Issue 1
Gangland (1998-) #1
In 'Clean House' (written by Brian Azzarello and painted by Tim Bradstreet), a mob informant's new life takes a deadly twist. In 'The Bear' (written and illustrated by Dave Gibbons), white snow runs red as old scores are settled in New Russia. In 'Your Special Day' (written by Doselle Young with art by Frank Quitely), a lonely hit man stages a suicidal hit at the wedding of a mob boss's daughter. And in 'Chains' (written and painted by Peter Kuper), a line of white powder links lives—and fates—from the Golden Triangle to the Big Apple.
Issue 2
Gangland (1998-) #2
In 'Platinum Nights' (written by Lucius Shepard and illustrated by James Romberger), a gangbanger embarks on a wild and dangerous Big Apple spending spree. In 'Big Shot' (written by Jamie Delano and illustrated by Randy DuBurke), a captain of industry revisits his brutal rise to power and braces for his own lieutenant's power move. And in 'Killer Smile' (written by Simon Revelstroke and illustrated by Richard Corben), a mobster revisits his Hell's Kitchen stomping grounds for a fateful encounter with his childhood pal.
Issue 3
Gangland (1998-) #3
In 'Gang Buff' (by Darko Macan and Kilian Plunkett), a thrill-seeking dentist takes a walk on the wild side with a band of bootleggers. In 'Worldwide Gangster Robots From Outer Space' (by Scott Cunningham and Danijel Zezelj), a homeless man plagued by strange visions seeks to save the world from a crew of extraterrestrial thugs. In 'Small Time' (by Ed Brubaker and Eric Shanower), a gang of suburban kids devises a fool-proof get-rich-quick scheme. And in 'Original Gangster' (by Tayyar Ozkan), a clan of prehistoric brutes is trapped in an endless cycle of violence.
Issue 4
Gangland (1998-) #4
In writer/artist David Lloyd's 'The Big Snooze,' a mutt with a nose for trouble takes a bite out of crime—literally. In 'The Initiation' (written by Joe R. Lansdale and Rick Klaw, with art by Tony Salmons), a trio of teens faces their biggest fears outside the local convenience store. And in 'Electric Chinese Death' (written by Richard Bruning, with art by Mark Chiarello), a pair of mob enforcers wanders into the wrong part of Chinatown.