April 23 – A Tyler Boss & Matthew Rosenberg Signing Tour

The award-winning power duo Matthew Rosenberg and Tyler Boss—co-creators of What’s The Furthest Place From Here and 4 Kids Walk Into a Bank—are getting back together to headline a national spring signing tour to celebrate the launches of their respective highly-anticipated series, We’re Taking Everyone Down With Us and You’ll Do Bad Things, both launching on March 26. Rosenberg and Boss will hit 31 comic shops in 31 days across the U.S.

Rosenberg and Boss will also be signing limited edition connecting variants with covers by tour poster artist Dylan Burnett (Arcade KingsCosmic Ghost Rider) for We’re Taking Everyone Down With Us #1 and You’ll Do Bad Things #1 that will only be available at the signings and limited to 10 sets per store.

“After years of making comics together, Tyler still doesn’t hate me,” said Rosenberg. “We plan to fix that by locking ourselves in a car together for a month. Come watch it all fall apart.”

“This is going to go well,” said Boss in an attempt at manifesting. “Nothing is going to go horribly, horribly wrong.”

WHO: Matthew Rosenberg and Tyler Boss
WHAT: Book release and signing
WHEN: Wednesday April 27, 5-7pm
WHERE: Floating World Comics, 1223 Lloyd Center

Rosenberg and artist Stefano Landini’s new sci-fi miniseries We’re Taking Everyone Down With Us follows 13-year-old Annalise who’s left all alone in the world after her mad-scientist father is killed by the world’s greatest spy. Now, alongside her dead dad’s robot bodyguard, Annalise has a choice: try to lead a normal life for the first time ever…or seek revenge and maybe overthrow the world order in the process.

In Boss and artist Adriano Turtulici’s new horror miniseries You’ll Do Bad Things, it’s been ten years since the release of He Came in with a Smile, the true crime smash hit that chronicled the brutal murders committed by the Nursery Rhyme Killer. But in the decade since its release, its author Seth Holms hasn’t produced another title. He wants to write a story with a happy ending, but every time his fingers clack across the keyboard it always ends in his character’s death. Worse yet? These tales of blood and barbarity that flow so freely from Seth’s mind are starting to happen in real life.