality of this character on cartoonist and playwright Jules Feiffer The Judge explains his version of the creation myth of Cerebus s universe before warning Cerebus that he will live only a few more years before dying alone unmourned and unloved The Judge tells Cerebus that if the Aardvark ever questions his suffering he should remember his second marriage to Astoria Cerebus then falls back to earth where he discovers that the Cirinists have invaded and his empire has collapsed Jaka s Story Edit Issues 114 136 Cerebus returns to Iest now under a brutal Cirinist dictatorship and runs into Jaka again She is illegally working as a dancer in her landlord s tavern The landlord barman Pud treats Jaka kindly but secretly spends his days lusting after her Cerebus agrees to live with Jaka and her husband Rick as their houseguest That story is interwoven with unreliable tales of Jaka s childhood told by a writer representing Oscar Wilde using notes and stories provided by Rick In the end Cerebus disguises himself and travels to the Lower City to buy a jar of paint While he is gone the Cirinists find the tavern kill Pud and arrest Jaka Rick and Oscar Jaka is made to sign a confession of immoral behavior and is reunited with Rick however the Cirinists reveal to Rick that Jaka aborted the son that Rick always wanted He lashes out at Jaka and is allowed to divorce her although he is maimed for striking her Jaka returns to Palnu and Cerebus returns to the inn to find it in ruins Melmoth Edit Issues 139 150 This story arc concentrates on the last days and death of Oscar Wilde who is attended to by his trusted companion Robbie Ross rather than on Cerebus himself who appears in only a few pages The title refers to the gothic novel Melmoth the Wanderer by Charles Robert Maturin a relative of Wilde s Wilde adopted this alias during this period of his life Meanwhile a catatonic Cerebus believing Jaka to be dead spends his days mourning on the patio of a cafe In the last few pages of the story after the main action had concluded Cerebus overhears a conversation by two Cirinist jailers insulting Jaka Enraged Cerebus murders one of the guards and then springs into action Flight Edit Issues 151 162 First part of the Mothers amp Daughters story arc Cerebus s return to Iest and slaughter of Cirinsts leads to a very brief failed revolution Cerebus descends into darkness and speaks with Suenteus Po Meanwhile Cirin works to manage her sect and arrange her own Ascension Artemis with Elrod as his sidekick also stages his own impromptu revolution under his new persona PunisherRoach a parody of the Marvel comics character the Punisher Women Edit Issues 163 174 Second part of the story arc Mothers amp Daughters Cerebus crashes back to earth He is assisted by a mysterious old woman who is being openly spied upon by the Cirinists she sends him to a bar to hide This story arc includes a parody of Neil Gaiman s The Sandman in which the Roach plays Swoon a parody of Dream and Elrod plays Snuff a trans person parody of Death Astoria and Cirin symbolically duel in a dream realm The book includes excerpts from books written by Astoria and Cirin that describe their differing beliefs Cerebus flies across the city to slay Astoria but is interrupted by the arrival of Suenteus Po Reads Edit Issues 175 186 Third part of the Mothers amp Daughters story arc This book primarily consists of two long text pieces The first revolves around an author of Reads heavily illustrated books in Cerebus s world In this story there is a strong thread about the dangers of commercial success and selling out The series moves from this storyline to a long essay attributed to Viktor Davis a fictional Reads author This essay puts forth a theory on the nature of the sexes describing the Female Void focused on feeling and the Male Light focused on reason These two stories are accompanied by a long discussion between Cirin Astoria Cerebus and Suenteus Po Po gives information about aardvarks including that all aardvarks have Cerebus s magnifier quality and attempts to convince each of the others to abandon their pursuits of power and return to what they enjoy doing most then leaves them to their fates Astoria is convinced and also leaves but not before giving Cerebus information about her history with Cirin and also informing him of his hermaphrodite nature Cerebus and Cirin then engage in a long and brutal fight which leads to the beginning of another ascension Minds Edit Issue 187 200 Fourth and concluding part of the Mothers amp Daughters story arc Cerebus and Cirin ascend then are separated by a mysterious force As Cerebus flies through the solar system he is shown images from his past and is forced to reconsider his actions and his faith He then encounters a disembodied voice calling itself Dave that acknowledges itself as Cerebus s creator Dave shows Cerebus the history of the Cirinist movement revealing that Cirin is actually named Serna and was the best friend of the real Cirin the old woman Cerebus encountered in Women but usurped Cirin s leadership and effectively exchanged identities with her Dave then gives Cerebus information about his past showing that Cerebus unwittingly ruined his original destiny causing chaotic repercussions which have influenced most of his adventures Cerebus demands that Dave make Jaka love him in response Dave shows Cerebus visions of possible futures between himself and Jaka all of which are disastrously flawed for both of them due to Cerebus s nature After a period of penance and self reflection on Pluto Cerebus asks Dave to place him in a bar he remembers from his mercenary days Guys Edit Issues 201 219 Cerebus spends time and eventually becomes bartender in one of the Cirinists bars where degenerate men are essentially quarantined from the female citizens Described in the trade paperback s introduction as based on a bar that Sim frequented during a near alcoholic stint between relationships the series features various parodic characters who come and go while Cerebus remains stationary Cerebus begins a somewhat reluctant relationship with a woman named Joanne who was first introduced in one of the possible futures with Jaka that Dave showed Cerebus in Minds Rick s Story Edit Issues 220 231 Eventually Jaka s ex husband Rick arrives at the bar He has significantly aged become a heavy drinker having barely been able to tolerate alcohol in Jaka s Story and it is gradually revealed that the mental and emotional scars from the events at the end of Jaka s Story have left him mildly insane Rick is working on a book about his life which gradually becomes a religious work in which Cerebus is a holy figure and Rick his follower Joanne returns and taunts Cerebus by courting Rick At the end of the book Rick departs for reasons not entirely clear and tells Cerebus that he will see Rick only once more in his life After Rick has left Jaka shows up at the bar and she and Cerebus depart together heading for Cerebus s childhood home of Sand Hills Creek Going Home Edit Issues 232 250 First part of the Going Home story arc Cerebus and Jaka travel across land then on a river boat Cerebus is eager to make as much time as possible as he fears being trapped in the mountains near Sand Hills Creek by winter but instead he indulges Jaka s desire for shopping and public appearances Along the way they encounter veiled hostility from the Cirinists Cerebus and Jaka s relationship begins to show signs of deterioration and Jaka is almost tempted away by F Stop Kennedy a fictional version of F Scott Fitzgerald a writer who has accompanied them on their river boat Form amp Void Edit Issues 251 265 Second and concluding part of the story arc Going Home Cerebus and Jaka continue their journey towards Sand Hills Creek in the company of Ham and Mary Ernestway analogues to Ernest Hemingway and his fourth wife Mary On the trip Mary tells them about some of her and Ham s journeys This material is based on Mary Hemingway s journals about Ernest s last African safaris prior to his death Ham dies in what appears to be suicide but Cerebus becomes convinced Mary murdered him and flees in panic taking Jaka with him They discover that they have been traveling in circles without making any significant progress toward Sand Hills Creek and nearly die in a blizzard They finally arrive in Sand Hills Creek only to find that Cerebus s parents are dead and the rest of the community has shunned Cerebus for his perceived abandonment of his family Cerebus drives Jaka away blaming her for keeping him away too long Latter Days Edit Issues 266 288 First part of the story arc Latter Days After a prodigious leap in time over two issues Cerebus returns from the north intent on provoking the Cirinists into killing him Instead he is captured by a trio of characters based on the Three Stooges who await a religious revelation from him While Cerebus was in the north a religious movement developed out of the teachings of Rick and his writings about Cerebus Once Cerebus supplies the required revelation he inspires a successful anti Cirinist rebellion and a subsequent reordering of society Much of the second half of this chapter consists of Cerebus giving a highly idiosyncratic analysis of the Torah Published over the course of nearly a year this section called Chasing YHWH was presented almost entirely in text format with minimal art This story arc is unusual in that disembodied thought balloons give the impression that Cerebus is speaking directly to the reader at times It is revealed in the last issue of the arc that Cerebus has been talking to a female reporter who bears a striking resemblance to Jaka He eventually falls in love with the woman and marries her The Last Day Edit Issues 289 300 The second and concluding part of Latter Days and the conclusion of the series as a whole In the first 40 pages Cerebus has a dream or vision in which cosmology is seen as a reflection of theology complete with explanatory footnotes by Sim Upon waking Cerebus now incredibly aged decrepit pain wracked and mildly senile makes the laborious trek to his writing desk to write down his new revelation He then hides the manuscript and it is implied that nobody will find it for two thousand years Cerebus spends most of the rest of the book trying to persuade his chief of security Walter O Reilly named after Corporal Walter Radar O Reilly from M A S H to admit his son Shep Shep with whom he remembers sharing an idyllic father son relationship However the Sanctuary is under lockdown due to opposition from a new and even more rabidly feminist homosexualist group led by Shep Shep s mother whom Cerebus refers to as New Joanne which favors such rights as pedophilia zoophilia juvenile recreational drug use and lesbian motherhood As a result social values have undergone a complete breakdown Cerebus finally goes to bed despairing of seeing his son again but Shep Shep manages to sneak into Cerebus s room late that night Their subsequent conversation shatters Cerebus s last illusions about his son Shep Shep has aligned himself with his mother who has been conducting genetic engineering experiments partly with knowledge gained from Cirin s earlier experimentation Cerebus is disgusted and horrified when Shep Shep shows him the results of one of the experiments a lion cub with a human baby s head and explains his mother s plans As Shep Shep leaves Cerebus grabs a knife intending to kill him but falls out of bed and breaks his neck alone unmourned and unloved just as the Judge had predicted His life flashes before his eyes in a series of flashback panels and his ghost sees many of his old friends and enemies waiting for him in the Light Jaka Bear and Ham beckon to him and he eagerly rushes to join them thinking they are in Heaven but then he notices the absence of Rick and realizes that the Light may in fact be Hell He calls out to God for help but is dragged into the Light nonetheless Other appearances EditComics Buyer s Guide Edit Silverspoon Prince Valiant comic strip parody 11 pages published weekly in Comics Buyer s Guide reprinted in Swords of Cerebus Vol 4 and in the Cerebus phone book from 11th printing onSwords of Cerebus Edit Each of the six issues includes one or two Cerebus stories not all of which are included in the phone books Swords of Cerebus Vol 1 January 1981 The Name of the Game Is Diamondback 7 pages layouts by Marshall Rogers story and art by Sim January 1981Swords of Cerebus Vol 2 June 1981 Demonhorn first appeared in Nucleus 1 5 pages story and art by Sim The Morning After 6 pages inks by Josef RubinsteinSwords of Cerebus Vol 3 Fall 1981 What Happened Between Issues 20 and 21 8 pagesSwords of Cerebus Vol 4 Fall 1982 Magiking 10 pages Silverspoon first appeared in Comics Buyer s Guide 11 pages Swords of Cerebus Vol 5 Summer 1983 Cerebus Dreams written and drawn by Barry Windsor SmithSwords of Cerebus Vol 6 Fall 1984 A Night on the Town All of the stories above except Demonhorn were reprinted in Cerebus World Tour Book 1995 Epic Illustrated Edit His First Fifth 9 color pages October 1984 A Friendly Reminder 3 color pages February 1985 Selling Insurance 2 color pages June 1985 The Girl Next Door 3 color pages June 1985AV in 3D Edit Cerebus Dreams II 4 3D pages December 1984Cerebus Jam 1 April 1986 Edit The Defense of Fort Columbia by Sim Gerhard Scott and Bo Hampton 6 pages The First Invention of Armour 1404 by Sim Gerhard and Murphy Anderson 6 pages Squinteye the Sailor by Sim Gerhard and Terry Austin 5 pages Cerebus versus the Spirit Sim Gerhard and Will Eisner 4 pagesAnything Goes Edit Breaking Up is Hard to Do 3 color pages plus cover March 1986Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 8 Edit Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Cerebus the Aardvark by Eastman Laird Sim and Gerhard 43 pages plus cover 1986Spawn Edit Spawn 10 May 1993 Crossing Over 22 color pages plus cover story by Sim art by Todd McFarlaneGlamourpuss Edit The March 2011 incorrectly dated March 2010 on the reverse cover issue of Glamourpuss 18 written and drawn by Sim What if Cerebus had lived in the age of Mad Men 10 pages Cerebus in Hell Edit In 2017 Sim started publishing a new series Cerebus in Hell with issues 0 and 1 through 4 Cerebus having died in Cerebus 300 is now in what appears to be Hell wandering and as usual badmouthing his way with art by Gustave Dore swiped from that artist s famous illustrations for Dante Alighieri s Divine Comedy Small pictures of Cerebus copied from the Cerebus comic book with only a few poses repeated throughout are added to the art 20 Cerebus 1s Edit Starting in August 2017 Dave Sim began to write and publish a series of monthly comic books all numbered 1 and all satires of various classic comic books The first Batvark 1 is a satire of Batman 1 the second Aardvark Comics 1 a satire of Action Comics 1 As with Cerebus in Hell the artwork is by Gustave Dore with small pictures of Cerebus added Cerebus in Hell Presents 1 Cerebus in Hell No 0 November 2016 2 Cerebus in Hell No 1 1 4 January 2017 3 Cerebus in Hell No 2 2 4 February 2017 4 Cerebus in Hell No 3 3 4 March 2017 5 Cerebus in Hell No 4 4 4 April 2017 6 Batvark 1 August 2017 7 Aardvark Comics 1 September 2017 8 Strange Cerebus 1 October 2017 9 Death of Cerebus in Hell 1 November 2017 10 Cerebus The Vark Knight Returns 1 December 2017 11 Watchvark 1 January 2018 12 The Amazing Cerebus 1 February 2018 13 World s Finite Cerebus 1 March 2018 14 Love and Aardvarks 1 April 2018 15 The Undateable Cerebus 1 May 2018 16 The Un Bedable Vark 1 June 2018 17 Teenage Mutant Ninja Cerebi 1 July 2018 18 Nick Calm Agent of C O D P I E C E 1 August 2018 19 Crisis of Infinite Cerebi 1 September 19 2018 20 The League of Extraordinary Cerebi 1 October 2018 21 Cerberus in Hell 1 November 2018 22 Canadian Vark 1 December 2018 23 Giant Size Jingles 1 January 2019 24 Cerebus the Aardvark In Sim City A Dave to Kill For 1 February 2019 25 Cerebus the Aardvark In Sim City That Issue After 1 Teenage Money Nabbing Cerebi 0 March 2019 26 Super Cerebus Annual 1 April 2019 27 Cerebus Woman 1 May 2019 28 LGBTQ etc People 1 June 2019 29 Fornicators inc 1 July 2019 30 Tales of Sophistication 1 August 2019 31 The Iron Manticore 1 September 2019 32 Colour Your Own Cerebus in Hell 1 October 2019 33 Vark Wars 1 November 2019 34 Vark Thing 1 December 2019 35 The House of Cerebus 1 January 2020 36 The Silver Cerebus 1 February 2020 37 The Varking Dead 1 March 2020 38 Green Dante Green Virgil 1 April 2020 39 Vark Wars Walt s Empire Strikes Back 1 May 2020 40 Attractive Cousins 1 July 2020 41 The Amicable Spider Vark Annual 1 August 2020 42 Batvark Penis 1 September 2020 42 Batvark Penis 1 Virgin Cover Variant September 2020 42 Batvark XXXXX 1 lt Censored for Grandma Variant gt September 2020 42 Batvark XXXXX 1 lt Censored for Grandma Variant gt Second Printing January 2021 43 The Vault of Cerebus 1 Octoberish 2020 44 Spider Whore 1 November 2020 45 Hermann 1 December 2020 45 Hermann 1 Virgin Cover Variant December 2020 46 Cerebus in Hell 2021 1 January 2021 47 The Amazing Batvark 1 February 2021 48 Flaming Cerebus Comics 1 March 2021 49 Cerebus The Duck 1 April 2021 50 Baby Yoda Cerebus 1 May 2021 51 Strangers in Cerebus 1 June 2021 52 The Unethical Spider Vark 1 July 2021 53 Crisis In Infinite Quarantine 1 August 2021 54 Batvark Coronavirus There Are No Comics 1 September 2021 54 Batvark Coronavirus While Diamond Slept 2020 1 September 2021 55 Super Cerebus VS Covid 19 1 October 2021 55 Super Cerebus VS Covid 19 1 Wraparound Cover Variant October 2021 56 The League of Extraordinary Corona 1 November 2021 57 Coronavirus Book 1 December 2021 58 Cerebus in Hell Presents 58 Cerebus in Hell 2022 1 January 2022 59 Cerebus in Hell Presents 59 Defective Comics Annual 1 February 2022 60 Cerebus in Hell Presents 60 Cerebus the Emily 1 March 2022 60 Cerebus in Hell Presents 60 Cerebus the Emily 1 Harpies Bizzaarre Variant March 2022 61 Cerebus in Hell Presents 61 Batvark A Poet in the Family 1 April 2022 61 Cerebus in Hell Presents 61 Batvark A Poet in the Family 1 Batvark Girl Variant April 2022 62 Cerebus in Hell Presents 62 Grey A L 1 May 2022 63 Cerebus in Hell Presents 63 Giant Size Public Defenders 1 June 2022 63 Cerebus in Hell Presents 63 Giant Size Public Defender Varkdevil Variant 1 June 2022 64 Cerebus in Hell Presents 64 The Uncrucifiable Cerebus Goes To A Gay Bar 1 July 2022 65 Cerebus in Hell Presents 65 Kurtz VZ Kurtz 1 August 2022 66 Cerebus in Hell Presents 66 Flailing at Love 1 September 2022 67 Cerebus in Hell Presents 67 Hell O Dali 1 October 2022 68 Cerebus in Hell Presents 68 BTVRK 1 November 2022 69 Cerebus in Hell Presents 69 Giant Size Aardvark Vanaheim Three Wheel 1 December 2022 70 Cerebus in Hell Presents 70 Cerebus in Hell 2023 1 January 2023 71 Cerebus in Hell Presents 71 Cancel America Comics 1 February 2023 72 Cerebus in Hell Presents 72 AV Team Up 1 March 2023 73 Cerebus in Hell Presents 73 New Varks 1 April 2023 74 Cerebus in Hell Presents 74 Aversions 1 May 2023 75 Cerebus in Hell Presents 75 She Aversions 1 June 2023 76 Cerebus in Hell Presents 76 War In Hell 1 July 2023Characters EditCerebus Edit Cerebus is a misanthropic anthropomorphic 3 foot tall 91 cm bipedal gray aardvark although like other anthropomorphic characters in the series he was born to ordinary human parents 21 Supporting characters Edit Jaka Tavers The love of Cerebus s life A dancer by profession she is the niece of Lord Julius and ex wife of Rick Nash Lord Julius Grandlord of the city state of Palnu who exercises control by making the bureaucracy incredibly dense and incomprehensible Julius is crafty and intelligent but often plays the fool to confuse and baffle opponents His character design and behavior is based on Groucho Marx including snappy insults a constant cigar the chicken walk and a painted on mustache Astoria A beautiful political manipulator Lord Julius ex wife and the main driving force behind Cerebus s campaign to become Prime Minister in High Society She is the leader of the Kevillists a feminist sect which opposes Cirin The Kevillists mirror the Cirinists philosophy but would prefer power in the hands of daughters instead of mothers She is named for actress Mary Astor and may be inspired in some ways by Sim s ex wife Deni Loubert though Sim himself denies this in issue 298 citation needed Cirin Leader of the Cirinists a matriarchal fascist sect which conquers Estarcion at the conclusion of the Church and State storyline Originally named Serna she took the name and effectively exchanged identities with the real Cirin whose views were much less militaristic The sect honors mothers primarily also giving high honors to daughters potential mothers and children Men are tolerated Like Cerebus she is an aardvark Elrod the Albino Elrod of Melvinbone Essentially Michael Moorcock s Elric of Melnibone with the voice and personality of Senator Claghorn or Foghorn Leghorn Elrod is an almost purely comic character whose main purpose is to frustrate and enrage Cerebus In Reads it is revealed that he was created by Cerebus s proximity to a magic gem and after learning this he vanishes from existence However Joanne tells Cerebus she and her husband used to live next door to Elrod who was married at the time to Red Sophia Roach Artemis An incompetent superhero character Sim used the Roach to satirize popular mainstream comic characters or industry publishing trends beginning with Batman His other guises have included Captain Cockroach Captain America Moonroach Moon Knight Wolveroach Wolverine the Secret Sacred Wars Roach Marvel Super Heroes Secret Wars series and Frank Miller s Batman from The Dark Knight Returns normalroach Valentino s normalman Punisherroach the Punisher Swoon The Sandman and Sergeant Preston of the Royal Mounted Iestan police the main character of the radio series Challenge of the Yukon Adam Weisshaupt Introduced in Cerebus he is a ruthless political opponent of Cerebus throughout the Church amp State storyline His manipulations of both Cerebus and the Roach lead to his pawns eventually growing more powerful than he ever hoped to be Weisshaupt is named after the historical Adam Weishaupt but drawn to look like George Washington a connection well known to Illuminati conspiracy theorists Bear Cerebus s best friend from his mercenary days and main drinking buddy In Guys there are hints Cerebus is suppressing an attraction to him Joanne Introduced in a possible future for Cerebus and Jaka by Dave in Minds Joanne is a bored housewife who has an affair with Cerebus prompting Jaka s suicide After Cerebus returns to Estarcion Joanne reappears and becomes Cerebus s lover only to be spurned by Cerebus She later seduces Rick as a way to taunt Cerebus Joanne is in many ways an opposite of Jaka and Cerebus bases much of his post Guys views on how to deal with women on his experience with her After Shep shep s mother leaves Cerebus he labels her New Joanne Bran Mac Mufin Originally a barbarian warlord whose people worshiped an idol who looked remarkably like Cerebus and which the aardvark destroyed He later turns up quite unexpectedly in civilized clothing to act as an adviser to Cerebus in two separate occasions first in Cerebus s campaign and first reign as Prime Minister of Iest and then arriving after Cerebus is Pope to observe the miracles and give Cerebus advice though he seems to have a hidden agenda During the Iest campaign Cerebus states that he trusts Mac Mufin s military advice more than anyone else s When Thrunk deposes Cerebus Mac Mufin commits suicide by stabbing himself in the chest with a sword Mac Mufin is a parody of Robert E Howard s Celtic barbarian Bran Mak Morn In his first appearance in issue 5 his name was spelled Bran Mak Mufin but in subsequent appearances he goes by Bran Mac Mufin Rick Nash First introduced as Jaka s husband in Jaka s Story Rick is a friendly gentle ne er do well whom Sim described in the introduction to the phonebook of Jaka s Story as the nearest I will ever come to the portrayal of a good and thoroughly decent human being completely without guile or malice After his marriage to Jaka is dissolved he becomes mildly insane He eventually goes on to become the prophet of a religion centered on Cerebus Suenteus Po Estarcion s third aardvark who has lived several lifetimes and has shaped the history of Estarcion It is also a very common name and several people named Suenteus Po appear in the story in various roles one as an enigmatic illusionist and another as a historian who narrates a sizable portion of Cerebus s first reign as Prime Minister of Iest though it is very strongly implied that both these Pos are the aardvark It is mentioned in High Society that some of the followers of the original Suenteus Po named their children after him The name may be a playful misspelling of the name of Roman historian Suetonius There was a rock band on San Francisco label Solana Records named Suenteus Po that released an album in 2000 The Regency Elf A childlike playful spirit who inhabits Cerebus s rooms at the Regency Hotel in High Society at first only Cerebus can see her She helps Cerebus with some of his political scheming though as innocent as she seems it s all just a game to her It is discovered later that the Regency Elf who appears to Cerebus is a fake created by Cerebus s subconscious The Regency Elf is inspired in part by Elfquest and its creator Wendy Pini Visually the Regency Elf is inspired by Debbie Harry 22 Various other characters in the series were designed to resemble famous actors politicians and other personalities and comic in jokes including British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher Professor X with a bit of Chris Claremont thrown in Canadian Member of Parliament Sheila Copps director Woody Allen Alan Moore Rick Veitch Oscar Wilde F Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway Norman Mailer Rodney Dangerfield Mick Jagger Keith Richards and Chico Marx citation needed Collections EditThe first 25 issues of Cerebus were collected in six issues of Swords of Cerebus plus one supplement to volume six and these stories were then collected in the Cerebus trade paperback Swords of Cerebus also published several new short Cerebus stories listed under Other appearances above which were not reprinted in the phone books All of the story arcs from the Cerebus comic book have been reprinted in collected omnibus editions of 240 630 pages each all of which are presently still in print They are generally referred to by fans and retailers as Cerebus phone books due to their size also they use the same newsprint paper as the original comics Sim has released two collections of his responses to readers letters the original letters are not included after the publication of Cerebus 300 Collected Letters 2004 ISBN 0 919359 23 X was released in 2005 and Collected Letters vol 2 was released in 2007 Miscellaneous stories not appearing in the above collections have been reprinted in the short collections Cerebus World Tour Book and in Cerebus Number Zero which reprints issues 51 112 113 and parts of issues 137 138 A few standalone uncollected stories have appeared in various collections and magazines over the years and Cerebus has made cameo appearances on the covers of magazines such as Comics Revue Sim also marketed a set of Diamondback cards based upon a game seen in early issues in the 1980s All of the material in the Cerebus arc was reprinted in smaller collections called Swords of Cerebus before Sim decided on the phonebook format 23 The phonebooks themselves tie into ideas presented in the series Although grammatically incorrect the titles of books 8 through 11 could be read as a sentence women read minds guys the concept of women reading minds is a key plot point 24 Also beginning with Going Home the first storyline begun after Sim s religious conversion the covers of each phone book are printed in full color with Going Home and Form and Void using Gerhard s scenic nature photography as covers rather than the drawings used on past books Novels and collections Edit Title 25 Issues 25 Orig dates 25 Storyline 26 25 Year ISBN Notes1 Cerebus 1 25 1977 1981 Cerebus 1987 0 919359 08 6 Third published volume 27 From 11th printing also contains Silverspoon strips2 High Society 26 50 1981 1983 High Society 1986 0 919359 07 8 First published volume 25 27 3 Church and State I 52 80 1983 1985 Church amp State 1987 0 919359 09 4 Second published volume 27 4 Church and State II 81 111 1985 1988 1988 0 919359 11 65 Jaka s Story 114 136 1988 1990 Jaka s Story 1990 0 919359 12 46 Melmoth 139 150 1990 1991 Melmoth 1991 0 919359 10 87 Flight 151 162 1991 1992 Mothers amp Daughters 1993 0 919359 13 2 first volume published with a volume number8 Women 163 174 1992 1993 1994 0 919359 14 09 Reads 175 186 1993 1994 1995 0 919359 15 910 Minds 187 200 1994 1995 1996 0 919359 16 711 Guys 201 219 1995 1997 Guys 1997 0 919359 17 512 Rick s Story 220 231 1997 1998 Rick s Story 1998 0 919359 18 313 Going Home 232 250 1998 2000 Going Home 2000 0 919359 19 114 Form and Void 251 265 2000 2001 2001 0 919359 20 515 Latter Days 266 288 2001 2003 Latter Days 2003 0 919359 22 116 The Last Day 289 300 2003 2004 2004 0 919359 21 3Reception and legacy EditCerebus has been rated to be one of the greatest characters in comics history Wizard rated him as the 63rd greatest comic book character 28 while Empire rated him as the 38th greatest comic book character describing him as a character born of bizarre brilliance 29 IGN placed Cerebus as the 91st greatest comic book hero of all time stating that few names hold as much sway in the independent comics scene as Cerebus and Cerebus mark on the industry will be everlasting 30 The term Cerebus Syndrome has come to commonly describe developments where initially comedic or superficial works in any medium gradually become more serious complex and dramatic 31 References Edit Interview with Dave Sim Sim says the name Cerebus at 3 58 into the interview Uzumeri David May 5 2020 The Cerebus Celibate Issues 1 50 Comics Alliance Archived from the original on September 4 2014 Retrieved July 15 2020 Moore Alan April 1997 From Hell Part 3 Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved April 24 2018 a b Shulgan Christopher November 2003 Comic Book Anti Hero Saturday Night page 1 page 3 ComicCon Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b c Coville Jamie Dave Sim Interview Collector Times June 16 2005 Comicon board posting by Colleen Doran permanent dead link Colleen talks about Dave s support of self publishers Grant Paul J January 1993 A Boy amp his Aardvark Wizard 17 56 59 Heintjes Tom Thompson Kim July 1984 Marvel Threatens Aardvark Vanaheim Over Cerebus Wolverine Parody The Comics Journal 91 David Peter November 20 1992 But I Digress Comics Buyer s Guide Krause Publications Reprinted in But I Digress 1994 pp 70 71 Dave Sim interviewed by Tom Spurgeon excerpted from The Comics Journal nos 184 amp 192 Archived from the original on 2012 03 24 Retrieved 2012 03 05 Just to be clear on the subject of what I consider scripture the Torah that is the Law and the Prophets as held by Orthodox Judaism i e no Ruth no Esther no Daniel no Job no Song of Songs etc the First Book of Moshe through to Malachi the four Gospels Acts and John s Apocalypse and all of the Koran Sim Dave 2007 Collected Letters Volume 2 p 90 CFG Cerebus Mailing List talk with Dave Sim Cerebusfangirl com Retrieved 2011 07 18 Grady Hendrix 2004 03 23 books gt Readers Of The Last Aardvark by Grady Hendrix The Village Voice Archived from the original on 2008 06 13 Retrieved 2011 07 18 Tundis Jeff Gerhard and Aardvark Vanaheim have parted ways Cerebus Yahoo Group Retrieved 2007 02 28 Dave Sim s blog July 10 2007 Davesim blogspot com 2007 07 10 Retrieved 2011 07 18 CFG Archive of Newsarama discussion Feb 6 2008 Alta Societa una storia di Cerebus Anteprima e Preordine Blackvelveteditrice com Archived from the original on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2011 07 18 Product page Archived 2011 06 15 at the Wayback Machine at Ponent Mon Archived 2011 06 15 at the Wayback Machine s website Cerebus Returns In September With A New Series In 2017 Cerebus In HellBy Dave Sim And Friends June 22 2016 Retrieved June 29 2018 Cerebus like Howard the Duck is a funny animal in the world of humans Dave Sim from the Notes From The President section in Cerebus Number Zero June 1993 Notes on the auction for page 96 of High Society Beguiling com Archived from the original on 2011 07 07 Retrieved 2011 07 18 Cerebus 189 Note From The President With Cerebus we did the Swords collections first four issues in each until it became unwieldy to keep a half dozen collections in print so we switched to the phone book format Dave Sim from the Notes From The President section in Cerebus 189 December 1994 Letter from Dave Sim Retrieved 2011 07 18 a b c d e Weiner Robert G Weiner Stephen Figa Elizabeth FRW Royal Derek Parker FRW Graphic Novels and Comics in Libraries and Archives page 13 McFarland 2010 ISBN 978 0 786 44302 4 Griggs Henry Cerebus the Aardvark Henry Griggs Ramblings Retrieved 2011 05 02 a b c Liss Margaret 2009 10 17 Cerebus phonebooks part two CerebusFanGirl Retrieved 2011 05 30 Wizard s top 200 characters External link consists of a forum site summing up the top 200 characters of Wizard Magazine since the real site that contains the list is broken Wizard Archived from the original on June 8 2011 Retrieved May 7 2011 Cerebus is number 38 Empire Retrieved May 9 2011 91 Cerebus IGN Retrieved May 9 2011 Turner Maier Jason 2004 02 22 Why Serious Things Happen in Funny Webcomics Investigating the Cerebus Syndrome Stanford University Archived from the original on March 23 2009 Retrieved 2011 05 31 External links Edit The Aardvark Hero Dave Sim s Cerebus from Emma Tinker s thesis Identity and Form in Alternative Comics 1967 2007 University College London 2008 OCLC 829958496 Portal comics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cerebus the Aardvark amp oldid 1130823150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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