
Eventually Madwimmin Books closed, and some of its laid-off employees went to work at Bounders.

Many of the characters were connected to the city's feminist bookstore, which faced insuperable commercial pressures when Bounders Books and Muzak (a parody of Borders Books and Music) moved in. The strip ran for 25 years the characters aged in real time, and their (unnamed) city changed in ways realistic of many US cities. The Seven Days post states that Bechdel “now draws single strips when inspiration strikes.” Main characters In the strip, the characters reflect on Donald Trump’s presidency and write postcards to the White House for the Ides of the Trump campaign. Bechdel also drew the cover for the November 23–30, 2016 issue of Seven Days, featuring the Dykes to Watch Out For characters having Thanksgiving dinner.

The amount of traffic caused the website to crash. “Pièce de Résistance” was published in Seven Days and on Bechdel's website. The same characters are shown addressing the eight-year gap and responding to the election of Donald Trump. On November 23, 2016, Bechdel broke the strip's hiatus with an episode called “Pièce de Résistance”.

On May 10, 2008, Bechdel announced that she was putting the strip on indefinite hiatus in order to complete her graphic novel memoir Love Life, which was eventually published in 2012 as Are You My Mother?. It introduced the Bechdel test, a set of criteria for determining gender bias in works of entertainment, that has since found broad application. The strip was one of the most successful and longest-running queer comic strips. Characters reacted to contemporary events, including going to the Michigan Womyn's Festival, Gay Pride parades and protest marches, and having heated discussions about day-to-day events, political issues and the way lesbian culture was changing. Īccording to Bechdel, her strip was "half op-ed column and half endless, serialized Victorian novel". The first illustrated book edition was published by Firebrand Books in 1986. The strip was carried in Funny Times and syndicated to a number of gay and lesbian newspapers, and also posted on the web. Overview ĭTWOF chronicled the lives, loves, and politics of a fairly diverse group of characters (most of them lesbians) living in a medium-sized city in the United States, featuring both humorous soap opera storylines and biting topical commentary. The strip, which ran from 1983 to 2008, was one of the earliest ongoing representations of lesbians in popular culture and has been called "as important to new generations of lesbians as landmark novels like Rita Mae Brown's Rubyfruit Jungle (1973) and Lisa Alther's Kinflicks (1976) were to an earlier one".

Alison Bechdel, author of Dykes to Watch Out Forĭykes to Watch Out For (sometimes DTWOF) was a weekly comic strip by Alison Bechdel.
