Eddie Campbell, born on 10 August 1955 in Britain, is a cartoonist and comics artist whose career spans more than four decades, with credits as writer, artist, colorist, inker, and letterer across well over a hundred and fifty works.
Alec: The King Canute Crowd #[nn] (2000)
He is perhaps most widely recognized for his collaboration with writer Alan Moore on *From Hell*, a sprawling, meticulously researched examination of the Jack the Ripper case that Campbell both illustrated and published. His work on that project demonstrated his remarkable ability to sustain a dark, immersive visual atmosphere across a long-form narrative. Equally important to his body of work are the semi-autobiographical *Alec* stories — intimate, digressive vignettes gathered in *Alec: The Years Have Pants* — and *Bacchus* (also published as *Deadface*), a witty adventure series imagining the handful of Greek gods who have managed to linger into the modern world.
Alec: How to Be an Artist #[nn] (2001)
Campbell's pen-and-ink draftsmanship draws on a broad tradition: the impressionists, the freewheeling illustrators of the Phil May and George du Maurier era, and cartoonists such as Milton Caniff and Frank Frazetta. His prose sensibility has been likened to Jack Kerouac and Henry Miller. That combination of loose, expressive line work and literary self-awareness gives his pages an unusually personal texture.
After the Snooter #[nn] (2002)
Over the course of his career he has received nearly every significant industry honor available, among them the Eisner, Harvey, Ignatz, Eagle, and UK Comic Art awards.