Alan Moore

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Background
Alan Moore (born 18th November 1953) is a comics writer and occultist from Northampton, who has been described on occasion as the most significant comics writer in history and one of the most important British writers of the last fifty years. Among the best-selling and critically acclaimed series he is responsible for are Watchmen, V for Vendetta, From Hell, Marvelman, the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and the reinvention of DC's Swamp Thing as well as the controversial Lost Girls (co-created with Melinda Gebbie, whom he later married).

Early career
He began his career working in fanzines in the 1970s before moving on to work for titles such as 2000 AD in the early 1980s, where he began working on Tharg's Future Shocks  and Tharg's Time Twisters before creating characters such as Abelard Snazz, Skizz (1983), D.R. & Quinch (1983) and Halo Jones (1984). (He also wrote a Rogue Trooper strip, an ABC Warriors strip and a few Ro-Busters strips.) For Marvel UK around the same time he wrote several backup strips in Star Wars and Doctor Who (1980), the Daredevil spoof Dourdevil, numerous text stories featuring Night Raven and a lengthy Captain Britain epic (1982-1984), amongst other things. Moore was also one of the creators involved in the now legendary though sadly short-lived Warrior magazine (for which he wrote Marvelman, The Bojeffries Saga and V for Vendetta between 1982 and 1984).

Early American work
He really rose to prominence after breaking into the American market with his work for DC on Swamp Thing (1984-1987), and later Watchmen (1986) and such well-remembered stories as Batman:The Killing Joke (1988) and the Superman stories For the Man Who has Everything (1985) and Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? (1986). His often thought-provoking work gave comics a degree of respectability they had never previously attained in either Britain or the US.

More recent career
Moore left mainstream comics for a time in the late eighties to create his own publishing company, Mad Love (with his then wife, Phyllis, and their mutual lover Deborah Delano) and initiate projects such as AARGH and Big Numbers, before returning to create series such as The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (1999) and Promethea for America's Best Comics and Neonomicon for Avatar Press. Several of his works, including From Hell (a breathtakingly well-researched retelling of the story of Jack the Ripper) have been turned into movies. However, Moore (a sometimes controversial figure who has at one time or another had disagreements with virtually every company he has ever worked for and almost everyone he has ever worked with) has generally been unsupportive of these projects and refuses to be credited on them (the movie version of V for Vendetta, for instance, carries the credit "Based on the graphic novel by David Lloyd" because Lloyd was the artist). He has also asked that he not be credited on Marvel's reprints of his Marvelman/Miracleman series, resulting in their Miracleman title being, somewhat bizarrely, credited as "Written by: the original author."

Characters and strips created by Alan Moore

 * Abelard Snazz
 * Albion (Limited Series)
 * Axel Pressbutton
 * Brinna
 * Captain UK
 * Chrysoprasia
 * Cobweb
 * Cornelius Cardew
 * D.R. & Quinch
 * Dourdevil
 * Ernest Errol Quinch
 * Evey Hammond
 * Fascination
 * Halo Jones
 * Heartbreak Hotel
 * Kaptain Briton
 * Lawrence Taylor
 * Legion
 * Lost Girls
 * Ludy
 * Meggan
 * Miracleman (Marvel UK)
 * Miraclewoman
 * Mysta Mystralis
 * Pulger
 * Qys
 * Rodice
 * Rorschach Skubbs
 * Roxanne O'Rourke
 * Skizz
 * Skizz (Interpreter Zhcchz)
 * Special Executive
 * The Bojeffries Saga
 * The Fury
 * The Glyph
 * Thorkwung
 * Tilotny
 * Toby
 * Toy Molto
 * V for Vendetta
 * Vixen
 * Waldo 'D.R.' Dobbs
 * Wardog
 * Warpsmiths
 * Wutzek
 * Young Nastyman (Terrance Rebbeck)
 * Zeitgeist