In addition to self-publishing
Cynicalman, Feazell's work has been published by
Aardvark-Vanaheim,
AC Comics,
Arrow Comics,
Caliber Press,
Fictioneer Books,
Last Gasp,
NBM Publishing,
Eclipse Comics, and
First Comics. Discussing his choice to draw stick figures, he described them as "art (that's) so simple – it verges on
calligraphy," and added that thin characters let him condense more information into panels. He also expressed hope that stick figures would inspire people to draw their own comics, advising, "Don't try to fool people into thinking that you're a great artist. Draw what you want to draw. Discover the comic within you – just draw that." Cynicalman and his supporting cast (including
Antisocialman,
CuteGirl, and
StupidBoy) have been featured in Feazell's minicomics, and in a weekly newspaper strip carried in a few Michigan papers from 1997 to 2002. Some of his work has been collected in paperbacks entitled
Cynicalman, The Paperback (1987, minicomics material),
ERT! Not Available Comics (1995, minicomics), and
The Amazing Cynicalman (the newspaper strip). A weekly color strip, ''Cynicalman, America's Laid-Off Superhero'', ran on
Serializer.net. Feazell has made a graphic novel called
The Death of Antisocialman featuring Antisocialman and multiple characters from the Cynicalman comics. There are 12 chapters in the novel series, all of which are available on Feazell's site. In 2012, Feazell released
The Amazing Cynicalman, a feature-length film he wrote and directed, based on his comics work. == References ==