Pulsar wind nebulae are now well established as important probes both of
neutron stars' relativistic winds and of the surrounding interstellar medium.
Amongst this diverse group of objects, pulsar bow shocks have long been
regarded as an oddity, only seen around a handful of rapidly moving neutron
stars. However, recent efforts at optical, radio and X-ray wavelengths have
identified many new pulsar bow shocks, and these results have consequently
motivated renewed theoretical efforts to model these systems. Here I review the
new results and ideas which have emerged on these spectacular systems, and
explain how bow shocks and "Crab-like" nebulae now form a consistent picture
within our understanding of pulsar winds.Comment: 12 pages, 2 embedded EPS figures, 1 GIF figure. Advances in Space
Research, in pres