
Our new series for 2015 is drawing to a close! Daily Constitutional editor Adam takes us on a Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London - 20 stops on a metropolis-wide search for all things illustrated.
He'll be taking in everything from Gillray and Hogarth, to Scooby Doo and on to Deadpool and beyond! In addition he'll guide you to the best in London comic book stores as well as galleries that showcase the best in the cartoonist's art.
Alan Moore & Eddie Campbell (1989 - 1996)
The business of telling the Jack the Ripper tale on a nightly basis is no straightforward task. Other London tales sit still, remain constant. Jack is fluid.
Much of the "new" information that comes in on this case with such regularity can be discarded pretty quickly. But when Alan Moore, one of the great storytellers of our age weighs-in, it's time to sit up and take notice.

The problem in giving a critical assessment of this comic book is essentially the same problem as that which Moore himself faced back in 1988 when he first conceived the project: what can be said about this subject that hasn't been said before?
Moore found a new angle on the famous Whitechapel murders by taking an holistic rather than forensic approach - looking at Victorian society from top-to-bottom to better assess the causes of such a barbaric episode in British history.
His greatest achievement is that it's difficult to imagine, in 2015, approaching the case in any other way. From Hell is often held up as the graphic novel that changed the world of illustrated fiction forever. But it is also the analysis that changed the face of this notorious case for all time.
So how to recommend this comic without recourse to those dread words "iconic" and "game-changing"?
The rightly garlanded Mr Moore gives me the perfect opportunity with his annotations to Chapter 4 for From Hell, in which he writes...
"I should take this opportunity to point out that From Hell has, if anything, been more thoroughly researched visually than it has in terms of content."
Chapter Four of From Hell is simply one of the most thrilling things I have ever read on London.
With the case set up, the characters, the social background all in the mix, Moore has Sir William Gull - Physician-in-Ordinary to Queen Victoria - take us on a tour of London - quite literally a guided tour.
In terms of narrative, this is where the plate-spinning job becomes a superhuman effort with Masonic lore, ancient myth, legend, literature and political comment all entering the fray. It's breathless stuff, essentially a monologue from Gull, all hurtling along like a Russell Brand prose poem.
It is as we criss-cross the metropolis that artist Eddie Campbell really comes into his own. His dark, often scratchy style has to this point been employed to perfectly fashion the unspeakable hell of Victorian Whitechapel.
But when Campbell lifts our gaze to the obelisks, columns, spires and domes of the city (particularly in the Nicholas Hawksmoor churches), from Earl's Court to the Isle of Dogs, he combines the eye of a master draughtsman with the showmanship of some operatic ringmaster.

It is the way that Moore and Campbell work together that makes From Hell the landmark work that it is. Both men are riveting storytellers in their fields, with a seemingly innate ability to know when the drama needs reining, and when to use the whip.
(A map to Christ Church Spitalfields)
Last word to Moore who adds in his annotations, with characteristic self-deprecation, the following:
"Suffice to say that any adequate appendix listing Eddie's sources in the way that I am listing mine would be twice as long as this current monstrosity, which in itself looks set to end up twice as long as the work to which it refers."
From Hell is published by Knockabout Comics and you can buy a copy direct from their website here: www.knockabout.com
This is the second-to-last instalment of our Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London - as I noted in the last instalment, I'll be moving all 20 posts on to their own standalone blog and looking in to creating a full cartoon & comic book walking tour for London Walks.
Before the last instalment - on commemorations dedicated to a pair of cartoon legends - I'll be blogging a short piece on the writing and compiling of this series, and posting a list of links so that those who want to can go over the series in order.
Also... our Special Correspondent David Tucker will be joining in the cartoon fun here on the Daily Constitutional soon with a piece on Steve Bell. Thanks for reading.
A London Walk costs £9 - £7 concession. To join a London Walk, simply meet your guide at the designated tube station at the appointed time. Details of all London Walks can be found at www.walks.com











