Sex, With Ginda Bojeffries
Jun. 9th, 2009 05:00 am![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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Frighteningly, I think this is safe for work.
Yes, I've been saving all these up for a while.
So: this is Alan Moore & Steve Parkhouse's long out of print "Bojeffries Saga." Which I just happen to have the Tundra edition of, which this is from.
This is the dread Ginda Bojeffries. This is in answer to a LOST GIRLS post which was unintentional squick.
Here is Moore being squicky entirely on purpose, to break your brain. Behold and shudder.







(c)1989 Alan Moore & Steve Parkhouse.
So: this is Alan Moore & Steve Parkhouse's long out of print "Bojeffries Saga." Which I just happen to have the Tundra edition of, which this is from.
This is the dread Ginda Bojeffries. This is in answer to a LOST GIRLS post which was unintentional squick.
Here is Moore being squicky entirely on purpose, to break your brain. Behold and shudder.








(c)1989 Alan Moore & Steve Parkhouse.
no subject
Date: 2009-06-09 09:12 am (UTC)Oh, and:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bojeffries_Saga#Publication_history
In 2004 Parkhouse suggested there would be no more stories,[6] however A1-editor Dave Elliott and Gary Spencer Millidge (editor of Alan Moore: Portrait of an Extraordinary Gentleman) have both suggested there will be more stories[7] while long-time Moore-collaborator, Kevin O'Neill said, in September 2008, that Moore was taking breaks from working with him on League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Century to finish the finale of the Bojeffries Saga.[8] Moore confirmed that and gave more details about the story and a collection from Top Shelf Productions:
“Yeah, I have written a final Bojeffries – well, I don’t know if it’s a final – but I’ve written a kind of, it wouldn’t hurt if it was the last one, although maybe me and Steve will want to do some more with them.
What we’re going to do is, we’re going to collect up, with Top Shelf, all of the Bojeffries material that’s appeared to date, and we’re going to cap it all off with a twenty-four page story called After They Were Famous, which is the Bojeffries in 2009, existing side-by-side with culture as it is now, as opposed to culture as it was in the eighties and the early nineties."