Cover - \"Saint Julie\" - Simon Bisley
p.03 - \"Letters To The Editor\"
p.05-10 - \"Gallery: Justice Howard\"
p.12-13 - \"Dossier: Peering Into Distant Corners\" - S. C. Ringgenberg
p.16 - \"The Trend\" - Meredith Bogard
p.16 - \"Theatre Of Tragedy\"
p.18-19 - \"Galactic Geographic: The Strangest Outpost\" - Karl Kofoed
p.20-27 - \"The Longest Pleasure\" - C. J. Henderson, Langden Foss,
and Vision Comics
p.30-35, 101-120 - \"Sha: Soul Vengeance\" - Pat Mills and Oliver Ledroit
p.58-61 - \"Wildflower: Through Desert Plains\" - Milly Martinez
p.63-69 - \"Wake Of The Tyra Li\" - Eddie Wilson
p.72-77 - \"The Mailman\" - Carlos Trillo and Domingo Mandrafina
p.79-92 - \"The Swamp Monster Strikes Again\" - Eduardo Risso
p.96-99 - \"The Daily News\" - Daspastoras
Features in This Issue
Gallery on Justice Howard
The Final Graphic Novel In The "Sha" Series!
The Longest Pleasure
Sha-Soul Vengeance
About Heavy Metal
Don Donahue (1942 - October 27, 2010) was a comic book publisher, operating under the name Apex Novelties, one of the instigators of the underground comix movement in the 1960s.
In San Francisco in 1968, Donahue traded his hi-fi tape player to poet Charles Plymell to publish the first issue of Robert Crumb's Zap Comix on his printing press. Donahue later purchased the equipment and founded Apex Novelties, which published numerous influential comics from that movement, including work by S. Clay Wilson, Kim Deitch, Shary Flenniken, Justin Green, Bill Griffiths, Spain Rodriguez, Gilbert Shelton, Art Spiegelman. He was known for publishing material by radicals, including the Symbionese Liberation Army (best known for kidnapping Patty Hearst).
The partner of cartoonist Dori Seda, he inherited the rights to her work following her death at the age of 37, and published Dori Stories, a compilation of her comics.
Donahue died of cancer on October 27, 2010.