Cherry (comics)

Last updated
Cherry
Cherry wordmark.svg
logotype
Publication information
Publisher Last Gasp
Cherry Comics
ScheduleIrregular
Format Ongoing series
Genre Erotic
Publication date1982–2000; 2019
No. of issues23
Creative team
Created by Larry Welz

Cherry (originally Cherry Poptart) is an erotic comic book about a sexually adventurous 18-year-old woman and her friends, written and drawn by Larry Welz.

Contents

Creation

Cover of the first issue CherryPoptartComicNo1.jpg
Cover of the first issue

Welz created Cherry Poptart, first appearing in underground comic Funnybook #1, in 1971. Though the character and subsequent self-titled comic is largely known as an erotic or pornographic book, it does garner critical merit for its humor and occasional political commentary. [1] The Cherry character has also appeared in several free speech/censorship awareness campaigns. [2]

Contrasting the subject matter with more "innocent" connotations, Welz draws the comic in a simple style reminiscent of Dan DeCarlo, whose style was also the basis for the Archie comic book series. [3] [1] The strip so closely followed the "Happy Teenager" genre typified by Archie that lawsuits were threatened, but these failed to stop Welz. [3] The series frequently parodied other pop culture material and current events. [4]

Publication history

The series was first published in 1982 [5] by small press company Last Gasp [6] as Cherry Poptart. The first issue was an anthology, featuring three Cherry Poptart stories, one featuring another Welz character called Trina Tron, and two strips featuring similarly-themed strips from other underground cartoonists – Larry Todd's Vamperotica and Jay Kinney's The Wholesome Twins. This format was dropped for later issues, which largely revolved around Cherry and her friends, though each issue usually featured multiple shorter stories. The Todd and Kinney stories were also dropped from subsequent reprints of the series. [7] From the third issue the book was retitled Cherry; Welz has stated this was in response to threats of legal action by Kellogg's over its Pop-Tarts trademark. [7] Inside the comic the name was still occasionally used for the character, but generally the character was simply referred to as 'Cherry'.

On occasion Welz would search for other artists to help on the title in the hope of moving it to a quarterly schedule, though generally he continued the title as a solo effort. [8] In issue #8 Ellie is prominently featured in a Oz mockery called "Ellie Dee in the Land of Woz"; this was originally planned as a spin-off title (tentatively called Cherry's Pal Ellie Dee in the Land of Woz) but instead ran in the pages of Cherry. The name was also a pun on Apple Computer co-founder Steve Wozniak. [9]

Tundra Publishing also published a spinoff series called Cherry's Jubilee for stories from other creators, [10] ranging from underground comix figures such as Grass Green to mainstream figures like Marv Wolfman. [5] In 1993, Kitchen Sink Press took over from Last Gasp as the series' publisher for Cherry #14 through #19, also reprinting the first 13 issues and taking over Cherry's Jubilee. [10] In 1998, Welz formed his own Cherry Comics, which issued Cherry Deluxe, a planned anthology similar to Cherry's Jubilee; the first issue featured a story by Neil Gaiman. [1] No further issues of Cherry Deluxe followed but Cherry Comics took over publication of the regular series from #20 onwards, again issuing fresh reprints of the previous issues.

The series is among the largest-selling of the underground comics, [11] and is among those titles credited with reviving that genre. [12] [3] As of 2024 no new issues have been released for 5 years.

Characters

The series also featured occasional cameos by another Welz creation, Captain Guts. [3]

Wary of accusations of creating child pornography, Welz included a disclaimer from Cherry Poptart #2 stating that all the characters were 18 or older. [13] The same issue featured a single-page gag story in which Cherry's underage sister Cinnamon was indignant about not being allowed to perform any sex acts in the comic, due to being underage. Welz explained in The Gauntlet in 1992 that the issue and the character were intended to address the serious concern raised by his publisher that if Cherry was depicted as being under 18, the strip could be classified as child pornography. The strip remains the sole appearance of Cinnamon. [3]

On 30 August 1990 Winsor Parker, the owner of Xeno's comic store in Jacksonville, Florida, was arrested after an undercover police officer purchased a copy of Cherry Anthology #1 from the store; the comic was ruled obscene by the judge under the same statute which had befallen recordings by 2 Live Crew. [14] Parker pled not guilty, claiming he was unaware the material had been ruled obscene in Florida. [15] Copies of Cherry were seized by Canadian police from Toronto store Dragon Lady comics in February 1991, along with issues of "Omaha" the Cat Dancer , works by Milo Manara and titles produced by Eros Comics. This and other busts in Canada led to the Comic Legends Legal Defense Fund creating the anthology comic The True North to raise funds for store owners facing legal charges. [16]

Cherry is sometimes featured as a "spokesmodel" for the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund; since the body's formation it has been promoted in turn in the pages of Cherry. [5] [17]

Stories

Cherry Poptart / Cherry

IssueDateContentsNotes
Cherry Poptart #11982
  • "Hot Rod Boogie": Cherry will do anything to drive Ronnie's hot rod car.
  • "Vamperonica": wealthy Veronica Towers tries to get back stage to get her false teeth into rock star Mick Jugular. A 1979 strip by Larry Todd.
  • "The Wholesome Twins": twin sisters Julie and Sue argue over Sue's new job as a typist with the CIA. A 1975 strip by Jay Kinney.
  • "The Invitation": Cherry and Ellie get distracted getting ready for a party. A 1977 strip.
  • "'s Cool Daze": well-endowed teacher Mr. Feeney helps Cherry learn. A 1977 strip.
  • "The Psylicone Psyrcus": Trina Tron takes a stimu-pill. A 1977 strip.
"Vamperonica" and "The Wholesome Twins" were omitted from later print runs.
Cherry Poptart #21985
  • "Pool Cue": Cherry and her mom keep the pool guy sweet.
  • "Best Friends": Cherry placates her BDSM-enthusiast friend Monica after sleeping with her boyfriend.
  • "Le's Party!": Cherry throws a house-party, but her mom ends up the centre of attention.
  • "Down & Dirty": Cherry Coptart helps Captain Guts in a vice sting.
  • "A Personal Message from Cherry": Cherry breaks the fourth wall to announce her creed to readers.
Cherry #31986
  • "Good Morning": Cherry wakes and recalls a dream about John Donson.
  • "Saturday the 8th Part 5 – The Beginning": a masked killer is no match for Cherry and her well-armed friends.
  • "Cherry Meets Rambone – Second Blood, Part Three": Cherry journeys into the Vietnamese jungle to find John Rambone.
  • "Vini, Vidi, Visa!": Cherry and Lola take a trip to the mall, causing chaos with their antics.
  • "Oklahoma Smith and the Lost Temple of the Doomed Raiders": Cherry helps Oklahoma Smith retrieve the Golden Idol.
Cherry #41987
  • "The Babysitter": Cherry keeps numerous couples happy with her promiscuous babysitting.
  • "Cherry the Barbarian Chapter 73": Cherry finds a better way to defeat the guardian of a bridge.
  • "Good Ol' Mom": after nearly getting caught out double-dating, Cherry enlists her mom's help to keep both her visitors happy.
  • "Ellie Dee in Digitaland": a hacking attempt sees Ellie sucked into a computer world.
Cherry #51987
  • "The Love Channel": Cherry catches up on the soaps.
  • "The Job Interview": Cherry's experience as a secretary for Wally Norse and John Wesley Hardon helps her land a job.
  • "The Clan of the Care Bear": after falling out of a car as a baby, Chayree grows up with a Neanderthal tribe.
  • "One in Wins Choice": Cherry earns a stuffed bear at the fair.
  • "Ellie Dee in Deep Shit": Ellie comes up with a device to help her interface with her computer.
The issue is dedicated to the memory of murder victim Sandy Patton.
Cherry #61988
  • "Cherry's Mom Scores Again": Cherry tries to help her mom warm up a date but the pair get distracted by each other.
  • "Fuckin' Beach Party, Man!": Cherry, Lola and Patty have fun at a beach house.
  • "Bimbos from Hell": a computer genius summons Cherry, Ellie, Lola and Patty from Hell to fulfil his wishes.
  • "The Artist in Torment": Cherry helps a frustrated cartoonist to steer clear of thoughtful narrative.
  • "Dori Seda's Mudwrestling Story": Larry Welz unsuccessfully attempts to get Dori Seda to draw a mud wrestling strip for the issue.
Cherry #71988
  • "Girl Talk": Cherry, Lola and Patty eye up a new science teacher – who falls for Ellie instead.
  • "Space Cookie": Cherry is 'Social Director' onboard the space cruiser Cher when it is boarded by Dork Vulgar.
  • "Hooligan's Island": Cherry visits an island with some eclectic residents.
Cherry #81989
  • "Ellie Dee in the Land of Woz": Ellie's computer transports her to the land of Woz.
  • "Nurse's Aid": Cherry's attempts to help an elderly patient backfire.
  • "Spaghetti-O Western": Cherry brings in outlaw Kitty Starr.
Cherry #91990
  • "The Phantom Hitchhiker": a trucker has an encounter with Cherry.
  • "Mom's Closet": Cherry gets inspired by her mom's old clothes.
  • "Mad Maxine – The Road Whorrior": Madeline Maxine signs on to escort a convoy.
  • "Grownies (Just Don't Understand)": Cherry gets a lecture from hypocritical school counsellor Ms. Priss.
  • "Cherry Does Zara Tungi": Cherry meets Penthouse Hot Talk mascot Zara Tungi. By Mark Bodé.
  • "Ellie Dee in Cyberland": Ellie's computer transports her to an underground vault in the Vatican City.
Cherry #101990
  • "The New Guy": Johnny Fuckerfaster tries to get a job at Cherry International.
  • "Honor Farm Girls": Cherry dreams of being arrested by the Comics Police.
  • "Rebel without a Hardon": Cherry and Zara go drag-racing. By Mark Bodé.
  • "Hole in One": Cherry and her mom play golf. Collaboration between Welz and Larry Todd.
  • "The Cherry Duke Show": Cherry and her near-identical cousin Terry get involved in a farce. Story by Dan Fogel, with art by Welz.
Cherry #111990
  • "Threedy": Cherry extols the virtues of 3-D.
  • "Good Ol' Mom": 3-D reprint of strip from Cherry #4.
  • "Nurse's Aid": 3-D reprint of strip from Cherry #8.
  • "Cherry Closely Encounters Captain Eeyon": Cherry and Ellie meet the genitally-challenged Captain Eeyon.
  • "The Love Channel": 3-D reprint of strip from Cherry #5.
  • "I ♥ My Job": Cherry works the register at Burger Tyrant.
  • "A Personal Message from Cherry": 3-D reprint of strip from Cherry #2.
3-D issue.
Cherry #121991
  • "Cherry Gets It in the End": Cherry and her mom deal with the changing demands of the pornography industry.
  • "Sgt. Cherry and Her Squealing Commandos": Cherry, Lola, Patty and Ellie deploy in Iraq. Story by Dan Fogel, with art by Welz.
  • "Slut du Jour": Patty throws a party.
  • "Winehigh": Cherry goes on a hot air balloon. By Larry Todd.
Cherry #131992
  • "Slumber Party from Hell": Cherry, Lola and Ellie experiment with a Ouija board.
  • "The Curse of Lola": A jealous Lola attempts to use magic to get back at Cherry.
  • "Cherry Popstar": Cherry gets ready for a gig with her band, the Bimbos from Hell.
  • "Cherry Meets the Vampire Le Stud": Cherry and Ellie investigate a vampire's mansion.
Cherry #14February 1993
  • "Cherry Does the Time Warp": Cherry is sent back in time to make sure she is born and the future Church of Cherry will come into being. She meets her mother and turns her from a prude into a hedonist. She finds out her father might be one of Captain Guts, George Washington, Davy Crockett, Jesse James or James Dean.
First issue published by Kitchen Sink Press.
Cherry #15November 1993
  • "Out in the Woods": Cherry deals with bikers, survivalists, Big Foot and the White Male Elite.
  • "Motorcycles & Dinosaurs": Ellie creates a time-travelling motorcycle that takes her and Cherry forward to the time of lizard men. Collaboration between Welz and Larry Todd.
Cherry #16November 1994
  • "Cherry Meets the Renaissance Dude": Cherry encounters Luccan the magician.
  • "Motorcycles & Dinosaurs": Ellie creates a time-travelling motorcycle that takes her and Cherry forward to the time of lizard men. Collaboration between Welz and Larry Todd.
Cherry #17April 1995
Cherry #18October 1995
  • "Cherry has an Anxiety Attack": Cherry fantasises about Mr. Le Mort in her World Lit class and helps school counsellor Ms. Renfrew relax.
  • "Cherry Dances with Dolphins": Cherry makes a breakthrough in human-dolphin communications.
Cherry #19November 1996
  • "Party Girls, or Festive Women": Cherry and Lola are upstaged by the Boobsie Twins.
  • "Cherry Does Dick": Cherry has a disappointing encounter with star athlete Dick.
Cherry #20March 1999
  • "The Champion": Cherry and Lola try to teach Monique there's more to life than working out.
  • "Smells Like Team Spirit": Cherry and fellow cheerleaders Lola, Patty and congratulate the school football team for winning a game.
Cherry #21August 1999
  • "The Businesswomen": Cherry's mom and Ellie's mom tell their daughters they are host a Tubberware™ party with a twist. Story by John Nubbin.
  • "She's So Excited": Monique helps Cherry get ready for a date. Story by C. J. Henderson.
Cherry #22April 2000
  • "Cherry Has Left the Planet": Cherry is abducted by aliens, and Ellie enlists the help of agents Muledeer and Skuzzy to help find her.
Cherry #23November 2019
  • "Cherrypocalypse": Cherry returns from outer space.
  • "Attack of the 50 Ft. Cherry": Cherry grows to giant size. By Mark Bodé.

Cherry's Jubilee

IssueDateContentsNotes
Cherry's Jubilee #11992
  • "Consciousness Rising": Cherry attends an anti-porn seminar. Story by Gerard Jones, art by Larry Welz.
  • "Double Your Trouble": an accident splits Cherry in two – one brazen, one shy. Story by Jim Pitts, art by Chuck Austen.
  • "A Fistful of Cherry": Cherry stars in a Spaghetti Western. Story by Dan Fogel, art by Greg Espinoza.
  • "Cherry Meets Roger Fnord": Cherry meets a sex-crazed time-traveller. By S. E. Mills.
Cherry's Jubilee #21992
  • "Cherry Meets Octobяiaиa": A powerful, promiscuous Russian arrives to help downtrodden American workers. Story by Dan Fogel, art by Larry Welz.
  • "Swede Chaser": Cherry takes part in a futuristic car race. By Greg Espinoza.
  • "Hip-Ocracy": Cherry has an affair with President Clit Billton. Story by Dan Fogel, art by Duke Roosevelt.
  • "Weird Cherry": Commander Cherry Poptart, Science Officer Ellie Dee, First Officer Gar Hanson and Engineer Maple Handle pilot the USS Star-Tang into uncharted space. Story by Dan Fogel, art by Larry Welz.
Includes a history of Octobriana.
Cherry's Jubilee #31993
  • "The Uncommon XXX-Men vs. The Testosterone Titans": Cherry transports her comic-obsessed boyfriend Ned Mylar into a comics universe in time for the arrival of Orgasmus. Story by Marv Wolfman, art by Larry Welz.
  • "Tunnel of Luv": Dave takes Cherry to a tunnel of love. By Leslie Sternbergh  [ ca ].
  • "Hobo Hal Meets Cherry": Cherry and Ellie try to cheer up Hobo Hal. By Grass Green
  • "Pulp-Chritude": Cherry falls asleep while reading. Story by Dan Fogel, art by Duke Roosevelt.
  • "A Typical Work Day for the Modern Girl": Cherrie in the world of work. By Molly Kiely.
Cherry's Jubilee #4April 1994
  • "Special Handling": Cherry's mom introduces her to the pleasures of home shopping. Story by Kate Worley, art by Larry Welz.
  • "Shu!": Cherry tries snake-charming. By Forg.
  • "The Lil' Meremaid": the story of Cherriel. By Larry Todd.
  • "Vive la Ooh-la-la": Cherry's mom tells her about her Aunt Cheri, a French Resistance fighter in World War II. Story by Dan Fogel, art by Steven Crompton.
  • "Cherry Does M*yb*rry": Cherry and her mom get arrested speeding through Mayberry. By Lee Terry and Lew Reid.

Cherry Deluxe

IssueDateContentsNotes
Cherry Deluxe #1August 1998
  • "The Inkeeper's Soul": An angelic Cherry and demonic Lola compete for a villager's soul. Story by Neil Gaiman, art by Larry Welz.
  • "Talk Radio": Cherry and her mom set out to cheer up a conservative radio host. Story by Kate Murray, art by Larry Welz.
Also includes Tug & Buster stories by Marc Hempel.

Reception

Amazing Heroes reviewer R.A. Jones listed Cherry as one of the ten best titles of 1986, calling it "depraved, disgusting, pornographic, infantile and utterly lacking in any redeeming value", stating "We all need to be offended once in a while" and praising its lampooning of the "saccharine" Archie comics. [18] However, Adam-Troy Castro disagreed in a later issue, feeling that the satirical content was the singular joke of the art's resemblance to Archie material. [19] She was ranked 82nd in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list. [20]

In other media

Unmade film adaptations

During the late 1980s, Welz made a couple of attempts to make a film version of the series. Initially it was planned as a low-budget pornographic film starring Tammy Monroe as Cherry, but Welz withdrew his co-operation after realising the production was a generic porno. Instead, Berkeley-based company Magic Lightning Productions planned a Cherry Poptart film in 1990, co-produced by Welz and Charles Webb. This was intended to be R-Rated, and reportedly attracted interest from Columbia Pictures and New Line Cinema. Welz also entered negotiations with an animation studio to make direct-to-video Cherry cartoons. [21] However, none of these versions made it into production.

Merchandise

Welz has produced t-shirts, posters and cigarette lighters featuring Cherry. In 2022, he linked up with Discordia Merchandising to make a resin figure of Cherry. [22]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Underground comix</span> Comics genre

Underground comix are small press or self-published comic books that are often socially relevant or satirical in nature. They differ from mainstream comics in depicting content forbidden to mainstream publications by the Comics Code Authority, including explicit drug use, sexuality, and violence. They were most popular in the United States in the late 1960s and 1970s, and in the United Kingdom in the 1970s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gilbert Hernandez</span> American cartoonist

Gilberto Hernández, usually credited as Gilbert Hernandez and also by the nickname Beto, is an American cartoonist. He is best known for his Palomar/Heartbreak Soup stories in Love and Rockets, an alternative comic book he shared with his brothers Jaime and Mario.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fantagraphics</span> American publisher

Fantagraphics is an American publisher of alternative comics, classic comic strip anthologies, manga, magazines, graphic novels, and (formerly) the erotic Eros Comix imprint.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kim Deitch</span> American cartoonist

Kim Deitch is an American cartoonist who was an important figure in the underground comix movement of the 1960s, remaining active in the decades that followed with a variety of books and comics, sometimes using the pseudonym Fowlton Means.

<i>Zap Comix</i> Underground comic book

Zap Comix is an underground comix series which was originally part of the counterculture of the late 1960s. While a few small-circulation self-published satirical comic books had been printed prior to this, Zap became the model for the "comix" movement that snowballed after its release. The title itself published 17 issues over a period of 46 years.

A minicomic is a creator-published comic book, often photocopied and stapled or with a handmade binding. In the United Kingdom and Europe the term small press comic is equivalent with minicomic, reserved for those publications measuring A6 or less.

<i>"Omaha" the Cat Dancer</i> Erotic comic strip/book by Reed Waller and Kate Worley

"Omaha" the Cat Dancer is an erotic comic strip and later comic book created by artist Reed Waller and writer Kate Worley. Set in fictional Mipple City, Minnesota in a universe populated by anthropomorphic animal characters, the strip is a soap opera focusing on Omaha, a feline exotic dancer, and her lover, Chuck, the son of a business tycoon.

<i>Zot!</i> Comic book by Scott McCloud

Zot! is a comic book created by Scott McCloud in 1984 and published by Eclipse Comics until 1990 as a lighthearted alternative to the darker and more violent comics that dominated the industry during that period. There were a total of 36 issues, with the first ten in color and the remainder in black and white.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Last Gasp (publisher)</span> American publishing company

Last Gasp is a San Francisco–based book publisher with a lowbrow art and counterculture focus. Owned and operated by Ron Turner, for most of its existence Last Gasp was a publisher, distributor, and wholesaler of underground comix and books of all types.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Airboy</span> Boy aviation comic character

Airboy is a fictional Golden Age aviator hero of an American comic book series initially published by Hillman Periodicals during the World War II, before ending his initial run in 1953. The hero was the costumed identity of crack pilot Davy Nelson II, and created by writers Charles Biro and Dick Wood with artist Al Camy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kitchen Sink Press</span> American comic book publisher

Kitchen Sink Press was a comic book publishing company founded by Denis Kitchen in 1970. Kitchen Sink Press was a pioneering publisher of underground comics, and was also responsible for numerous republications of classic comic strips in hardcover and softcover volumes. One of their best-known products was the first full reprint of Will Eisner's The Spirit—first in magazine format, then in standard comic book format. The company closed in 1999.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Adult comics</span> Comics intended primarily or strictly for adult readers

The catch-all term adult comics typically denotes comic books, comic magazines, comic strips or graphic novels that are marketed either mainly or strictly towards adult readers. This can be because they contain material that could be considered thematically inappropriate for children, including vulgarity, morally questionable actions, disturbing imagery, and sexually explicit material.

Roberta Gregory is an American comic book writer and artist best known for the character Bitchy Bitch from her Fantagraphics Books series Naughty Bits. She is a prolific contributor to many feminist and underground anthologies, such as Wimmen's Comix and Gay Comix.

<i>Neat Stuff</i> American comic book series by Peter Bagge

Neat Stuff is an American alternative comic book series created by Peter Bagge and published by Fantagraphics. It ran from 1985 to 1989 for fifteen issues. Most takes the form of a series of short stories featuring different sets of characters, although some issues feature full-length stories relating to just one set of characters. The series was Bagge's first one-man comics anthology. Described by Dez Skinn in Comix: The Underground Revolution as the work which "threw Peter Bagge into the limelight", Bagge soon retired the title in preference of continuing the Bradley characters' story in Hate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LGBT themes in comics</span>

In comics, LGBT themes are a relatively new concept, as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBTQ) themes and characters were historically omitted from the content of comic books and their comic strip predecessors due to anti-gay censorship. LGBT existence was included only via innuendo, subtext and inference. However the practice of hiding LGBT characters in the early part of the twentieth century evolved into open inclusion in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, and comics explored the challenges of coming-out, societal discrimination, and personal and romantic relationships between gay characters.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Erotic comics</span> Adult comics which focus substantially on nudity and sexual activity

Erotic comics are adult comics which focus substantially on nudity and sexual activity, either for their own sake or as a major story element. As such they are usually not permitted to be sold to legal minors. Like other genres of comics, they can consist of single panels, short comic strips, comic books, or graphic novels/albums. Although never a mainstream genre, they have existed as a niche alongside – but usually separate from – other genres of comics.

Lawrence Edward Welz is an American cartoonist who created Cherry Poptart. He was an early contributor to the underground comix movement in the San Francisco area during the late 1960s and early 1970s. He graduated from Bakersfield High School.

Larry S. Todd is an American illustrator and cartoonist, best known for Dr. Atomic and his other work in underground comix, often with a science fiction bent.

Angela Bocage is a bisexual comics creator who published mainly in the 1980s and 1990s. Bocage was active in the queer comics community during these decades, publishing in collections like Gay Comix,Strip AIDS USA, and Wimmen's Comix. Bocage also created, edited, and contributed comics to Real Girl, a comics anthology published by Fantagraphics.

<i>Birdland</i> (comic) Erotic comic book series

Birdland is a creator-owned erotic comic book limited series created by Gilbert Hernandez. It was first published by Fantagraphics via their Eros Comix imprint between 1990 and 1991. The series features characters from the Love and Rockets series he devised along with his brothers Jaime and Mario but was marketed separately due to its highly explicit sexual content.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Prince of Stories: The Many Worlds of Neil Gaiman. St. Martin's Publishing. 28 October 2008. ISBN   9781429961783.
  2. David, Peter (April 27, 2001). "The CBLDF: Perception vs. reality". The Comics Buyer's Guide #1432. Archived at peterdavid.net.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Critical Vision: Random Essays & Tracts Concerning Sex, Religion, Death. Critical Vision. 1995. ISBN   9780952328803.
  4. Edd Vick (January 15, 1989). "Cherry". Amazing Heroes . No. 157/Preview Special. Fantagraphics Books.
  5. 1 2 3 "Cherry Poptart Returns in Vault Comics Crossover". 23 March 2023.
  6. 1 2 "Don Markstein's Toonopedia: Cherry Poptart".
  7. 1 2 A History of Underground Comics. Ronin. 1993. ISBN   9780914171645.
  8. Edd Vick (August 1, 1989). "Cherry". Amazing Heroes . No. 170/Preview Special 9. Fantagraphics Books.
  9. Edd Vick (January 15, 1989). "Cherry's Pal Ellie Dee in the Land of Woz". Amazing Heroes . No. 157/Preview Special. Fantagraphics Books.
  10. 1 2 3 Comix: The Underground Revolution. Pavilion Books. 29 April 2004. ISBN   9781843401865.
  11. Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books. Univ. Press of Mississippi. 25 March 2013. ISBN   9781628469998.
  12. Press, Ivy (May 8, 2004). #810 HCA New York Comic and Comic Art. Heritage Capital Corporation. ISBN   9780965104180 via Google Books.
  13. Dirty Pictures: How an Underground Network of Nerds, Feminists, Misfits, Geniuses, Bikers, Potheads, Printers, Intellectuals, and Art School Rebels Revolutionized Art and Invented Comix. Abrams. 14 June 2022. ISBN   9781647001100.
  14. "Newsline". Amazing Heroes . No. 184. Fantagraphics Books. October 1990.
  15. "Newsline". Amazing Heroes . No. 184. Fantagraphics Books. November 1990.
  16. Socks, Jason (October 1991). "Perspective – The True North Fights Against Censorship". Amazing Heroes . No. 195. Fantagraphics Books.
  17. "The CBLDF: Perception vs. Reality | Peter David.net".
  18. R.A. Jones (April 15, 1987). "Comics in Review". Amazing Heroes . No. 115. Fantagraphics Books.
  19. Adam-Troy Castro (June 1991). "Infernal Gall". Amazing Heroes . No. 192. Fantagraphics Books.
  20. Frankenhoff, Brent (2011). Comics Buyer's Guide Presents: 100 Sexiest Women in Comics. Krause Publications. p. 52. ISBN   978-1-4402-2988-6.
  21. Andy Mangels (May 1990). "Andy Mangels Backstage". Amazing Heroes . No. 179. Fantagraphics Books.
  22. "FIRST EVER Cherry Action Figures by Larry Welz". 4 January 2022.