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The man who wrote Watchmen is a treasure house of story, and his indie work shows just how far-ranging his imagination is. He’s told every kind of story under the sun, showing that comics were more than corporate art; they’re just art. These are Moore’s seven best indie comics, books that expanded on the legend of Northampton’s sorcerer supreme.
7) League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: The Tempest

League of Extraordinary Gentlemen was Alan Moore’s brainchild for 30 years, and he ended it with a bang. This six issue series paid off all of the drifting plot threads of Moore’s massive shared universe, as an old foe returns, using the League’s secret to start a war that will shake imagination itself. Moore and the late great Kevin O’Neill are on fire in this one, giving readers everything they could want from the final story with the League. It’s also a skewering of the current pop culture paradigm, as the forces of corporate entertainment take over the universe of fiction. It’s the perfect ending for one of the greatest indie franchises ever.
6) League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century

Moore and O’Neill are back already, for another run with the League. League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century was a three issue series. Each issue was set in a different year โ 1910, 1969, and 2009 โ as the group deals with a plan for world domination by Oliver Haddo and his Moonchild. This one was Moore’s trip through 20th century British fiction, from The Threepenny Opera to Harry Potter. Some fans like to think this book is the curmudgeonly writer saying modern fiction is bad compared to what came before, but the argument is at least made well by this awesome story.
5) WildC.A.T.s

Okay, so this one is weird, because currently, WildC.A.T.s isn’t an indie book. Wildstorm Productions was sold to DC Comics, so Moore’s work on the book is in a weird place (although it’s been out of print for a while, DC did publish an edition of his work on the book in the ’00s). In the mid ’90s, the Image guys were giving Moore work and he took over this book that had been all style, little substance and made it into an awesome superhero team comic. Moore wrote issues #21 through #34, working with artists like Travis Charest, Jim Lee, Kevin Nowlan, and several fill-in artists. He created an all-new team and told the story of the original team going to Khera, the planet their oldest members came from, ending it all in the most surprising way possible. This is Moore making ’90s cheese smart and it’s fantastic.












