William Messner-Loebs
b. 1949
William Messner-Loebs — born William Francis Loebs Jr. on February 19, 1949, in Michigan — built a substantial career in American comics across the 1980s and 1990s, working as both writer and artist for publishers including DC Comics, Image Comics, and Comico. His hyphenated surname reflects a combination of his own name and that of his wife, Nadine.
He is perhaps best recognized for his runs on DC's The Flash and Wonder Woman, two high-profile superhero titles that demonstrated his facility with established characters. Alongside that mainstream work, Messner-Loebs created and produced Journey: The Adventures of Wolverine MacAlistaire, a creator-owned series on which he served as both writer and artist, showcasing a more personal storytelling sensibility distinct from his superhero assignments.
Over a career spanning from 1983 into 2020, he accumulated credits as writer, artist, inker, and letterer across more than 300 issues, with notable contributions also to titles such as Impulse and The Maxx: Maxximized. That breadth of roles across the production process speaks to a craftsman comfortable working at multiple levels of comics creation. His Michigan roots and independent streak remained consistent threads throughout a career that balanced genre work with genuinely original projects.
Full bibliography · 57 series
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