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By Annie Jonas
Greater Boston is nurturing one of the most dynamic comic book scenes in the region.
While Boston’s comic scene may not match the scale of New York or Los Angeles, it boasts something rarer: deep camaraderie between local shops, fiercely inclusive grassroots events and organizations, and growing recognition as a comics hub.
“The Boston and greater New England comics community is really flourishing,” Zach Clemente, president of the Boston Comic Arts Foundation, said. The nonprofit art advocacy group focuses exclusively on championing comics as an art form worthy of larger recognition and celebration.
The North American comic book market is experiencing a significant period of growth, with projections estimating a rise from $1.36 billion in 2024 to $2.39 billion in 2030, according to a recent report.
This weekend, over 20,000 will attend Anime Boston, an annual three-day convention that celebrates Japanese animation, comics, and more. Later this summer, thousands more will gather for Fan Expo Boston (formerly Boston Comic Con) to celebrate all things comics – featuring celebrity guests like Orlando Bloom and Ewan McGregor, alongside cosplay competitions, fandom shopping, and more.
If the scene was once a scrappy sidekick, it is now confidently stepping into its own main character arc – a kind of coming-of-age tale ready for its next issue.

Comic bookstores are a big part of the scene’s success. These shops aren’t just retail spaces. They’re cultural incubators – safe havens for fans, creators, and newcomers alike.
“It’s a bit of an accidentally well-kept secret, but the comic scene here is really, really good,” Clemente said.
Each shop, from Harvard Square’s The Million Year Picnic (the oldest comic book store in New England) to Comicopia in Kenmore, brings its own flavor. Some specialize in indie or international titles; others embrace superheroes, manga, or graphic novels.
But what sets Boston apart isn’t just the range – it’s the collaboration between stores.
“It’s not so much a competition and much more of a network,” Erin McGrath, a co-founder of Ladies of Comicazi, added. “They really are connected to and supportive of each other. That’s really special.”

McGrath, also known as “The Red Menace” by fellow Ladies for her red hair (“and for being a little bit of a menace, if I’m being honest”), formed the affinity group in the mid-2000s with several women who would frequent the comic book shop Comicazi in Somerville.
At the store and at events (like a muppet trivia night, for example), they shared a love for the medium, but also their frustrations with it – particularly when it came to representing (or, rather, underrepresenting) feminine perspectives.
“We were talking about how feminine perspectives were not focused on very much in comics and in the scene…and we all thought it would be really nice to have a show that focused on women and other folks who were not typically the guest stars at the big shows,” she added.
So, what began as a blog in 2013 became LadiesCon in 2016, and now Cazicon (returning June 1 at Arts at the Armory), with a mission to uplift creators who are women, queer, trans, or people of color.

CaziCon is one of many strides made to amplify underrepresented voices in Boston’s indie comic scene. Cagen Luse, a comic artist who began Comics in Color as a small library meetup in 2018, has watched it grow into a fully-fledged annual festival celebrating and spotlighting stories by and about people of color.
“There’s not great representation of stories by and about people of color in comic book stores generally,” he said. “But independent cons let you find stories you’d never find otherwise.”
Luse likened comic book shops to “mini cons,” where you go to find your people – alongside your next great comic strip.
“The comic book stores were the precursor to what have now become comic book festivals. It’s my theory that we needed a place to collect,” Luse said. “For people who are into comics – or ‘nerds,’ as we were called when it wasn’t a thing that was really mainstream or accepted by the mainstream – comic bookstores were the place that you could go to find your people. I think that they’re an important part of that culture,” he said.
Several interviewees also credit the region’s density of colleges, the grassroots culture, and the diversity of voices for the rich comic book scene.
Clemente sees Boston’s scale as a strategic advantage: “It’s just manageable enough… you have a lot more overlap, more cross-pollination. The infrastructure – stores, events, the people – it all propels the scene forward.”

And it continues to evolve. With the rise of manga, graphic novels, and hybrid literary forms, Boston comic shops have leaned into what’s exciting and inclusive. “They hired people who knew what they were talking about,” said Clemente. “Boston has a lot of stores that knew how to do that and stuck with it.”
Finally, after years of being relegated to the margins of literary legitimacy, comics are getting the rightful recognition they have long-deserved – thanks to the grassroots work by readers, comic book stores, organizations, and cons that make-up Greater Boston.
With more people discovering comics through streaming, libraries, and bookstores, the scene is only expected to grow. But the real engine remains the local shops and collectives, cultivating talent and providing space for stories that challenge norms.

Whether you’re picking up your first comic book, an artist debuting a self-published strip at The Massachusetts Independent Comics Expo (MICE), or an adult rediscovering comics through a book club, Greater Boston’s comic book scene has got you covered.
| Store | Address | Offerings |
|---|---|---|
| Amaya Bros Comics | 357 Cambridge St, Cambridge, MA 02141 | Amaya Bros Comics specializes in Pokémon singles, sports cards and comic books. |
| Book Wonder – Diverse Used Books & Graphic Novels | 330A Boston Ave, Medford, MA 02155 | Book Wonder is a small pop-up inclusive used bookshop in Medford. They offer gently-used graphic novels and books for children, teens and young adults. |
| Comicazi | 407 Highland Ave, Somerville, MA 02144 | Comic shop also offers items such as graphic novels, games and toys, plus events. |
| Comicopia | 464 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, MA 02215 | Niche bookshop for new comics, graphic novels, paperbacks and translated Japanese manga. |
| Comic Stop | 134 Main St, Watertown, MA 02472 | Comic book store offering new and vintage comics, trading card games and other collectibles. |
| Friar Tuck’s Comics & Collectibles | 310 Harvard St 2nd floor, Brookline, MA 02446 | Comic book shop featuring classic and independent comics, along with collectibles and role-playing games. |
| Hub Comics | 19 Bow St, Somerville, MA 02143 | Indie comics shop with a wide selection of graphic novels, plus signings and movie nights. |
| Magic Dragon Comics | 91 Warren St, Arlington, MA 02474 | Quaint collectibles store stocking comic books & graphic novels for all ages in a no-frills setting. |
| Newbury Comics | Multiple locations | Source for music, movies, comics and other pop culture goods, with an emphasis on independent artists. |
| New England Comics | Multiple locations | A local chain of comic book stores offering a wide selection of comic books, graphic novels, toys, and action figures. |
| Omar’s World of Comics | 20 Waltham St, Lexington, MA 02421 | Comic shop stocking graphic novels and related merchandise, and featuring a bistro. |
| The Million Year Picnic | 99 Mt Auburn St, Cambridge, MA 02138 | Long-running comics shop specializing in independent & alternative comic books and graphic novels. |
| The Outer Limits | 437 Moody St, Waltham, MA 02453 | Comic book shop featuring a variety of collectibles, plus toys, and memorabilia. |
| Zenith Comics | 95 Pleasant St, Malden, MA 02148 | Comic book shop featuring a variety of comics and graphic novels, plus toys and action figures. |
Annie Jonas is a Community writer at Boston.com. She was previously a local editor at Patch and a freelancer at the Financial Times.
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