Comic Books in Finnish Dialects - Greece

Greece

  • O Κόκκορας / The Rooster - 1981, created by Arkas
  • Show Business - 1983, created by Arkas
  • Ξυπνάς Μέσα Μου Το Ζώο / You Bring Out the Animal in Me - 1985, created by Arkas
  • Μετά την καταστροφή / After the Destruction - 1986, created by Arkas
  • Φάε το κερασάκι / Eat the Cherry - 1987, created by Arkas
  • Ο Παντελής Και Το Λιοντάρι / Pantelis and the Lion - 1987, created by Arkas
  • Αταίριαστοι Έρωτες / Ιncongruous Love - 1988, created by Arkas
  • Ο Ισοβίτης / The Lifer - 1988, created by Arkas
  • Χαμηλές Πτήσεις / Flying Starts - 1991, created by Arkas
  • Καστράτο / Castrato - 1995, created by Arkas
  • Πειραματόζωα / Animal Testing - 1998, created by Arkas
  • Ο καλός λύκος / The Big Good Wolf - 1998, created by Arkas
  • Η Ζωή Μετά / The Hereafter - 1999, created by Arkas
  • Οι Συνομήλικοι / Peers, created by Arkas
  • Θηρία Ενήμερα, created by Arkas
  • Το Μικρό και το Μεγάλο / The Small and the Big, created by Arkas
  • Επικίνδυνα Νερά / Dangerous Waters, created by Arkas
  • Blood Opera - 2004, created by Ilias Kyriazis
  • Blockbuster, created by Ilias Kyriazis
  • Turta - 2006, created by Ilias Kyriazis and Tassos Papaioannou
  • Manifesto - 2005, created by Ilias Kyriazis
  • Manifesto 2 - 2009, created by Ilias Kyriazis
  • Μια καρδιά για τον Λεοντόκαρδο / Falling for Lionheart - 2011, created by Ilias Kyriazis
  • Galaxia, created by Manos Lagouvardos
  • Logicomix - 2008, created by Apostolos Doxiades, Christos Papadimitriou, Alekos Papadatos and Annie Di Donna
  • Giant-size Fascists, created by Con
  • Κρακ Κόμικς / Crack Comis, created by Tasos Maragkos
  • Apocalypse Mode On - 2010, created by Giorgos Kampadaes
  • Ύψιλον / Ypsilon - 2004, created by Vasilis Chilas and Thanos Kollias

Read more about this topic:  Comic Books In Finnish Dialects

Famous quotes containing the word greece:

    Tell Greece that her spring has been taken out of her year.
    Herodotus (c. 484–424 B.C.)

    It was modesty that invented the word “philosopher” in Greece and left the magnificent overweening presumption in calling oneself wise to the actors of the spirit—the modesty of such monsters of pride and sovereignty as Pythagoras, as Plato.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    When a man hath no freedom to fight for at home,
    Let him combat for that of his neighbors;
    Let him think of the glories of Greece and of Rome,
    And get knocked on the head for his labors.
    George Gordon Noel Byron (1788–1824)