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Eisner Award for Best Continuing Series
Awarded forBest Editor
CountryUnited States
First award1988
Most recent winnerTransformers by Daniel Warren Johnson
Websitewww.comic-con.org/awards/eisner-awards/

The Eisner Award for Best Continuing Series is an award for "creative achievement" in American comic books. It has been given out every year since 1988.

A title must have had at least two issues published in the previous year to eligible for the award.[1]


Winners and nominees

Year Title Creators Ref.
1990s
1988 Concrete (Dark Horse Comics) Paul Chadwick [2]
The American (Dark Horse Comics) Mark Verheiden, Chris Warner, Art Nichols
Eddy Current (Mad Dog Graphics) Ted McKeever
1989
1989 Kings In Disguise (Kitchen Sink Press) James Vance, Dan Burr [3]
Animal Man (DC Comics) Grant Morrison, Chas Truog, Doug Hazlewood
Excalibur (Marvel Comics) Chris Claremont, Alan Davis, Paul Neary
Maze Agency (Comico) Mike W. Barr, Adam Hughes, Rick Magyar
V for Vendetta (DC Comics) Alan Moore, David Lloyd
1990s
1995 Too Much Coffee Man (Adhesive Comics) Shannon Wheeler [4]
Don Simpson's Bizarre Heroes (Fiasco) Don Simpson
Roarin' Rick's Rare Bit Fiends (King Hell Press) Rick Veitch
S. R. Bissette's Tyrant (Spiderbaby Graphix) Steve Bissette
THB (Horse Press) Paul Pope
1996
1996 Astro City (Jukebox Productions/Image) Kurt Busiek, Brent Anderson [5]
Black Hole (Kitchen Sink Press) Charles Burns
The Book of Ballads and Sagas (Green Man Press) Charles Vess et al.
Optic Nerve (Drawn & Quarterly) Adrian Tomine
Preacher (DC Comics/Vertigo) Garth Ennis, Steve Dillon
Stray Bullets (El Capitan Books) David Lapham
1997 Leave It to Chance (Homage Comics) James Robinson, Paul Smith [6]
Barry Windsor-Smith: Storyteller (Dark Horse Comics) Barry Windsor-Smith
Coventry (Fantagraphics) Bill Willingham
Nowhere (Drawn & Quarterly) Debbie Drechsler
The Wretch (Caliber Comics) Phillip Hester et al.
1998
1998 Castle Waiting (Olio Press) Linda Medley [7]
Lost Stories (Creative Frontiers) John Riley, Garrett Berner, Dave Sharpe
Soulwind (Image Comics) C. Scott Morse
Squee! (Slave Labor Graphics) Johnen Vasquez
A Touch of Silver (Image Comics) Jim Valentino
1999
1999 Age of Bronze (Image Comics) Eric Shanower [8]
Colonia (Colonia Press) Jeff Nicholson
Inhumans (Marvel Comics) Paul Jenkins, Jae Lee
Lenore (Slave Labor Graphics) Roman Dirge
Young Justice (DC Comics) Peter David, Todd Nauck, Lary Stucker

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Notes

References

  1. ^ "2024 Eisner Awards Call for Entries" (PDF). Eisner Awards Comic-Con International. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  2. ^ "1988 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees, Comic Book Awards Almanac".
  3. ^ "1989 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees, Comic Book Awards Almanac".
  4. ^ "1995 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees, Comic Book Awards Almanac".
  5. ^ "1996 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees, Comic Book Awards Almanac".
  6. ^ "1997 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees, Comic Book Awards Almanac".
  7. ^ "1998 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees, Comic Book Awards Almanac".
  8. ^ "1999 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees, Comic Book Awards Almanac".

Category Category:1993 establishments in the United States Category:Annual events in the United States Category:Awards established in 1993 Category:Comics awards