And now that I've made this kind of post legal.. :)
Alan Moore is an english comics writer and totally awesome. A lot of his work is either authorised or thinly veiled pastiches of modern superheroes (most famously "Watchmen") but he's also done some great transformative comics. I'm not sure the "
historical RPF" in
From Hell counts (though it is awesome in a disturbing sort of way) but
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen and
Lost Girls certainly do.
I must admit I haven't read "Lost Girls" because, well, I'm just not up for reading porn about some of my favourite childhood characters (Alice, Dorothy, and Wendy). But if you are it's apparently really good :) It's also interesting to note that the (G-rated) online fancomic
Cheshire Crossing came out at around the same time with a very similar premise and characters, apparently independently devised. Scans
here.
Do
not judge "The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" by the terrible, terrible movie. It's fantastically inventive and complex, creating a world populated entirely by (other people's :)) fictional characters. The first two volumes (the only ones I've read) follow a league of victorian heroes (Mina Murray, Captain Nemo, Alan Quartermain, The Invisible Man, and Dr Jekyl) who are charged with the duty of protecting The Empire from various foes, including the martians from War of The Worlds. It both celebrates and deconstructs the tropes and ideas of victorian writing while also being an incredibly entertaining read. Scans
here.