Garth Ennis was born on 16 January 1970 in Northern Ireland and has become one of the most distinctive voices in comics over a career spanning more than three decades. He broke through writing Hellblazer for DC's Vertigo imprint before co-creating Preacher with artist Steve Dillon — a sprawling, darkly comic supernatural Western that remains his most celebrated achievement and drew frequent contributions from artists Glenn Fabry and Carlos Ezquerra. His nine-year tenure on Marvel's Punisher franchise gave that character a grim authority it had rarely possessed before, while The Boys, developed with artist Darick Robertson, offered a caustic, satirical take on superhero culture that later found enormous success as a television adaptation.
100% Marvel : Punisher #2 (2001)
Ennis has shown a consistent loyalty to long-term collaborators: John McCrea partnered with him on Hitman, and Ezquerra worked alongside him on both that title and Preacher. His writing tends toward unflinching moral seriousness beneath its often savage humor, and his body of work — credited across more than a thousand issues, including substantial runs on 2000 AD — reflects a genuine preoccupation with war, conscience, and human frailty. The industry has recognized his output with the UK Comic Art Award, the Comics Buyer's Guide Fan Awards, and four consecutive nominations for the Comics Buyer's Guide Award for Favorite Writer between 1997 and 2000.