Tharg's Future Shocks

For other uses, see Future Shock (disambiguation).
Cover to Alan Moore's Shocking Futures. Art by Kevin O'Neill.

Tharg's Future Shocks is the name given to a long-running series of short strips in the British weekly comic 2000 AD in 1977. The name originates from the fictional editor of 2000 AD and the book titled Future Shock, written by Alvin Toffler, published in 1970.

Publishing history

The series began in issue 25 of 2000 AD titled Tharg's Future Shocks in a single short story written by Steve Moore, who also created the format. This established the pattern of the series which would be two or three page short stories which were normally self-contained.

These stories would be a testing ground for new artists and writers and creators resulting in the stories having a very mixed level of quality.[1] Some successful authors such as Peter Milligan, Alan Davis, Alan Moore and Grant Morrison found some of their earliest work published as Future Shocks.

Spin-offs

Some characters proved popular enough to spin into their own ongoing story in 2000 AD: these include D.R. and Quinch.

Similar series

2000 AD also began several other science fiction and horror short stories under several different titles, including Time Twisters. Examples of the others include:

Collected editions

The stories have been collected into a number of trade paperbacks:

Two collections of Alan Moore's Future Shocks (Alan Moore's Shocking Futures) and Time Twisters (Alan Moore's Twisted Times) stories were released by Titan Books in 1986:

The contents of those two volumes has been collected together into a single volume, along with additional material from Moore:

Despite the title, this is not a complete collection of all Future Shock stories from the comic, only all of the stories in the 1986 and 1987 books described above.)

All the Future Shocks written by Peter Milligan, John Smith and Neil Gaiman and around half of Grant Morrison's were collected in:

References

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