Downloads — Cerebus

Why one of the most influential indie comics of all time remains both a holy grail and a hot potato in the age of piracy. There is a specific kind of comic fan—usually one with a beard, a longbox full of 1980s independent books, and a complicated relationship with artistic genius—who will tell you that Cerebus the Aardvark is the greatest achievement the medium has ever seen. For 300 issues over 27 years, Dave Sim single-handedly (and later with Gerhard) created a sprawling, satirical, literary epic that began as a Conan the Barbarian parody and evolved into a dense examination of politics, religion, metaphysics, and the nature of storytelling.

Today, we’re diving into the murky waters of Cerebus downloads: the why, the where, the legality, and the ethics of trying to read a 6,000-page magnum opus that the creator himself has very complicated feelings about. Before we talk about downloading, we have to talk about scarcity. If you want to read Watchmen or The Dark Knight Returns digitally, you can click a button on ComiXology (now Kindle) or DC Universe Infinite. It’s easy. It’s legal. It’s frictionless. cerebus downloads

Cerebus is the opposite.