Joe Kelly (writer)
Joe Kelly | |
---|---|
Joe Kelly at the March 2012 Wondercon | |
Born | Joseph Kelly 1971 |
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | Writer |
Notable works | Deadpool Uncanny X-Men Action Comics JLA I Kill Giants Spider-Man/Deadpool |
Joseph Kelly (born 1971) is an American comic book writer, penciler and editor who has written such titles as Deadpool, Uncanny X-Men, Action Comics, and JLA. As part of the comics creator group Man of Action Studios, Kelly is one of the creators of the animated series Ben 10.
Contents
1 Career
2 Bibliography
2.1 Marvel Comics
2.2 DC Comics
2.3 Image Comics
3 Notes
4 References
5 External links
5.1 Interviews
Career
Kelly received his MFA at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, where he still teaches Writing for Animation/Writing for Comics. At NYU, he was recruited into Marvel Comics' editor James Felder's Stan-hattan Project, a program that trained potential comic book writers at the university. After six months of working in the class, Felder offered Kelly a job scripting Fantastic Four 2099 over a Karl Kesel plot.[1] Kelly took the assignment, but his first published work for Marvel was 1996's 2099: World of Tomorrow #1–8 and Marvel Fanfare vol.2 #2–3.
In 1997, Kelly began his first monthly assignment, Deadpool, initially pencilled by Ed McGuinness. The title was immediately well received by fans and critics. At one point it was due to be cancelled with #25, but a write-in and Internet campaign by fans led Marvel to reverse their decision. Kelly left the title with #33 in 1999. In 1997, Kelly also became the writer of Daredevil, on which he was accompanied by well-known Daredevil artist Gene Colan.
At around the same time he produced a Daredevil/Deadpool '97 Annual with artist Bernard Chang which pitted the two characters against each other and was generally well received. Kelly left Daredevil with #375 in 1998.
Kelly's next major Marvel assignment was in late 1997, at the company's then bestselling title, X-Men, where he worked with penciller Carlos Pacheco. However, Kelly's stint on the title, and his friend Steven T. Seagle's run on sister title Uncanny X-Men, was cut short when the creators quit, blaming constant editorial interference. Kelly's last issue was #85 in 1999.
Kelly then began to work for Marvel's competitor DC Comics, specifically their Action Comics title starring Superman with #760 in October 1999. He stayed on the title for almost five years (up until #813, May 2004), working mainly with penciler Pasqual Ferry.
During this run he authored "What's So Funny About Truth, Justice & the American Way?" in Action Comics #775, which introduced The Elite (an Authority-like team of anti-heroes) and their leader Manchester Black. That issue was called "the single best issue of a comic book written in the year 2001" by Wizard Magazine.
In December 2000, Kelly had a short stint as writer on the Superboy comic (#83–93), again mostly working with his Action Comics collaborator Ferry.
In 2002 he began a long run on DC's JLA (#61–93) comic book with penciller Doug Mahnke. After their run on that title finished the same creative team launched a twelve-issue limited series Justice League Elite featuring some of the characters from Action Comics #775.[2][3]
Also in 2002, DC published Green Lantern: Legacy – The Last Will & Testament of Hal Jordan, a hardcover graphic novel by Kelly and artists Brent Anderson and Bill Sienkiewicz, which looked back at the life and career of Hal Jordan, who at that point was the Spectre. (Early in his career, Kelly had described working with Sienkiewicz as his dream collaboration.[1]) An interview with Kelly also appeared in the first volume of Writers on Comic Scriptwriting from Titan Books.
Kelly has produced three creator-owned works: Steampunk, pencilled by Chris Bachalo and published by DC through Wildstorm's Cliffhanger imprint in 2000 (a second part, Drama Obscura, brought closure to the story, but Kelly has said he intends to eventually continue the book); M. Rex with penciller Duncan Rouleau, which was published by the now-defunct Avalon Studios (it was cancelled after two issues); and Ballast, with penciller Ilya, a one-shot published by Active Images.[4]
In 2004 he collaborated with artist Ariel Olivetti on a Space Ghost series, published by DC, which depicted the character with a serious space opera tone and, for the first time, revealed his origins.[5] Next up is a similar mini-series, this time starring Jonny Quest.
Kelly is a part of the Man of Action collective of creators (along with Joe Casey, Duncan Rouleau, Steven T. Seagle), who created the series Ben 10, currently airing on Cartoon Network. Around the same time Ben 10 began to air, he was also hired as a story editor on TMNT: Fast Forward. With Man of Action Studios, he is also a Supervising Producer on Disney/Marvel's Disney XD series, Ultimate Spider-Man.
Kelly has written DC's Supergirl and Marvel's Amazing Spider-Man. He has published creator-owned work through Image Comics, including Four Eyes[6] and I Kill Giants,[7] as well as a graphic novel Douglas Fredericks and the House of They.[8]
Kelly wrote the Fantastic Four: World's Greatest Heroes episode "My Neighbour Was a Skrull" featuring the Skrulls, as well as the series premiere of Chaotic, a new animated series based on the trading card game. He also co-wrote Darksiders, a video game for THQ.
In 2007, he shot a short film, Brother's Day, which was a selection in the Brooklyn International Film Festival.
Bibliography
Marvel Comics
2099:
Fantastic Four #5: "Strange Tidings" (script; plot by Karl Kesel and art by Matt Ryan, 1996)
World of Tomorrow #1–8 (with Ben Raab and various artists, anthology, 1996–1997)
Daredevil:
- "The Politics of Infamy" (with Stephen JB Jones, in Over the Edge #10, 1996)
- "Aftermath" (with Pasqual Ferry, in #358, 1996)
- "A Question of Trust" (with Cary Nord, in #365, 1997)
- "A Time to Say Farewell" (with Gene Colan, in #-1, 1997)
- "Prison without Walls" (with Gene Colan, in #366, 1997)
- "Cruel & Unusual Punishments" (with Gene Colan, in #367, 1997)
- "Widow's Kiss" (with Gene Colan and Ariel Olivetti, in #368–370, 1997)
- "Fallout" (with Ariel Olivetti, in #371, 1998)
- "Devil and the Demon" (with Ariel Olivetti, in #372, 1998)
- "Weight of the World" (with Ben Raab and Richie Acosta, in #373, 1998)
- "So Little Time to Save the World" (with Jonathan Barron and Ariel Olivetti, in #374, 1998)
- "With a Little Help from My Friends" (with Chris Claremont and various artists, in #375, 1998)
Marvel Fanfare #2–3: "Wendigo Instinct" (with Pop Mhan, anthology, 1996)
What If...?:
- "The Man, The Monster" (with Nelson DeCastro, in #91, 1996)
- "...I'll Be Your Best Friend!" (with James Daly, in #92, 1996)
X-Men:
Wolverine Annual '96: "The Golden Temple" (with Tommy Lee Edwards, 1996)
Juggernaut: "A Night in Spite" (with Duncan Rouleau, one-shot, 1997)
Deadpool (plot assist by James Felder on #20 and 26):
Classic: Volume 1 (tpb, 264 pages, 2008, .mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
ISBN 0-7851-3124-8) includes:
- "Hey, It's Deadpool!" (with Ed McGuinness, in v1 #1, 1997)
Classic: Volume 2 (tpb, 256 pages, 2009,
ISBN 0-7851-3731-9) collects:
- "That Wacky Doctor Game" (with Ed McGuinness, in v1 #2–5, 1997)
- "Paradigm Lost" (with Aaron Lopresti, in v1 #-1, 1997)
- "Typhoid" (with Ed McGuinness, in v1 #6–8, 1997)
Daredevil/Deadpool Annual '97 (with Bernard Chang, 1997)
Classic: Volume 3 (tpb, 280 pages, 2009,
ISBN 0-7851-4244-4) collects:
- "Heroes Reburned" (with Ed McGuinness, in v1 #9, 1997)
- "Road-Trip Roulette" (with Shannon Denton, in v1 #10, 1997)
- "With Great Power Comes Great Coincidence" (with Pete Woods, in v1 #11, 1997)
- "The Drowning Man" (with Pete Woods, in v1 #12–13, 1998)
- "Landau, Luckman and Lake" (with Walter McDaniel, in v1 #14–17, 1998)
Classic: Volume 4 (tpb, 296 pages, 2011,
ISBN 0-7851-5302-0) collects:
Deadpool/Death Annual '98 (with Steve Harris, 1998)- "Payback" (with Walter McDaniel, in v1 #18–19, 1998)
- "Justice, Order, & Luck" (with Pete Woods, in v1 #20, 1998)
- "You Only Die Twice" (with Yancey Labat, in v1 #0, 1998)
- "Dead Reckoning" (with Walter McDaniel, in v1 #21–25, 1998–1999)
Classic: Volume 5 (tpb, 272 pages, 2011,
ISBN 0-7851-5519-8) collects:
Baby's First Deadpool Book (with various artists, one-shot, 1998)- "Mouthful of Malice, Head Full of Cheese" (with Pete Woods, in v1 #26, 1999)
- "Take My Wife... Please!" (with Walter McDaniel and Pete Woods, in v1 #27–29, 1999)
- "Truth and Lies" (with Pete Woods and David Brewer, in v1 #30–33, 1999)
Dead Head Redemption (tpb, 240 pages, 2011,
ISBN 0-7851-5649-6) collects:
- "Pinky Swear" (with Rob Liefeld, in v2 #900, anthology, 2009)
The Wedding (tpb, 168 pages, 2014,
ISBN 0-7851-8933-5) collects:
- "The Niagara Bride" (with Paco Medina, in v3 #27, co-feature, 2014)
X-Men v2:
Zero Tolerance (tpb, 320 pages, 2000,
ISBN 0-7851-0738-X) includes:
- "Homecoming" (with Carlos Pacheco, in #70, 1997)
- "A House in Order/Life Lessons" (with Carlos Pacheco, in #71–72, 1998)
- "The Elements within Us" (with Joe Casey and Jeff Johnson, in #73, 1998)
- "Rituals" (with Carlos Pacheco, in #74, 1998)
- "Anatomy of a Monster" (with Germán García, in #75, 1998)
- "A Boykie and His Dinges" (with Mat Broome, in #76, 1998)
- "Stormfront; Little Morlock Lost" (with Germán García, in #77–79, 1998)
- "Power Play" (with Steven T. Seagle and Chris Bachalo, in Uncanny #359, 1998)
- "Children of the Atom, Part 2" (with Brandon Peterson, in #80, 1998)
- "Jack of Hearts, Queen of Death!" (with Adam Kubert, in #81, 1998)
The Hunt for Professor X (tpb, 368 pages, 2015,
ISBN 0-7851-9720-6) includes:
- "Parts 2, 4 and 6" (with Adam Kubert, in #82–84, 1998–1999)
Magneto: Rogue Nation (tpb, 192 pages, 2002,
ISBN 0-7851-0834-3) includes:
- "A Tale of Two Mutants" (with Alan Davis, in #85, 1999)
Spider-Man/Deadpool #1-ongoing (with Ed McGuinness, 2015–...)
Spider-Man:
Webspinners: Tales of Spider-Man #7–9: "The Bridge" (with Bart Sears and Andy Smith, 1999)
The Amazing Spider-Man:
Crime and Punisher (hc, 136 pages, 2009,
ISBN 0-7851-3393-3; tpb, 2009,
ISBN 0-7851-3417-4) includes:
- "Hammerhead: Family Ties" (with Chris Bachalo, in Extra! #1 and #575–576, 2008–2009)
- "J. Jonah Jameson! I Name Thee Murderer! – A Bookie Minute Mystery" (with Barry Kitson, in #577, 2009)
American Son (hc, 136 pages, 2009,
ISBN 0-7851-3870-6; tpb, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4083-2) collects:
- "Prelude: Nice Things" (with Dale Eaglesham, in Extra! #3, 2009)
- "American Son" (with Phil Jimenez, Paulo Siqueira, Marco Checchetto and Stephen Segovia, in #595–599, 2009)
Died in Your Arms Tonight (hc, 192 pages, 2009,
ISBN 0-7851-4459-5; tpb, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4485-4) includes:
- "Grim Hunt: Violent Visions" (with Max Fiumara, in #600, co-feature, 2009)
Return of the Black Cat (hc, 168 pages, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4249-5; tpb, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-3868-4) includes:
- "The Long-Term Arrangement" (with Mike McKone and Adriana Melo, in #606–607, 2009)
- "This Man, This [Expletive Deleted]" (with Eric Canete, in #611, 2010)
The Gauntlet: Volume 1 (hc, 176 pages, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4264-9; tpb, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-3871-4) includes:
- "The Other Woman" (with J. M. Ken Niimura, in #612, co-feature, 2010)
The Gauntlet: Volume 2 (hc, 160 pages, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4265-7; tpb, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-3872-2) includes:
- "Rage of the Rhino/The Walk" (with Max Fiumara and Javier Pulido, in #617, 2010)
The Gauntlet: Volume 3 (hc, 136 pages, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4611-3; tpb, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4612-1) includes:
- "Rhino: Endangered Species" (with Max Fiumara, in #625, 2010)
Grim Hunt (hc, 192 pages, 2010,
ISBN 0-7851-4617-2; tpb, 2011,
ISBN 0-7851-4618-0) collects:
Spider-Man: Grim Hunt – The Kraven Saga (with Michael Lark, one-shot, 2010)- "Grim Hunt" (with Michael Lark, Marco Checchetto and Matthew Southworth, in #634–637, 2010)
Origin of the Species (hc, 232 pages, 2011,
ISBN 0-7851-4621-0; tpb, 2011,
ISBN 0-7851-4622-9) includes:
- "Norah's Last Night in NYC" (with J. M. Ken Niimura, in #647, co-feature, 2010)
Heroes Reborn: The Return (tpb, 288 pages, 2009,
ISBN 0-7851-3748-3) includes:
Heroes Reborn: Rebel: "Wild Blue" (with Mark Bagley and Matt Haley, one-shot, 2000)
Heroes Reborn: Remnants "The Day the Earth Got Ill!" (with Ethan van Sciver, one-shot, 2000)
DC Comics
All-Star Comics 80-Page Giant #1: "P.O.V. A Fable" (with Duncan Rouleau, 1999)
Secret Origins of Super-Villains 80-Page Giant #1: "Dreams in Smoke" (with Butch Guice, 1999)
Superman:
Action Comics:
No Limits! (tpb, 208 pages, 2000,
ISBN 1-56389-699-0) includes:
- "...Never-Ending Battle..." (with Germán García, in #760–761, 1999–2000)
- "All I Want for Christmas" (with Germán García and Kano, in #762, 2000)
Endgame (tpb, 176 pages, 2000,
ISBN 1-56389-701-6) includes:
Superman Y2K: "The End" (with Butch Guice and Kevin Conrad, one-shot, 2000)- "Sacrifice for Tomorrow" (with Germán García and Kano, in #763, 2000)
- 'Til Death Do Us Part (tpb, 224 pages, 2002,
ISBN 1-56389-862-4) includes:
- "Quiet After the Storm" (with Kano, in #764, 2000)
- "A Clown Comes to Metropolis" (with Kano, in #765, 2000)
Critical Condition (tpb, 192 pages, 2003,
ISBN 1-56389-949-3) includes:
Metropolis Secret Files: "Metropolica" (with Pasqual Ferry, 2000)- "D.O.A." (with Cary Nord, in #766, 2000)
- "Critical Condition, Part 4" (with Kano, in #767, 2000)
- "O, Captain, My Captain!" (with Duncan Rouleau, in #768, 2000)
Emperor Joker (tpb, 256 pages, 2007,
ISBN 1-4012-1193-3) includes:
Superman: Emperor Joker (with Jeph Loeb and various artists, one-shot, 2000)- "Parts 4 and 9" (with Kano, in #769–770, 2000)
President Lex (tpb, 240 pages, 2003,
ISBN 1-56389-974-4) includes:
- "Kith & Kin" (with Kano, in #772–773, 2000–2001)
- "Fireside Chat" (with Eric Canete, in #774, 2001)
Return to Krypton (tpb, 208 pages, 2004,
ISBN 1-4012-0194-6) includes:
- "Escape from Krypton" (with Kano, in #776, 2001)
- "Dream's End" (with Pasqual Ferry, in #793, 2002)
- "Kancer" (with Kano, in #777, 2001)
- "King Takes Pawn" (with Duncan Rouleau, in #779, 2001)
Our Worlds at War (tpb, 512 pages, 2006,
ISBN 1-4012-1129-1) includes:
... Secret Files & Origins: "They Call Me Zed" (with Alberto Saichann, 2001)- "Parts 4, 8 and 12" (with Kano, in #780–782, 2001)
- "The Gift" (with Brandon Badeaux, in #783, 2001)
- "Joker: Last Laugh — Whose Mind is It Anyways?" (with Duncan Rouleau, in #784, 2001)
- "Demento; Red" (with Duncan Rouleau and Pasqual Ferry, in #785–786, 2002)
- "Jikei Ketsuki: Mercy, Love and Blood" (with Pasqual Ferry, in #787–788, 2002)
- "Man & Beast" (with Duncan Rouleau, in #789–790, 2002)
- "Big City, Little Man" (with Pasqual Ferry, in #792, 2002)
Ending Battle (tpb, 192 pages, 2009,
ISBN 1-4012-2259-5) includes:
- "Parts 4 and 8" (with Duncan Rouleau, in #795–796, 2002)
- "Superego" (with Renato Arlem, in #797, 2003)
- "Lost Hearts, Part 2: Heartbroken" (with Dwayne Turner, in Adventures of Superman #611, 2003)
- "Lost Hearts, Part 4: Heartsong" (with Pasqual Ferry, in #798, 2003)
- "The Cage" (with Carlos Meglia, in #799, 2003)
- "A Hero's Journey" (with various artists, in #800, 2003)
- "Seeds" (with Tom Raney, in #801, 2003)
- "The Harvest" (with Tom Derenick and Pasqual Ferry, in #802–805, 2003)
- "Supergirls" (with Pasqual Ferry, in #806–808, 2003)
- "Creeping Death" (with Pasqual Ferry, in #809, 2004)
Believe (tpb, 128 pages, 2013,
ISBN 1-4012-4705-9) includes:
- "Walking Midnight" (with Pasqual Ferry, Duncan Rouleau, Kano, Dave Bullock and Renato Guedes, in #810, 2004)
Superboy #83–93 (with Pasqual Ferry, Paco Medina, Eddie Berganza (co-writer on #87–90 and 92–93) and Carlo Barberi, 2001)
Adventures of Superman #600: "Superman: The Dailies 2002 – The Most Bizarro Case of All – Part 8 of 8" (with Carlos Meglia, co-feature, 2002)
Godfall (with Michael Turner and Talent Caldwell, hc, 112 pages, 2004,
ISBN 1-4012-0376-0; tpb, 2004,
ISBN 1-4012-0236-5) collects:
- "Parts 1 and 4" (in Action Comics #812–813, 2004)
- "Parts 2 and 5" (in Adventures of Superman #625–626, 2004)
- "Parts 3 and 6" (in Superman v2 #202–203, 2004)
Infinite Crisis (tpb, 128 pages, 2006,
ISBN 1-4012-0953-X) collects:
- "This is Your Life, Part 1" (with Jeph Loeb, Howard Chaykin, Tim Sale, Ed Benes, Renato Guedes and Jerry Ordway, in Superman v2 #226, 2006)
- "This is Your Life, Part 2" (with Dan Jurgens, Ian Churchill, Lee Bermejo, Ed Benes, Tom Derenick and Renato Guedes, in Action Comics #836, 2006)
- "This is Your Life, Part 3" (with Ed Benes, Tom Derenick, Duncan Rouleau, Karl Kerschl and Dale Eaglesham, in Adventures of Superman #649, 2006)
Supergirl (with Greg Rucka (plot of #7), Ian Churchill, Ron Adrian, Joe Benitez, Alé Garza and Adam Archer, 2006–2007) collected as:
Candor (includes #7–9, tpb, 176 pages, 2007,
ISBN 1-4012-1226-3)
Identity (collects #10–11, 13–19 and a story from Infinite Holiday Special '07, tpb, 256 pages, 2007,
ISBN 1-4012-1484-3)
Steampunk (with Chris Bachalo, Cliffhanger, 2000–2002) collected as:
Manimatron (collects #1–5 and Catechism one-shot, tpb, 160 pages, 2001,
ISBN 1-56389-762-8)
Drama Obscura (collects #6–12, tpb, 176 pages, 2003
ISBN 1-4012-0047-8)
Gotham Knights #17: "A Moment in the Light" (with Aaron Wiesenfeld, co-feature, 2001) collected in Batman: Black & White III (hc, 288 pages, 2007,
ISBN 1-4012-1531-9)
Wonder Woman #170: "She's a Wonder" (with Phil Jimenez, 2001) collected in Wonder Woman: Paradise Lost (tpb, 176 pages, 2002,
ISBN 1-56389-792-X)
Green Lantern: Legacy – The Last Will & Testament of Hal Jordan (with Brent Anderson, graphic novel, hc, 106 pages, 2002,
ISBN 1-56389-864-0)
9-11 Volume 2: "Wake Up" (with Scott Kolins, anthology graphic novel, tpb, 224 pages, 2002,
ISBN 1-56389-878-0)
Justice League of America:
JLA (with Doug Mahnke, Yvel Guichet, Lewis LaRosa and ChrisCross, 2002–2004) collected as:
Volume 6 (collects #61–76, tpb, 432 pages, 2015,
ISBN 1-4012-5136-6)
Volume 7 (collects #78–90, tpb, 416 pages, 2015,
ISBN 1-4012-5528-0)
Justice League Elite:
Volume 1 (tpb, 208 pages, 2005,
ISBN 1-4012-0481-3) collects:
Action Comics #775 (with Doug Mahnke and Lee Bermejo, 2001)
JLA #100: "JLE Prelude: Elitism" (with Doug Mahnke, 2004)- "Grand Experiment" (with Doug Mahnke, in #1–4, 2004)
JLA Secret Files '04: "Same Coin" (with Doug Mahnke, 2004)
Volume 2 (tpb, 192 pages, 2007,
ISBN 1-4012-1556-4) collects:
- "The Aftermath" (with Doug Mahnke, in #5–8, 2005)
- "Poison" (with Doug Mahnke, in #9, 2005)
- "Eve of Destruction" (with Doug Mahnke, in #10–12, 2005)
JLA/Cyberforce (with Doug Mahnke, one-shot, Top Cow, 2005) collected in DC/Top Cow (tpb, 200 pages, 2007,
ISBN 1-4012-1338-3)
Enginehead #1–6 (with Ted McKeever, 2004)
Space Ghost #1–6 (with Ariel Olivetti, 2005) collected as Space Ghost (tpb, 144 pages, 2005,
ISBN 1-4012-0721-9)
Solo #6: "Drive" (with Jordi Bernet, 2005) collected in Solo (hc, 608 pages, 2013,
ISBN 1-4012-3889-0)
Superman/Batman:
- "Stop Me If You've Heard This One..." (with Ed McGuinness, Carlo Barberi, Sean Murphy and Ryan Ottley, in Annual #1, 2006)
- "The Unexamined Life..." (with Scott Kolins, in Annual #2, 2008)
Sorcerer Kings (hc, 160 pages, 2011,
ISBN 1-4012-3266-3; tpb, 2012,
ISBN 1-4012-3446-1) collects:
- "Who Would Win?" (with Ed Benes, in #78, 2011)
DCU Holiday Special: "A Day without Sirens" (with Mick Bertilorenzi, 2009)
Bang! Tango #1–6 (with Adrian Sibar, Vertigo, 2009) collected as Bang! Tango (tpb, 136 pages, Image, 2015,
ISBN 1-6321-5250-9)
The Reign of Megamind #0 (with John Cassaday, Wildstorm, 2010)
Image Comics
M. Rex #1–2 (with Duncan Rouleau, Avalon Studios, 1999)
Ballast (with ILYA, graphic novel, tpb, 52 pages, Active Images, 2005,
ISBN 0-9766761-2-5)
Elephantmen:
The Pilot (with Peter Gross, one-shot, 2007) collected in Fatal Diseases (hc, 168 pages, 2009,
ISBN 1-60706-088-4; tpb, 2010,
ISBN 1-6070-6177-5)- "Captain Stoneheart" (with Chris Bachalo, in #7, 2007) collected in Wounded Animals (hc, 168 pages, 2007,
ISBN 1-58240-691-X; tpb, 2008,
ISBN 1-58240-934-X)
I Kill Giants #1–7 (with J. M. Ken Niimura, 2008–2009) collected as I Kill Giants (tpb, 184 pages, 2009,
ISBN 1-60706-092-2; hc, 300 pages, 2010,
ISBN 1-60706-172-4)
Four Eyes #1–4 (with Max Fiumara, 2008–2010) collected as Four Eyes: Forged in Flames (tpb, 96 pages, 2010,
ISBN 1-60706-292-5)
Douglas Fredericks and the House of They (with Ben Roman, graphic novel, hc, 80 pages, 2008,
ISBN 1-58240-994-3)
Bad Dog #1–6 (with Diego Greco, 2009–2014) collected as Bad Dog: In the Land of Milk and Honey (tpb, 184 pages, 2014,
ISBN 1-6321-5100-6)- The Nutshack
Notes
^ ab Senreich, Matthew (August 1997). "Creator Spotlight". Wizard (72). p. 147.
^ Joey Kelly on Justice League Elite Archived 2005-12-20 at the Wayback Machine., Newsarama
^ Joseph League Elite – Joey Kelly Talks JLE, Comic Book Resources
^ Active Images books, Active Images.
^ UGO: Joey Kelly Talks Space Ghost Archived 2006-05-15 at the Wayback Machine., UGO
^ A Boy & His Dragon: Kelly talks "Four Eyes", Comic Book Resources, June 26, 2008
^ Joe Kelly: "I Kill Giants", Comic Book Resources, April 25, 2008
^ Sullivan, Michael Patrick (October 3, 2008). "Says Who? Kelly talks 'Douglas Fredericks'". Comic Book Resources.
References
.mw-parser-output .refbegin{font-size:90%;margin-bottom:0.5em}.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ul{list-style-type:none;margin-left:0}.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ul>li,.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>dl>dd{margin-left:0;padding-left:3.2em;text-indent:-3.2em;list-style:none}.mw-parser-output .refbegin-100{font-size:100%}
Joe Kelly at the Grand Comics Database
Joe Kelly at the Comic Book DB
Joe Kelly at the Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators
External links
- Kelly's Man of Action Website
Joey Kelly on IMDb
Interviews
- The Trades: Joey Kelly – More Powerful Than a Steaming Locomotive
- Wizard Entertainment: 5 Questions with Joey Kelly
- Slushfactory.com Joey Kelly Responds To JLA Critics
- Heroes Wiki: Joey Kelly on his involvement in the Heroes graphic novels
Preceded by Mark Waid | Deadpool writer 1996–1999 | Succeeded by Christopher Priest |
Preceded by Karl Kesel | Daredevil writer 1997–1998 | Succeeded by Scott Lobdell |
Preceded by Greg Rucka | Supergirl writer 2006–2007 | Succeeded by Tony Bedard |
Preceded by Scott Lobdell | X-Men (vol. 2) writer 1997–1999 | Succeeded by Alan Davis |