Stray Bullets is an independent American comic bookseries published in black and white by El Capitan Books and Image Comics. It is written and drawn by David Lapham. The story deals with the often criminal and sometimes tragic misadventures of a large cast of characters and takes place from the mid-1970s through the mid-1990s. Published on an irregular basis since 1995, the comic has had close to 100 issues and is a long-time critically-acclaimed series.
Publication history
The first issue was published in 1995 and followed an irregular publishing schedule through its fortieth issue, which was published in 2005. In a 2007 interview with Michael Lorah for the Newsarama website, Lapham revealed that the series, including the final issue of the current story arc, was on hold indefinitely: In 2009, a new ten-page story titled, Stray Bullets: Open the Goddamn Box appeared in , an anthology book published by Dark Horse Comics. In March 2014, Image Comics ended the hiatus of Stray Bullets with the publication of the final issue of the HiJinks and Derring-Do arc, and the simultaneous launch of a new series and arc titled Stray Bullets: Killers. A giant-sized softcover trade paperback edition collecting all forty-one issues of the original series was also released by Image Comics. Killers ran for eight issues throughout 2014. Following a brief hiatus, Lapham returned in early 2015 with another new arc and series titled Stray Bullets: Sunshine & Roses that wrapped with an additional 41 issues in 2019. Lapham plans to continue publishing Stray Bullets in this fashion at Image, with each arc treated as a discrete miniseries. Lapham additionally published two issues of the Amy Racecar Color Special in 1997 and 1998, starring the alter ego of lead character Virginia Applejack.
Collected editions
There has been an assortment of volumes reprinting the original comic books. The first three story arcs in the series were originally collected in large-size hardcovers which were published in a format similar to European albums. Beginning in 2005, the first two of these same story arcs were published in traditional American comic book size softcover edition:
Innocence of Nihilism, collecting Stray Bullets #1–7.
Amy Racecar Volume 1 was also released in 2002. The volume collects the Stray Bullets issues featuring Amy Racecar as well as both issues of Amy Racecar Color Special.
Awards
The series has been nominated for numerous awards. Stray Bullets won the 1996 Eisner Award for Best Writer/Artist, Drama, and the trade paperback collection Stray Bullets: Innocence of Nihilism won the 1997 Eisner Award for "Best Graphic Album-Reprint" the Comic Book Awards Almanac and was a top votegetter for the Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Award for Favorite Reprint Graphic Novel/Album for the same year.