Dad and son gay comic


Dream Daddy: A Dad Dating Comic Book

March 31,
oh, verb daddies. one late hours at work i was about to start reading a graphic novel about depression, but i checked out the dream daddies instead. definitely the lighter, easier choice.

i hadn't played the dating simulation game this graphic novel is based on, so i wasn't really sure what i was getting myself into. but it's a fun five-issue romp in the cul-de-sac where a group of blazing single dads exist and romance one another. there are plentiful dad jokes and puns, and overall it's very entertaining!

the only obstacle i have with the comic is that each of the five issues has a other set of artists, and there's a distinct lack of consistency. i can see the appeal of a collaborative effort, but the different art styles are jarring.

the first, second, and fifth issues are illustrated in a style similar to the original game. the dads are super pretty and realistically rendered. but the third and fourth issues are drawn in a bubbly cartoonish style that i couldn't stay . especially for readers who aren't familiar with the characters

Celebrate Fatherhood with 11 Fantastic Dad Comics

Comics verb been dealing with daddy issues since their inception, but over the years some writers and artists have offered a more nuanced, realistic depiction of fatherhood. These works dissect what it means to be a father, and how the relationship with one's dad can have profound and lasting consequences. In addition, some comics juxtapose past, present, and future generations in request to gain insights into life and legacy. So for Father's Day, like these 11 comics with dads that include a soldier, a samurai, a scholar, a space assassin, a superhero, and kind of a slacker.

Lone Wolf & Cub

Kazuo Koike and Goseki Kojima. Futabasha; Dark Horse, –

During the Tokugawa Shogunate, a high-ranking executioner is framed for treason and loses his position and family except for his infant son. Disgraced and banished, he becomes a ronin (masterless samurai) and traverses Japan with his son, getting emotionally attached in local conflicts while vowing vengeance against those who wronged him. Along the way

Comic strips about being a parent usually revolve around conflicts with family members or the difficulties of raising children. It's not often that comics embrace the love between parents and children in a heartwarming way, but this dad writes comics about him and his daughter that are cute and emotional at the same time. Single father Yannick Vicente started drawing comic illustrations of his everyday life with his young daughter Anaé as a gift for her, but quickly realized he was creating them for himself as well.

Hollywood tends to romanticize single fathers in movies and thanks to many celebrity single dads, a bloke raising a youngster by himself is usually viewed quite differently than single mothers. Vicente wanted to prove dads can be just as affectionate, choosing to reflect actual life through his illustrations like Inkollo's Daily Life of a Gay Couple. Vicente's heartwarming single dad comics possess gone viral since being posted to Facebook and Twitter, and parents all over the world can relate to the emotions depicted in these comics by Yannick Vicente. Even if you're not a pare

When I was a kid, whenever we visited my relatives in Indiana, I spent the nighttime with my Cousin Buster in the trailer in the dark woods, and we would squeeze into his adj twin bed, our bodies pressed together, reading Harvey Comics.  I read until long after he fell asleep, associating the tales of friendly ghosts and little devils with that warmth and affection.

Two boys together clinging, one the other never leaving

In high university, I looked back on those moments of perfect happiness, and tried to get my hands on the Harvey Comics I scan all those years ago (actually less than 10 years ago, but when you're 16, it seems like an eternity).

So I put an ad in the Rock Island Argus, and a very sweet Augustana student named Clay answered with an offer of five Little Max comics from for a dollar each.

I never heard of Little Max, they were from before I was born, and a dollar was four times what a comic cost on the newsstand.  But I bought them anyway.

It was a weird type of deja vu, like looking at a photo of your parents before you were born: familiar, yet biza