the best books (i read) of 2024

I’ve been meaning to post this for a couple months, and now’s as good a time as any because it’s already April! Last year I read nearly 40 books, which might not sound like much to real-deal bookworms, but it was definitely a high for me. I tried to bounce around genres a bit but ended up sinking most of my time into horror novels. Some of them I truly did not care for, while others continue to stick with me well into 2025.

Thankfully, there were more of the latter than the former last year. With that in mind, I thought I’d put together a quick list of some of my favorites, which, for the purposes of this being my blog, I shall call the Best Books of 2024.


The Bog Wife
by Kay Chronister


Appalachian folk horror that’ll make you feel like you know how to tend to a bog and raise a bog wife of your very own. I came to find out what exactly Chronister was going to do with the premise, but stayed for the vivid characterizations of the Haddesley siblings. 

Devils Kill Devils
by Johnny Compton


This shouldn’t work for me, but I loved it. If I had known it was a vampire book I might not have picked it up, but Compton took notes from some interesting places—specifically getting vampire inspiration from anime like Blood: The Last Vampire—and went full-bore on the scope. 

The Eyes Are the Best Part
by Monika Kim


Fittingly, this book is a boiler, and one of a few I read in one or two days. Great debut with a gnarly premise and biting commentary. 

Play Nice
by Jason Schreier


I love stories about creative people collaborating and making their dreams come true, and loved this book despite not particularly caring about Blizzard’s games. It ends up being a fantastic look into how quickly some people can develop fantasy-poisoned CEO brains after pulling in a few million dollars. 

Incidents Around the House
by Josh Malerman


I really enjoyed Daphne, so I was eager to find out what Malerman had cooked up for his latest book. This is one of a few last year that played some unique, if questionable, games with formatting and narrative, but the monster in it is so effective it doesn’t matter. Real creepy haunter that has some moments that’ll cut into you.

Crypt of the Moon Spider
by Nathan Ballingrud


I need to read more novellas like this. Balingrud’s first entry in what will eventually be a series takes us to the moon, where the threads of an ancient spider are used to treat mental maladies. 

We Used to Live Here
by Marcus Kliewer


I kind of want to live in the searing discomfort of this book’s opening pages. Kliewer sets up an awkward situation that’s nearly impossible to satisfying conclude, but I dig where it ends up going. Increasingly unwelcome guests, impossible architecture and an unreliable narrator made this one stand out among a crowded year.

Mouth
by Joshua Hull


Hey, look, another novella, and this one is really fun! It’s a super quick story about a guy that ends up taking over a property with one stipulation: He has to care for a massive sentient mouth embedded in the ground. Knowing more than that isn’t going to help you.

Small Town Horror
by Ronald Malfi


Consider me a Malfi-head now, because this was one of the most smooth and satisfying reads of the year. Malfi excels at characterization, breathing sharp and bitter honesty into a former group of friends whose lives collide once again thanks to ghosts of the past that were never going to stay buried in the first place. He’s got another one out this very month, and I have a couple on the backburner I’m looking to dive into soon. Highly recommended to both horror fans and anyone who digs a story about flawed people who find nothing but doom in the mistakes of their youth. 

The Queen
by Nick Cutter

Hot damn, this one was wild as hell. I know he’s had acclaim in the past for novels like The Troop, but is the first Nick Cutter I’ve read. It definitely won’t be the last. Totally unafraid to go to some bizarre and starkly realized places, this is the antidote to any stories you’ve ever condemned for not peeling the curtain back far enough. It’s the counterpoint to all the monster movies that spent most of the runtime obscuring their marquee antagonists in shadows. It’s about big, genetically-mutated human-wasp hybrids and it does not mess around.

Honorable Mentions: You Like It Darker by Stephen King, I’ll Be Waiting by Kelley Armstrong, I Was a Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham Jones

INTERVIEW: Joey Weiser on making, sharing and publishing comics

Joey Weiser is a cartoonist with some really awesome comics under his belt. From his Eisner Award-nominated Mermin series to Ghost Hog, the upcoming The Littlest Fighter (spring 2025, Oni Press) and beyond, he took some time to talk to subhumanzoids about all the inspiration and work that goes into them. Read on for some insight into Joey’s process, how he got published and more!

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Were there specific comics that inspired you to make your own? When did your interest begin?

I was a big fan of comic strips and superhero comic books growing up, and it was Jeff Smith’s Bone that showed me a melding of the comic strip sensibility and long-form storytelling of comic books that really inspired me to make my own. 

I know you’re super into all things tokusatsu and kaiju. What else outside of comics has influenced your work?

Well, I’m a big Japanese film fan in general, and some of that has surely seeped into my work. But the biggest influence I can feel were the TV cartoons of my youth. Rocko’s Modern Life and Eek! the Cat are two that were my real favorites which probably still influence my work. Outside of a few exceptions like The Adventures of Pete & Pete, if it wasn’t animated or didn’t feature creatures of some sort I didn’t have much interest in it. 

A panel from Mermin vol. 1

Are you all digital? What’s your preferred media, and what does your comic making process look like?

I do a lot of sketching digitally and I’ve been doing some small work completely digitally, but largely my work is still drawn on paper with pencil and ink and then colored digitally. I have a whole step-by-step guide to how I make comics online, and it’s a little old but mostly still accurate. The big bullet points are that I do a lot of outlines, move to rough sketches, pencil and ink on paper, and then color digitally. 

How did you go about getting your comics in front of people in the beginning?

A combination of making zines and taking them to comic shows, and sharing my work online. At the time, online meant like Livejournal and message boards. I went to my first comic show as a creator while I was in college, shared a table with several classmates, and sold / gave away my comics to whoever would take them. I think in the beginning I put a lot more emphasis on getting my work in front of people’s eyeballs than making money. Unfortunately, I still basically hang on to those morals! 

When did the transition from self-publishing to professional publishing happen, and what was the querying/pitching process like for you?

Well, self-publishing for me meant printing out mini-comics at my school’s computer lab and then eventually at copy shops. For graphic novels, I’ve been pretty much working with publishers from the beginning. I drew like half of my first graphic novel, The Ride Home, roughed out the rest of the book, collected that all into big mock-ups, and mailed them out to a handful of publishers. I got a resounding, “No thank you,” from most everybody who bothered to respond, but Adhouse Books agreed. And thankfully Adhouse Books rules, so it worked out. 

You’ve done short form and long form comics over the years, including a bunch of graphic novels. Do you have a preference for your storytelling?

The nice thing about short form comics is it’s closer to immediate gratification because you get to share them sooner. I like making short comics, but after years of doing graphic novels, it’s often hard to contain a story idea in 4-24 pages or whatever. Lately I’ve been using those opportunities to lean into gag ideas or just try to convey a feeling. 

A panel from Dragon Racer, the second in the Ghost Hog series

What’s the hardest part about tackling the bigger projects?

The hardest part about big projects is just how much time it takes. Time when you aren’t sharing your work with more than maybe a few people, time when you feel like you’re not accomplishing anything, and potentially time when you are not receiving a regular intake of income. Writing is also hard for me to estimate how long it will take. Once I get into the mechanics of the art it’s pretty reliable to be like, “It takes me X amount of time to draw a page,” or color a page, or whatever. But writing is a lot more nebulous.  

Speaking of graphic novels, you have a new one coming out in Spring 2025. Congrats! How did The Littlest Fighter come to be?

Thank you! Yes, The Littlest Fighter is my new graphic novel, slated for March 2025! It’s essentially about a kaiju who is the size of a human child who wants to battle giant-sized kaiju. This was originally a mini-comic idea I published, obviously inspired by my love of kaiju movies. I tooled around with the idea a bit until it turned into something bigger than the original concept, and brought it to Oni Press who has published the majority of my graphic novels. They liked the idea too, and here we are!

Are there any other projects you’re working on or are you fully honed in on the graphic novel?

My main comics output lately has been doing a monthly strip called Shady Creek. It’s about frogs (and the plan is to expand into bugs and other creepy crawlies) living together and musing about whatever it is that comic strip characters muse about. It runs in Flagpole Magazine, the local free weekly paper here in Athens, GA but I also post it on social media and archive it on my website.

Lightning round time: favorite Godzilla movie?

Invasion of Astro-Monster!

Sentai?

Gokaiger!

One comic everyone should read?

Hate to repeat myself, but I’ll say Bone!

Most recent manga?

Doraemon!

Can you give everyone an elevator pitch on why they should watch every Tora-San movie ever made?

The Tora-san films are a 50-film series, 48 of which came out over a 25-year span, followed by two anniversary films. They basically feature the same cast in the main roles throughout, and you see not only the actors age in real time, but the world around them change as well. So by the end of it, you feel as if this family is your family, and you’ve watched modern society evolve from the late 60’s into the early 90’s (and then even check in again decades later). It’s a truly remarkable thing. And they’re funny! And romantic! And melancholic! And humane! It’s basically everything I want in fiction that doesn’t feature monsters (although there is a kaiju in one of them).

Thanks so much for taking the time to answer these questions! Do you have any advice for anyone out there looking to get into making their own comics (and hopefully publishing them)?

Write and draw as much as you can, and you almost can’t help but improve. Create the kind of work that you want to make, and put it in front of as many people’s eyeballs as you can. Honestly, how to get published is as much of a mystery to me as it is to you, but if you share it with the people, and they can feel your passion, I think something will come of it. 

the spectrum sensation: scavenger #1

14 (!) years ago I posted about Spectrum, the comics line I created back when I was 12 or so, which was itself back in 1993. At the time, I was neck-deep in my Image comics obsession, zipping over to the comic shop each week to buy new issues of Spawn, Youngblood, Brigade and whatever else the alternative to the House of Ideas would belch my way.

Naturally, that meant that I needed to make a line just like it, and I got right to work. The results were comics like Scavenger, Altitude and The 3, all wholly original creations, trademarked, copyrighted and absolutely not infringing upon anything. I recently visited home again, and this time I decided to take all my old middle school Spectrum comics with me to scan.

Let’s kill the preamble and get right to it. Presented for your displeasure, today we’re starting with the very first issue of Scavenger. Created on notebook paper—in some cases drawn on both sides in pencil—this one was originally stapled back to back with the first issue of Altitude, which I’ll share next. It was an innovative “Ultra Flip” comic that served up two issues for the price of one ($1.95USD, $2.95CAD), kicking off the four-part “Eye of the Beast” storyline in style.

Between the art style and the use of pencils with no inking, scanning might be a little rough, but it’s all in the name of the Preservation of High Art. As the cover says, THE ACTION STARTS HERE!

Next up, ALTITUDE #1!