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Watchmen is considered a masterpiece for good reason, but Moore had been giving readers amazing work since he came to the American comic industry with Saga of the Swamp Thing #20 (most people think that issue #21 was his first issue, but he closed out the book’s previous story arcs the issue before). Moore’s run writing Swamp Thing made him into a star, and the scribe mastered using the character to create stories that were unlike anything that readers had experienced before. In fact, an argument can be made that Moore’s time on Swamp Thing gave readers his greatest story before Watchmen even began: the 1985 epic “American Gothic”. This story is, in many ways, better than Moore and Gibbons’s classic, and deserves its flowers as such.
“American Gothic” Was Pitch Perfect Superhero Horror

Swamp Thing under Moore was one of the best comics ever. The writer worked with main artists Simon Bissette, John Totleben, and colorist Tatjana Wood, with editor Karen Berger. Their work on the character played up the horror elements, but also dug into Swamp Thing as a human being (which was ironic because the run established that Swamp Thing was no longer human) and his relationship with Abby Arcane. It was emotional, scary, and would deal with real life social problems, like environmentalism. It was a book that was more mature than anything else there, and it built beautifully to “American Gothic”.
The story is, well, simple. John Constantine recruits Swamp Thing to help him on a mysterious mission, with the swamp creature sent all over America to stop monsters from succeeding at, well, monstrous things. Swamp Thing (Vol. 2) #37-50 is mostly made up of one and two issue stories, each of them building the story in the background of the monster of the month tales, until we learned the truth — the monsters were part of a plan to allow the Great Darkness, the nothingness of the void before creation, to eat existence. It all leads to battle in Hell, as angels, demons, forces of nature, and human sorcerers teamed together to stop the impossible.









