Difference between revisions of "Peter Milan"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Peter "Tick" Milan''' was a prolific LNH [[Writer]]. His best-known series, ''[[Decibel Dude & Vigilante Guy]]'', to issue #50, with a Christmas special and a four-issue ''[[The Two-Fisted Hard-Drinkin' Manly Adventures of Vigilante Guy|Vigilante Guy]]'' miniseries. He also wrote ''[[LNH-Men: The Silver Age]]'', a sequel to ''[[Golden LNH-Men]]'', and was one of three writers on ''[[Crisis of Infinite Sidekicks]]''. | '''Peter "Tick" Milan''' was a prolific LNH [[Writer]]. His best-known series, ''[[Decibel Dude & Vigilante Guy]]'', to issue #50, with a Christmas special and a four-issue ''[[The Two-Fisted Hard-Drinkin' Manly Adventures of Vigilante Guy|Vigilante Guy]]'' miniseries. He also wrote ''[[LNH-Men: The Silver Age]]'', a sequel to ''[[Golden LNH-Men]]'', and was one of three writers on ''[[Crisis of Infinite Sidekicks]]''. | ||
− | Elsewhere on [[RACC]], he was one of the main writers for the [[Omega]] [[imprint]], with ''RapidFire'' and ''Grim'', and wrote the ''[[LNH vs. Omega]]'' one-shot. In 1995, he won [[RACCies:Favorite Writer]]. | + | Elsewhere on [[RACC]], he was one of the main writers for the [[Omega]] [[imprint]], with ''RapidFire'' and ''Grim'', and wrote the ''[[LNH vs. Omega]]'' one-shot. He provided the initial spark of inspiration for the [[Crossroads]] imprint. In 1995, he won [[RACCies:Favorite Writer]]. |
[[Category:Writers]] | [[Category:Writers]] |
Latest revision as of 22:30, 12 March 2022
Peter "Tick" Milan was a prolific LNH Writer. His best-known series, Decibel Dude & Vigilante Guy, to issue #50, with a Christmas special and a four-issue Vigilante Guy miniseries. He also wrote LNH-Men: The Silver Age, a sequel to Golden LNH-Men, and was one of three writers on Crisis of Infinite Sidekicks.
Elsewhere on RACC, he was one of the main writers for the Omega imprint, with RapidFire and Grim, and wrote the LNH vs. Omega one-shot. He provided the initial spark of inspiration for the Crossroads imprint. In 1995, he won RACCies:Favorite Writer.