Tuesday, May 22

Review: The Last Days of Animal Man #2

June 29th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

The Last Days of Animal Man #2

Written by Gerry Conway

Pencils by Chris Batista

Inks by Dave Meikis

Cover Art by Brian Bolland

DC Comics

My comics tastes tend toward the offbeat and that’s what made me curious about The Last Days of Animal Man. It’s a pretty odd title and the Brian Bolland covers are really eye-popping.

The cover to Issue One has Animal Man and a pack of various animals running toward the reader, all as skeletons, which is a tribute to the first run of Animal Man in the same pose with the same animals. Issue Two has Animal Man suspended in midair as a Green Lantern whale keeps him aloft with a powerful green light beam. Bolland’s art has graced quite a number of Animal Man covers over the years and so it makes sense for him to be around for this six issue limited run. It also makes sense to have Gerry Conway killing off Animal Man since he’s the guy who killed off Gwen Stacy, Peter Parker’s famous first love. That alone makes it interesting to me but this isn’t the offbeat read I had expected.

Animal Man began with a few appearances in Strange Adventures in the ’60s and never took off until, twenty years later, Grant Morrison turned him into something cool and experimental. Buddy Baker was no longer just some guy who finds himself with super powers after a fateful encounter with an alien. With Morrison, the whole language of comics is explored with Buddy Baker speaking back to the reader as well as Morrison. Animal Man was offbeat and unconventional and found a home with Vertigo but, after being passed along to different writers, the trend has been to make Animal Man less weird and more a superhero which this current run conforms to.

It’s not a bad little story so far. It’s one of those fantasy segments with events twenty years or so into the future. Buddy Baker and his lovely wife, Ellen, still live in San Diego, which has undergone a rebirth after suffering a Katrina-like deadly storm. Buddy is starting to feel his age and is struggling with a mid-life crisis that only gets worse each time he’s called upon to use his super powers which continue to fail him. Ellen sells time shares instead of being an artist. The kids have left home. Life is a bit boring. Buddy and Ellen maintain a sunny California youthful look but that is little consolation. Not even Botox can smooth away the pain.

The domestic troubles seem more a hint at what Animal Man used to explore more fully in its heyday. Issue Two, with its Green Lantern tie-in, really makes no bones about the fact Animal Man is being marched out for review as a standard-issue superhero. The Green Lantern sequence is fun with the whale’s charming salutation, “Friend, of my friends.” The other workhorse in this issue goes back to Animal Man’s archrival, Mirror Master. Twenty years have passed, long enough for Mirror Master’s daughter to be all grown up and ready to kick some ass in her brand spanking new identity as Prismatik.

Towards the end of the issue, Animal Man finds a way to get his mojo back and, in a fight scene with the formidable Prismatik, is close to killng her until the Justice League descends upon him. Apparently, Superman, The Flash, Power Girl, and all the rest, need to have a talk with Animal Man. He is a standard-issue superhero and he better not forget that.

 
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Review: Pope Hats #1

June 23rd, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Pope Hats #1

Written and Drawn by Ethan Rilly

32 pages, 6″ x 9″, $4 US

Distributed by AdHouse Books

Everybody wants to rule the world. The characters in Ethan Rilly’s Pope Hats would love to rule over their own lives. We’re invited to see them try.

Don’t let it ever be said that there isn’t room for another comic about whining aimless youth. Meet Franny and Vickie. Two friends who have recently decided to share a house and who seem at their best when they’re not doing much of anything outside of witty remarks. The opening scene finds the two inside a KFC as Vickie eats and Franny observes, “I’m convinced that I spend an outrageous portion of my life watching you eat.” The conversations and the art work are executed with crisp panache. The thin brush lines go well with the dry wit similar in spirit to the work of Gabrielle Bell.

As the night progresses, we are privy to a callow conversation between the girls and a couple of boys, Louis and Peter. It is Vickie’s hope to get to know Peter better. Instead, Vickie gets wasted, has to leave the bar, and pukes in an alley. She is the aspiring actress and eveything must be dramatic for her. She steadies herself a little as she announces she will continue to vomit in a Boston accent. Franny is the more responsible one. She’s a legal assistant and doesn’t seem to have any interests outside of work.

They tell you in art school to create something that you are compelled to do. Anyone can draw a scene with a couple of girls chatting and maybe throw in a few other devices. Someone who is compelled to say something is going to take it further. That’s what Ethan Rilly is doing. I can sense a driving force at work. After all the cute banter, we find the spotlight falling on Franny as she discovers Vickie has wandered off in search of a boy or a hot dog in the middle of the night. Once alone, Franny begins talking to a cartoon ghost she’s spoken with before. The dialogue is funny but it can also be read as a meditation on loneliness.

Who is Frances Scarland? We know she’s what keeps Vickie together. We know she’s loyal to her job, she’s pretty mild-mannered, and she talks to a ghost. Maybe that’s more than enough for a girl of 23 or so. Maybe it’s a perfect picture of someone young who is trying to cope with an uncertain future, just a few steps away from the nearest Zoloft.

After a one page interlude depicting an old man cleaning out his yard, the last section of the book is an extended monologue of Franny talking about, what else, ghosts. Maybe this is Franny at that party she was racing on her bicycle to get to from the feature story. She had just had what she hoped would be her final talk with her cartoon ghost.

 
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Mysterius The Unfathomable Says Goodbye For Now

June 21st, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Did you give Mysterius the Unfathomable a try during its DC Comics WildStorm six issue run? After reading the last issue of the series, out last week, I’m as big a fan as when I started and I can only hope that this is not the last we see of the magician/mystic/detective and his lovely assistant, Delfi.

Created by the team of writer Jeff Parker (Agents of Atlas) and artist Tom Fowler (Mad Magazine), this series says goobye for now. A lot has been said about the quality of this series to which I add that this is one you’ll want to read more of once you let yourself inside this fully realized world of quirky supernatural goodness.

It’s in the last couple of issues that things come to head between Mysterius and Delfi. With their lives in mortal danger, Delfi lashes out at her boss for being so selfish as to allow them both to get into such a mess. Just when he needs her the most, she abandons him. Of course, Mysterius does not realize how badly he’s behaved or how badly he needs Delfi. In the end, they both may need each other far more than they could ever admit.

And that is at the heart of this story. Nevermind, for a moment, the witches, the zombies, and the pits of hell that also make up the plot. Basically, this is a buddy story. Mysterius may seem to be a dapper yet bumbling middle-aged man with a pot belly. But, when he’s teamed up with the right assistant (this time it would be Ella Tamblyn aka Delfi) he has a better than even chance at summoning his formidable magical powers. It also helps if he can somehow make a human connection with his Delfi and, despite himself, he just might be able to inspire her to help him. Some pretty successful comics titles are based on much less. The foundation is in place for this series to come back with a bang and I would prefer it to be sooner than later. Check out the Word Balloon interview with Jeff Parker where he says he’d love to pursue more Mysterius comics and would definitely see a possible TV show. His first choice for an actor to play Mysterius would be Geoffrey Rush. I still see Bill Murray as a contender but I can see why Rush would fit right in.

Thanks to the artistry of Tom Fowler and colorist Dave McCaig, all hell can break loose spectacularly in this final issue. Human (and nonhuman) excess runs amok in this satire of Burning Man which is worthy of the best Mad Magazine parody. Much has been said about the European look of this comic. I would go ahead and say it is a European style, both in the writing and art, which is made up of elegant detail, delicate exaggeration, and overall irreverence. Most of these characters are mercilessly drawn with more than a little junk in the trunk. Things are played up for laughs and it works quite well here even when depicting minions from hell battling zombies. Americans can sometimes take things too seriously, including minions from hell and zombies.

Understandably, Mysterius the Unfathomable is a special taste, sort of like Seaguy, but easily accessible. Once you get the collected trade to this year’s best kept secret in comics, you’ll see what the fuss is about and you’ll enjoy lingering over it. Here’s a sample of a nice added touch of spookiness. Delfi and Mysterius are en route to see a client when Delfi thinks she sees something strange:

Delfi: Wait–No…How did he turn the other way so quick? Look here, bird!

Mysterius: You…can’t see his face?

(pause)

Mysterius: Did that bird not have a face?

Delfi: Well, I’m sure it did, I just couldn’t see it. No big deal, sorry to stop everything. I just do that.

Mysterius: No, it is a big deal if it was a portent. Faceless bird…

Delfi: Can’t a portent be for something good?

Mysterius: Almost never.

Towards the end of this story, just when everyone should be resting easy in a comfy epilogue, off in a corner, there it is again, that bird without a face. What a cool and eerie way to say that Mysterius remains at your service.

 
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Review: Scarlett Takes Manhattan

June 11th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Scarlett Takes Manhattan

by Molly Crabapple and John Leavitt

48 pages, trade paperback, $12.95 US

Published by Fugu Press

Due out in July, Pre-Order thru Amazon

Sweet and naughty, Scarlett Takes Manhattan is an assured sexy romp through Victorian New York with the beautiful Scarlett on a journey of self-discovery. Warren Ellis calls it, “disgustingly wonderful.” Coming from the creator of some pretty sexy stuff, like Anna Mercury, you have to wonder what he means. Well, this book is absolutely erotically charged and delightfully so. Molly Crabapple has a deep love for her subject matter, vaudeville, erotica, comics, and it shows. Her evolution as an artist, with her illustration work and with Dr. Sketchy’s Anti-Art School Cabaret, leads her to a successful first graphic novel. 

Two glasses of cocktails with cherries looking very much like boobs on page one prepares us for what lies ahead. We next find Scarlett in bed with her lover as she tells the story of her life. It all begins quite innocently enough as a girl from the slums, Shifra Helfgott, eighteen and sexually curious, goes to the city to see a circus parade. She witnesses two elephants copulating which foretells her life’s path mixing sex with show business.

This is the 1880s and so opportunities are slim to none for Shifra, poor, uneducated and orphaned. As a charwoman, she learns that providing sexual favors can help ease her life. It’s then that she crosses paths with theatre impressario, Daniel D’Lovely. She discovers her sexual appeal on stage and Daniel’s secret once they become lovers. In time, she realizes she’ll need to develop a talent in order to remain relevant in vaudeville. This leads to her becoming the star fire-eater, Scarlett O’Herring. 

Shifra’s transformation into Scarlett is handled with sensitivity. As the character gains more control over her life, she becomes more complex as well as more conniving. She reahes a point where she must choose between her friends and betraying them for even greater power and wealth. Here is where the story tackles a little politics and gives us a taste of the corruption of the times with a hint at how little has changed. We also further explore the unique relationship between Daniel and Scarlett and whether they can remain loyal to each other no matter how their lives evolve.

In the end, Scarlett Takes Manhattan maintains a nice head of steam. Nothing too heavy here. What is remarkable is Molly Crabapple’s approach. Considering how sex is portrayed in comics, let alone all media, it is refreshing how Crabapple maintains our interest by celebrating sex rather than exploiting it. What else would you expect from a cartoonist who appreciates toasted marshmallow milkshakes?

 
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Barron Storey retrospective at the Society of Illustrators

June 8th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Maybe his illustration for the cover to The Lord of the Flies is permanently etched in your memory. Or perhaps you know him from his work with Neil Gaiman in The Sandman: Endless Nights. Barron Storey has been around for quite awhile creating amazing art and now it’s time for a retrospective.

Life After Black: The Visual Journals of Barron Storey is on display at the Museum of American Illustration at the Society of Illustrators. Covering a span of 30 years, the exhibit covers a selection of Storey’s 143 journals. The show runs from June 10 through July 31, 2009.

These journals provide a unique opportunity to see original work from a graphic narrative unfolding over many years. As Barron Storey puts it, “I do them for me but they are for you too. It’s the illustrator in me. They’ve been seen by a lot of people in my travels, but never like this.”

Barron Storey will be in attendance on June 12 for the opening reception. And he will deliver a lecture at the Society of Illustrators on June 16 at 6:30pm. In conjunction with the exhibit the Society has partnered with Materials For The Arts to provide journal making workshops on June 8 and June 15.

This exhibit features original art and journals as seen in the book, Life After Black and The Marat/Sade Journals. Work from “Despair” in The Sandman: Endless Nights will also be on display.

Barron Storey’s work has appeared in Time, National Geographic, The Saturday Review and his work is permanently on display at the National Air and Space Museum, The American Museum of Natural History and the National Portrait Gallery. He continues to inspire others as an illustrator, graphic novelist and noted educator. His work has influenced many artists in comics including Bill Sinkiewicz and Dave McKean.

 

 
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Review: Ghost Comics

June 8th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Ghost Comics

An anthology edited by Ed Choy Moorman

176 pages, 6″ x 9″, $10 US

www.edsdeadbody.com

There is so much good stuff emerging from the MoCCA Comics Arts Festival and here is one fine example: Ghost Comics, an anthology to benefit RS Eden, an agency for changing lives in Minnesota. Put together by Ed Choy Moorman, this book recently won a Xeric Grant.

One standout is Evan Palmer’s story, “The Trials of Sir Goodnight.” The sharp clean lines and details are very impressive, especially the panel that cuts to the severed head of the beast. The anthology bio section mentions that Palmer does background drawings for Vertigo‘s The Unwritten. What a cool gig for a recent art school grad!

Another must-see is Kevin Cannon’s “The Architecturons” which is, you guessed it, a parody of The Transformers made up to be super-powered architecture. This is the one piece that stretches the ghost theme to the most absurd level.

If I were to do a ghost theme comic, I’d go with something about ghosts from our former selves. Some contributors agree such as Lucy Knisley’s “Unlearning Curve” where she looks back on life in her teens. It’s a nice piece by the creator of the celebrated, French Milk. I also liked Will Dinski’s “Mind-Mapping” which follows the struggles of a man haunted by the ghosts of past mistakes and mishaps.

A couple of melancholy pieces that work well include Jeffrey Brown’s “Great Ghosts.” His page is a nice example of what he does best: showing how awkward and disconnected we can be when that’s the last thing we really want to be. Ed Choy Moorman’s “Dear Dave” is on a similar track complete with playlist.

And then there are a couple that really spooked me. One is John Hankiewicz’s “The  Offering” which you’ve got to read over until you’re ready to move on. Set in a church just off the highway, a young man peers at a very strange ritual throughout the night.

The other particularly eerie tale is Hob’s “The Witness” which might make a beautiful answer to whatever happened to Winsor McCay’s Gertie, the Dinosaur. It is certainly full of that type of wonderment. For fans of Hob, this finds him in true form.

And props to Allegra Lockstadt for such an awesome cover illustration.

 

 
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Review: Woman King

June 8th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Woman King

Written and Drawn by Colleen Frakes

88 pages, 5.5″ x 5.5″, $7 US

www.iknowjoekimpel.com

www.tragicrelief.blogspot.com

Here is a quintessential comic from MoCCA making its debut this year: Colleen Frake’s Woman King, a continuation on her take on fables and myth. Since her Xeric winning Tragic Relief, her work has gotten sharper and the scope of her storytelling keeps getting more complex. A recent graduate of the Center for Cartoon Studies, Frakes finds herself coming into her own with Woman King giving us a distinctive style and vision.

This is a hero myth turned on its head about the nature of war. In the middle of this is a girl being raised by wild bears. The bears are depicted as normally fun-loving gentle creatures who are led by one bear to rid the forest of abusive humans. Well, all humans, actually, except for the girl.

There is a fascinating internal logic at play in Woman King. The bear leader’s message is kill or be killed. The girl, a sort of Patty Hearst among terrorist bears, is becoming wiser to her surroundings, finding evidence that the bears are no better than the humans, but her sympathies remain with the bears. In one sense, I am intrigued mostly by the relentless telling of this tale. The characters are so vividly rendered and the pacing is spot on. But, to be sure, there is a satisfying ending to this thoughtful little tale.

 
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Review: SelfMadeHero’s The Hound of the Baskervilles

June 1st, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

The Hound of the Baskervilles

Adapted by Ian Edginton, Illustrated by I.N.J. Culbard

144 pages, Full color, published by SelfMadeHero

I’ve done some sleuthing and have found the graphic novel to enjoy amid the hightened interest in Sherlock Holmes generated by two upcoming major motion pictures. That book is SelfMadeHero‘s  The Hound of the Baskervilles. Check out their whole line up of classics including Manga Shakespeare!

It shouldn’t matter but I love the fact that the offices of SelfMadeHero are just a few doors down from where the original author of Sherlock Holmes, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, lived and worked. That close proximity must have added to the drive to create something special and these guys have done it.

This is no cut and paste transfer from prose novel to graphic novel. Instead, it is in tune with the comics medium. Holmes is a dynamic presence with a prominent cartoony chin and without the deerstalker cap and calabash pipe. Watson is also his own man in comics with wavy hair and a smart rugged mug.

I.N.J. Culbard’s art brings every character to life with his well placed brush strokes. An expressive mark across the face, from brow to cheekbone, is his trademark. The comics have a spare quality combined with a nice eye for essential details. The living quarters of Holmes and Watson set the tone for the book which is grounded in solid layouts and interesting textures.

Edginton does a beautiful job of reworking the prose novel’s many nuanced observations. In the original novel, for instance, Watson can linger upon how the foggy moor is far more suitable for prehistoric rather than modern people. A well-crafted sentence and image, in the graphic novel, does well to replace the prose novel’s longer digression.

Together, Culbard and Edginton give us a true comics adaptation of this famous murder mystery surrounding a phantom creature in the Devonshire moor. It is a wonderful tribute to a book that was a Harry Potter sensation in its day. When it first came out in 1901 as a serialized story in The Strand Magazine, long lines awaited each installment. And more than just a tribute, this graphic novel is a cool and fun read too.

 

 
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Review: Old Man Winter and Other Sordid Tales

May 19th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Old Man Winter and Other Sordid Tales

Written and Drawn by J. T. Yost

56 pages, 6 5/8″ x 10 1/4″, $6.95 US

www.birdcagebottombooks.com

An old man in the inner city living a lonely and desolate existence not much removed from the young people he tries to befriend is the lumpy little frame that J.T. Yost hangs his social commentary on. The old man, quite an unlikely hero, is up to the task and shines with humor and character in this Xeric Grant winning comics collection, Old Man Winter and Other Sordid Tales.

Yost states that the old man character is loosely based on a customer who frequents the art supply store where he works. Having worked in an art supply store myself (mandatory or inevitable for many an artist), I appreciate the details and cadences captured here: the monotony and need to create stories out of anything around you.

Within just a few panels, Yost brings to life a little drama taking place in the space of a couple of neighborhood blocks. Down to the pigeons and flies lingering over a garbage bag, a perfect gritty tale is told. A new tale that sets the tone for other previously published works.

“Old Man Winter”  leads you to “All is Forgiven,” a tale about the abuses of lab animals. A bit heavy-handed for some and probably spot-on for just as many, the actual story and execution is credible. The same can be said for a story about the darker side of circus life which has solid design sense. “Roadtrip,” a tale about the abuses of the meat industry, proves disturbing but it is also a masterful interplay of the story of a girl and the fate of a cow.

“Logging Sanjay” is the other story in this book based directly from life. As the title suggests, someone is the victim of something. Set in rural Georgia, this is a confessional of sorts about two teens who repeatedly torment another teen they call their friend. The character development is engaging. Yost has a way with bringing out the more animalistic qualities of humans that is very effective.

If there is one message Yost would want to make clear it is that we humans are more like animals than we’d care to admit. For more on J.T. Yost, please read on to my interview here at Newsarama.  

 
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Blog@Q&A: J.T. Yost

May 19th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

J.T. Yost recently won a Xeric Grant for his book, Old Man Winter and Other Sordid Tales. He is an emerging talent with a lot to say. For those of you interested in how one cartoonist on the rise, out in Brooklyn, keeps it together, read on.

Blog@Newsarama: I appreciate all the stories in your collection. Each is different, created at different times, but part of a whole as it came together for this book. Your vision appears to be to look at life head-on and expose the truth. Is that the voice you intended for your book?

J.T. Yost: With the exception of “Old Man Winter”, all of these stories were created within a framework of “rules”. For instance, “All Is Forgiven…” was for an anthology called BIZMAR. Each story had to include six familiar icons of comics: Bunny, Insect, Zombie, Monkey, Alien and Robot. I had an idea of what most of the stories submitted would be like, so I wanted to do something diametrically opposed. I worked the icons in subtly so that it could work as a stand-alone comic, and since I knew most of the subject matter would be humorous I attempted something more serious.

Animal welfare and vegetarian/veganism is extremely important in my life. I’m not a very confrontational person, so I use comics to convey what I believe to be an important message. Critics have faulted me for including so many comics dealing with these issues in one collection, but I believe I approached each in such a different manner that it doesn’t detract from their impact.

I spend a lot of time researching factory farm conditions, slaughterhouse practices and other facets of meat processing, and although I am surely biased I do try to present a truth that some may not be aware of. I have been accused of lacking subtley, and I suppose I am guilty to an extent. That’s actually something I’m working on in current comics. It’s difficult to present these horrible truths so close to my heart without coming across as preachy. (more…)

 
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Preview: Pop Gun War: Chain Letter

May 12th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Here is a quick run-down on the latest about the new Pop Gun War. Emily is somewhere on tour with her rock band and is staying at some seedy Motel in the middle of nowhere. She slams the door on a nosy mailman and that seems to set off a chain of events. Like Alice in Wonderland, she gets propelled down a portal to another world full of dark mysterious figures. (more…)

 
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Blog@ Q&A: Farel Dalrymple

May 12th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Farel Dalrymple’s art is art you can love. It takes you to a good place where artist rankings and hipster factors don’t matter. This is just plain good stuff. I had a chance to chat with Farel at the Stumptown Comics Festival and this interview resulted. The man sure gets around and despite any modesty on his part, he is a drawing machine. Check out his LiveJournal. It says it all.

Farel Dalrymple is well known for his on-going comics series, Pop Gun War, published by Dark Horse Comics. He is the founder of the influential Meathaus collective and the winner of a Xeric Grant and Society of Illustrators Gold Medal. This year he is nominated for a couple of Eisner Awards for his collaboration with writer Johnathan Lethem on the Marvel Comics 10-issue series, Omega the Unknown. Currently, he is at work on The Wrenchies. This 250-page, full-color comic is a postapocalyptic fantasy that takes place 3,500 years in the future, featuring a group of street children called “The Bolts.” It is due out in 2010 by First Second. (more…)

 
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Review: Star Trek

May 11th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Star Trek has legs. It has heart. And, oh yeah, it has balls. What J. J. Abrams manages to accomplish is the Star Trek we’ve always wanted to see. Talk about the fans all you want, but we’re all Trekkers now.

Anyone who still wants to pretend not to know how to form a Vulcan hand greeting is the real nerd. We’ve gotten way past that. We even have a United States Space Shuttle named after The Enterprise so we moved on a long time ago. It’s become part of us and Abrams knows this. He knows we’d all love to see Spock and Kirk on a wicked adventure and he delivers.

The timing was off for the first Star Trek movie. It couldn’t compete with the memory of Star Wars that it had hoped to exploit. It was as if the movie was still, in its own oddball way, as ahead of its time as the original TV show. This time though, Abrams is behind the controls with all his fast paced high energy and his writing team of Roberto Orci and Alex Kurtzman (Transformers, Fringe). 

A bit into the movie, we get our first wish fulfillment with a scene of a tween Kirk who has taken his dad’s Mustang for a spin out in the open roads of futuristic Iowa and nearly drives himself over a cliff during a high speed chase with a robocop. All this while we hear “Sabotage” by the Beastie Boys in the background. It’s the first sign that we’ve finally gotten a Star Trek on a much higher level.

Zachary Quinto, as Spock, and Chris Pine, as James T. Kirk, by their very presence, take the movie into warp speed. They have us at hello, live long and prosper. It makes their take on any old Star Trek relic all the more engaging. When Spock must use the Vulcan nerve pinch to knock out Kirk, we laugh not at Quinto but with him for doing it so cool. The same can be said for all the other pivitol characters with a special focus on some backstory about Bones. And then there’s Uhura who becomes entangled in more than one must-see scene. You even have Leonard Nimoy providing more than a cameo. 

We also have the visual effects led by George Lucas’s ILM this time out completing the transformation to a far more robust Star Trek. But, it’s those quieter moments that really add something. The lush cinematography of Dan Mindel (Mission: Impossible III) frames the characters artfully and hints at how much farther this movie could go beyond the built-in constraints of a franchise. The design of the film, led by Ryan Church, holds the whole thing together reminiscent of 2001: A Space Odyssey and Titanic.  

This Star Trek enjoys massive resources from Paramount Pictures. It was meant to be the ultimate reboot, visually and artistically as possible. If Abrams thought you really wanted a more art house version of Star Trek, he’d have found a way. But he seems to have worked it out for the best possible result and gotten to the heart of the matter which is a story about characters, friendship and idealism.   

 
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Sherlock Holmes Mystery Solved

May 7th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

A Sherlock Holmes mystery is solved. There’s been a lot of buzz over a reported graphic novel attached to the upcoming Sherlock Holmes movie starring Robert Downey Jr. As reported by USA Today, May 6, 2009, one of the movie’s producers,  Lionel Wigram, wrote a graphic novel and had an artist depict Sherlock Holmes in comic book form in order to help sell the project to studios.

The artist hired to do the pitch is John Watkiss and it wasn’t a graphic novel but a series of illustrations. An artist representative described the process: “As I understand it, John was contacted a few years back by Lionel Wigram in order to put together a similar series of pitch images for the Sherlock Holmes film, based on Wigram’s story treatment at that point. What followed were 14 amazing, large-scale black-and-white illustrations, which Wigram brought to a variety of production companies and Warner Brothers. Wigram credits John’s images as being the leverage that ultimately resulted in the film getting made.”

John Watkiss is a notable artist with a long history of doing film work, having worked extensively on Disney’s Tarzan, Atlantis, and Treasure Planet, storyboarding the entirety of Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow and an impressive series of paintings for a proposed trilogy of films of Neil Gaiman’s Sandman.

And there you have it, the image that turned the tide in favor of Sherlock Holmes with studio executives: the sword and nunchuck toting Holmes. And, along with that, another concept shot in the boxing ring. It certainly looks like the start of a successful graphic novel. I definitely support the idea of turning these illustrations into a book.

 
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Sherlock Holmes: and a graphic novel will lead the way.

May 7th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

It has become a sought after book but the graphic novel which the upcoming Robert Downey Jr. Sherlock Holmes movie is based upon remains unpublished. Written by the film’s producer, Lionel Wigram, to help promote the viability of the project, it seems that this book was never meant for the general public. This is not to be mistaken with the current Sherlock Holmes comics series by Dynamite Entertainment. And, of course, this movie is not to be mistaken with the Sacha Cohen/Will Ferrell version.

And the money shot in the comic book that wowed investors? Sherlock looking all bed head and wielding a sword in one hand and a whip in the other. 

Director/writer Guy Ritchie, Robert Downey, Jr. and the rest of the cast, which includes Jude Law, Rachel McAdams and Mark Strong, all appear to be on top of their game. There’s been a lot of buzz about this one and that will just keep humming along with the first trailer for the general public to be released to accompany Terminator Salvation when it opens May 21. 

Set for a Christmas Day release, this movie promises to give the viewer a rough and tumble Sherlock Holmes more true to the original than what the casual observer may imagine. You’ll see a Sherlock Holmes who is handy with a sword and knows his boxing and martial arts. You’ll also get a pretty sweet mystery involving a sinister occultist. And lots of manly swagger between Holmes and his buff compatriot, Watson. These two mean to kick some ass.   

USA Today provides a feature story about the latest developments. Go to their site to see more photos. Now, the question remains, who will win over audiences and go on to become a franchise? Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes or the Sacha Cohen/Will Ferrell flick? Well, the one with Cohen and Ferrell sounds like it’s going to be really offbeat much like the one with Gene Wilder in the ’70s, The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother. It might be good but it will be too offbeat and a franchise like this can’t pull any punches. You want badass action for something like this, right? And, if you have to take sides, how can you pass up the guy who made Iron Man hip?  

Also, if you’re in a position to do so, someone snag me a copy of the Lionel Wigram Sherlock Holmes graphic novel. Then again, who knows, it may not have been intended to be more than a glorified storyboard but it could end being published and available everywhere for the holidays.

 
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Review: I Still Live: Biography of a Spiritualist

May 4th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

I Still Live: Biography of a Spiritualist

Written and Drawn by Annie Murphy

60 pages, 7 1/4″ x 8 3/4″, go online for price

ghostcatcomics.com

One of the highlights of my recent trip to the Stumptown Comics Festival was a chance to meet Annie Murphy, creator of the graphic novella, I Still Live: Biography of a Spiritualist. She has an easygoing quality about her that is reflected in her book where she smoothly maps out for us a world we don’t see enough of in comics.

As a prominent leader of the Spiritualist Movement, Ascha Sprague was one of the best known women in America in the 1850s. Her headstone defiantly reads, “I Still Live.” Taking inspiration from this, Annie Murphy has created a book named by The Comics Journal as one of the top ten minicomics of 2008.  It has gone on to win a Xeric Grant.  

Murphy draws wonderfully spooky landscapes and portraits of 19th Century Vermont which she mingles with the writings of Sprague. We see Sprague emerge from a near death illness, believing she was revived by spirits, and evolve from a medium of spirits to a trail blazer in the earliest stages of the women’s movement.

Sprague lived during a time of tremendous tumult in America and the world. Murphy recounts the upheaval, be it the Communist Manifesto, the genocide of Native Americans in the name of Manifest Destiny or the surge in popularity with communicating with the spirit world. She does this with haunting and distinctive style as she pieces together history.  The story flows as it makes use of carefully placed washes, black space and reverse lettering with a preference for full page or two page scenes instead of panels.

And always she returns to the words of Sprague that, in turn, help guide Murphy on her own life’s journey. It all comes down to trusting oneself and the spirits: “Begin as though thou hadst a work before thee that must be done. Begin as though thou lovedst that work. And time shall tell the tale. Begin with us as friends, assistants, guides to help thy way. The nearer thou dost come to us, the nearer we shall come to thee.” 

Murphy manages to balance all the parts to this book: biography, history and autobiography. We see Murphy at the start as she first discovers Sprague one day in October which she describes as, “a time when the veil between the worlds is thin.” At the end, Murphy is ready to reveal a little more of herself as we see her struggle with her own purpose in life. Throughout, we feel the urgency of author and subject as both seem to meld into one force of energy. 

I Still Live is anything but predictable as it is told with a gentle but determined voice. It is a great example of how wide open the potential for the comics medium truly is.

 
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Review: Jin and Jam #1

May 4th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Jin & Jam #1

Written and Drawn by Hellen Jo

36 pages, 6″ x 7 3/4″, $5 US

Sparkplug Comic Books

It took the Stumptown Comics Festival for me to finally come into contact with Jin & Jam, a fiesty sensation that should be on anyone’s short list for best minicomics of 2008.

The off-kilter opening full page panel sucks you into some kind of Harold and Kumar teenage adventure in the making via Japanese hipster flat art: two kids sitting on a curb staring into space, one with a burger, the other with a cigarette, with a raucous church service in the background all drawn in a wonderfully intricate thin line. The influence of Taiyo Matsumoto’s manga is undeniable and acknowledged with an appropriate rebel yell quote from Black & White on the intro page: “We can beat ‘em…just you ‘n me!” 

And it just keeps going from there. Who would have thought so much could be invested in a fistful of fast food and cigarettes? Hank spits out a french fry into Jam’s hand after she forces him to give it back. Unsatisfied with that, in grand cartoon style, she slams her fist down on his skull. With contempt in one hand, she pilfers one of his cigarettes. With mercy in the other hand, she embraces him while he begins to cry cartoon tears. Then we cut to a dramatically foreshortened hand as scruffy Jam raises Hank’s pack of cigarettes up from the curb and offers a smoke to the fair maiden, Jin. Thus, the name of the book: Jam meets Jin and we see the start of a new friendship.

Just a panel of Jam sitting on the curb in her hoodie chomping away, all feral, on a burger would make an excellent poster. The design sense and the ear for whip-smart dialogue is killer.

There are a few moments when it seems to falter, mainly in the depiction of Jam which fluctuates a little more than it should. But, overall, hey, this is a totally awesome comic. The sense of wonder is uninhibited and authentic. Give me the antics of Ting and Terng, the conjoined twins, any day. From the fight scenes to the more dreamy moments, it’s all systems go. Already, by the end of the first installment, Jin & Jam looks poised to be a much talked about oddball hip comic.

 
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Review: Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?

April 27th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Batman #686 and Detective Comics #853 

DC Comics

Story by Neil Gaiman and Art by Andy Kubert

We all know that Batman isn’t really dead. But it’s nice to see a death of Batman story turned into a sweet Neil Gaiman confection. You can read “Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader?” now as there are fully stocked shelves with the story appearing in Batman #686 and Detective Comics #853 at your LCS.

None of the villains are particualrly menacing. They’re more like little marionettes dancing around in a fairy wonderland. We go through numerous scenarios of how Batman could have died including the most implausible case involving Alfred being the Joker. But, quickly and with style, we learn that these are only scenarios. This may even all turn out to be a bad dream.

As befitting a Gaiman tale, childhood and slumberland play a pivotal role. We see Bruce Wayne and his mom share great joy in the reading of a bedtime story. This scene takes on greater and greater significance as the story progresses, as it shines light on the deep recesses of Batman’s mind, and brings us full circle to a surprising ending of sorts. What’s not to like? Add to that the lush and intricate art work of Andy Kubert who does yoeman service as he brings to life various Batman eras in styles from each period.

However, I think that Gaiman piles on too many scenarios for how Batman could have died but maybe that goes with the territory. The point is, in this story, that it really doesn’t matter how you die but that someday you’re going to die anyway. And that’s something profound for anyone to mull over, especially if you’re Batman. An opportunity is lost in moving this promising theme forward since the Batman in this story is endlessly saying that he’s not a quitter and he’s there to save his city making him sound more like a third rate politician than an inspiring legend. It’s as if Gaiman gets caught up in a spin cycle where he feels obligated to reverence. He even has Robin pretty much say that Batman died for our sins. 

All in all, it’s a good effort but I’m lost as to whether anything was really said. The fun stuff in this two part story is seeing Batman from various eras, some of the metaphysical playing around on Gaiman’s part and the curious ending which brings to mind, in a way, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Maybe that’s what happened to the caped crusader. In the end, it doesn’t seem to matter. It’s probably all a bad dream and you’re going to die anyway.

 
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Review: Swallow Me Whole

April 18th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

Swallow Me Whole

Written and Drawn by Nate Powell

Top Shelf Productions, 216 pages, hardcover, $19.95 US

The opening pages immediately set the tone: on a black background, a liquid is being poured into a jar with a large frog floating inside; on another black page, a tiny gnome sits atop a boy’s pencil as he draws. We get lots of deep blacks, open spaces and unconventional storytelling devices. Panels are broken up or omitted as needed. Drawings often bleed off the page. Lettering takes on its own expressive life. We are able to read only up to what we would naturally hear in a conversation. 

The art is as beautiful and lyrical as the writing. Powell’s love and skill with drawing takes him to high places, allowing him to shift and play with style, from cartoony to more realistic. In his writing, there’s something similar going on, dialogue is enmeshed in deeply poetic observations.

The cover to Swallow Me Whole is at once inviting and provocative: a young woman free falling or floating, above a suburban landscape with bugs surrounding her. This is Ruth. She is bright and pretty and full of promise. But she hears and sees things that are not there, although they could be, at least in some sense. Her stepbrother, Perry, struggles with this too. So does Ruth’s grandmother, or Memaw, who is mostly bed-ridden and lives with the family. They each are tuned into these other-worldly visions, visions that could, given a chance, swallow them whole.

In Nate Powell’s world, being swallowed whole can mean many things. It could even be comforting. The profound is sought out and too often found by Ruth and Perry, who are just getting their bearings in a landscape made up of little wizards, frogs and insects, making spectacular demands. Could you blame them if they succumbed and allowed themselves to be swallowed up whole by these mysterious forces?

Here Ruth tries to take it all in: “That thread of our lives is such cheap narrative. Human forms lowly vibrate. Unfixed points do Heisenberg proud.” 

Pitch perfect teenage angst. That Powell manages to keep the rhythm going and balance the everyday with supernatural mystery, is quite impressive. 

This is a book that rewards you on a high artistic and literary level. If you haven’t had a chance to read it, then definitely seek it out. For some insights on Nate Powell’s work, please read on to my interview

 
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Interview: Nate Powell

April 18th, 2009
Author Henry Chamberlain

It is a painfully embarrassing moment and we can’t help but watch. She looks like she’s forced to take part in some initiation but it’s by her own design. Sara Goodman, age twelve or so, only wanted to dress up and look like Aunt Jemima for Halloween and join all the other kids in costume at school. That’s the premise for “Cakewalk,” a recent comic drawn by Nate Powell and written by Rachel Borman, which is full of the sweet melancholy of the best of Nate Powell’s work. His graphic novel, Swallow Me Whole, is up for three Eisner Award nominations (Best New Graphic Album, Best Writer/Artitst, Best Lettering) and shares the distinction of being the only graphic novel since Maus to be nominated for a Los Angeles Times Book Prize (Young Adult).  That presentation ceremony will be held on April 24.

Swallow Me Whole is a remarkable book which brings together a vision made up of exceptional outsiders just one step away from running away into the night. With his latest book, Powell has reached a landmark in his comics career. I was able to catch up with him at Emerald City ComiCon in Seattle and then conduct a subsequent interview. Nate was very thoughtful and generous with his time and it made for a great interview.

Blog@Newsarama: There’s a certain beauty in going back to the same story and telling it again. As a cartoonist myself, I suspect that earlier in your career you were finding your way as you retold a story and now it can be a deliberate act, the world of Nate Powell. What do you think?

Nate Powell: I wouldn’t say it’s deliberate by any means, but it is certainly unavoidable. Looking back at older comics of mine, it’s frustrating to realize that I had no concept of doing a story longer than 32 pages, even though I had a lot more to say. Those stories, especially “Conditions” and the main stories from Walkie Talkie, are confusing and cluttered because I tried to cram a whole world, or a year’s worth of thoughts into 32 pages. A few months ago I momentarily got excited to redraw It Disappears and “Autopilot” as 100 page stories, now that I understand a little more about patience and breathing room. Themes are constantly revisited, as are different incarnations of certain characters and activities. Most of that is due to unsuccessful attempts to communicate something in the stories, not that anybody can ever get it just right. I do feel that I worked a lot of themes out of my system in Swallow Me Whole, and it’s really exciting to work on new stories that are free of some older semiotic and thematic elements.

Blog@: The phrase, “swallow me whole,” keeps appearing in your work. How significant is it? Is there a story behind how it came about for you?

NP: Strangely, I had no memory of putting that phrase in so many stories until I stumbled across them over this winter. It’s not personally significant, but in each of the three appearances it seemed to convey meaning in an appropriate way. It’s pretty easy for me to feel overwhelmed by an anxious, agoraphobic terror, and the imagery of being enveloped or swallowed by something does seem reassuring—even when the swallowing isn’t protective. Like in older Dracula movies, when he conceals his dirty work with a wave of his cloak over the body of his passed-out victim: the concept of Dracula’s power is so alluring and effective precisely because people secretly want to feel the security that comes with placing their sovereignty in the hands of something or someone else, even when that means the end of their agency, freedom, or dignity. Re-read Dracula—you get all dizzy and swoony during those moments of vampiric power, and you really sense the sexual allure of safety and domination represented by the vampire. The “swallowing whole” theme is both a refuge and a poison. In It Disappears, the “swallowing” is in reference to the way that snow, frost, rain, or the dark of night covers everything, slows everything during its temporary reign on earth, covering roads and markers of our civilization, reminding us how fleeting that civilization really is.

Blog@: How did your ten years working as a support person for people with developmental disabilities affect your work? I held a similar job for about two years and found it rewarding but draining and didn’t get much art done. It’s an all encompassing world, isn’t it?

NP: Well, it’s simply unavoidable that any line of work done over the course of a decade will deeply affect they way you perceive the world and the art that comes forth from it. For a few years, it hit me that about seventy percent of all the people I hung out with had disabilities of some kind. I grew up with developmental disabilities in my family, and until recently took for granted the special lens through which I navigated my world. Yes, the work is definitely rewarding but draining. There’s a constant turnover of people who work as direct care staff, and awareness of this high rate of turnover is one of the main reasons I’ve tried to stick with it for as long as I can. At certain times I’ve felt that working for folks with disabilities is something that is as important to me, or more important, than drawing comics. I know that, if I’m never able to make a living drawing comics, I’d be fine with direct care work as a primary means of employment. It is so all-encompassing, however, that you can get completely burned-out without ever realizing it, unless you practically force yourself to take regular breaks, trips, tours, and take special time off to focus on other parts of life. Human services work requires a predisposition to be dedicated and self-denying, but those same qualities are what provide for inevitable self-destruction if you’re not careful.

Blog@: You’re in a band and manage a punk record label. How does the punk ethos play a role in your comics?

NP: Fundamentally, I’d say I’ve been so used to the “do-it-yourself” ethic that it’s been difficult to ease up on wanting a hand in every aspect of the production, publication, promotion, and distribution of comics. Not that it’s an issue of trust—most of my publishers have been amazing—but that kind of direct involvement, and that degree of being in-the-know about the stages of production, are difficult to part with. I have absolute trust in the wonderful folks at Top Shelf, and working with them has helped me realize that some folks are way better at those aspects of production than I am. And on the other hand, working with Soft Skull, which required me to personally distribute hundreds and hundreds of copies of my own books, underlined why one can’t assume that a publisher is gonna be competent or responsible just because they can put up the capital to print something.

DIY punk and its culture have also greatly informed my expectations of any scene or community. When I was younger, I believed this quality of support and connectedness was unique to punk, and it was so exciting to see that the comics community is full of the same support, sacrifice, social networking, enthusiasm, and ingenuity. I feel at home with both, and have high expectations of both.

Blog@: From your collected works, Sounds of Your Name, there’s quite a variety of work that’s experimental. I am guessing a lot of the early stuff came out of your studies at the School of Visual Arts in New York City . You’ve said that NYC wasn’t your scene. But surely you enjoyed the tempo on some level. Could you describe what it was like for you as a student back then? And wasn’t it quite a leap of faith to go to SVA in the first place?

NP: Well, I liked living in New York a lot—it was Providence , Rhode Island that crushed my soul. I went to a year of college in DC, and realized I had no idea why I was there. I’d been drawing and publishing comics for years by that point but had only started to take it seriously again. I spent the next three years at SVA in New York , and was really excited to be there, surrounded by lots of folks who were as excited as I was, having teachers whose comics I’d grown up reading. Most of my time was spent strictly on comics; I’d return home to Arkansas during every school break in order to tour and record with my bands, or make new episodes of our DIY sketch comedy show. It was a very dualistic existence at that point, but seemed perfectly natural. I felt at home in New York , but honestly didn’t put much energy into making it my home. When I finished school, I had already booked three tours for the coming months, and had new stories to work on—at twenty-two, it was really easy to adventure onward and leave school in the dust.

Blog@: Can you discuss how you came to develop the characters in Swallow Me Whole? I see hints of Ruth in your earlier comics, right?

NP: Well, the core narrative of the book came to me in a dream I had in October 2001. Perry and the parents were fully formed at that point, and Ruth was a hybrid of herself and a giant, waxy Keroppi-style frog child in the dream. I was also cooking up a comic called “Lightness” at the time, and Ruth was the protagonist in that book. Within a year or so, the two books merged seamlessly and some of the missing narrative components turned out to be related. For the most part, Ruth’s appearance and lots of her personality are patterned after my most beloved best friend. Perry is physically based on another of my best friends. Memaw is very similar to my grandmother, and a lot of her delusional scenes are lifted directly from the last few months of her life, as her cancer treatment began to take a neurological toll. It’s true that there are some similarities between Ruth and the little girl in “Autopilot”, a story I did in 2000 for Walkie Talkie, but those similarities are more due to the revisitation of themes and devices we discussed earlier.

Blog@: Considering that both Ruth and Perry are struggling with schizophrenia in Swallow Me Whole, they still manage to achieve rites of passage for high school: finding a job and someone to date. In that respect, they’re doing better than a lot of kids. Was it important to have them as fully integrated into society as possible?

NP: Certainly. One of the things I was most interested in working with in the book was the reader’s changing expectations of each character, based on their life circumstances. A lot of Ruth’s experiences are ambiguous in that they could represent her subjective experience as a teenager with schizophrenic or obsessive-compulsive issues, and they could also convey the subjective experience of just being a teenager. Ruth struggles a lot with being heard and respected, with finding a little dignity and sovereignty in her life; this issue is magnified once she has the stigma of someone with a mental disorder. After the “Baby Ruth” candy bar incident, the school faculty as well as her parents contextualize the situation through her disorder while she vies for people to listen to the reasons which might push anyone to act in such a heavy-handed way.

Whether someone grows up with or without diagnosed disorders or disabilities, it’s hard enough feeling like shit as a teenager, especially as one acutely dissatisfied with the world around you. I’ve never intended Swallow Me Whole to be a book “about disorders” or anything, as it has as much to do with those issues of sovereignty as love, death, disaffection, loss, and idealism.

Blog@: How important was it to set this book in a small town setting and to comment on it? You get an opportunity to call out some small town bad behavior.

NP: The narrative takes place in a community similar to the one in which I grew up, which is a metropolitan area of a couple hundred thousand people. I contest the notion that racism, ignorance, boredom, and regionalism are behaviors indicative of a smaller town. Growing up in the Little Rock area, I certainly considered smaller towns to be more backwards than my town, but it wasn’t until leaving home that I realized this isn’t necessarily the case. In fact, I think that the social frameworks of racism, sexism, homophobia, and xenophobia thrive from the misconception that these are small-town issues that don’t exist in larger areas. My next book Any Empire focuses on this issue, specifically how Midwestern racism and paranoia thrives from the notion that racism is a Southern problem. My new home of Indiana is far more fucked-up and backwards than Arkansas , and that’s one of the main reasons—a lot of white folks here feel like they have a free pass to be racist assholes because they’re free from mainstream blame in their sheltered, homogenous Indiana environment.

Blog@: Clearly, Swallow Me Whole is an achievement in your growing theme of wonderment. Do you see yourself as focusing on this sense of wonder?

NP: I do feel that my comics focus on the sense of wonder at a universe much larger, more powerful, and mysterious than we can grasp. I find a little peace and ease in realizing how small human beings are, and try to balance that with a focus on the concrete issues with which we struggle. I guess that would be wonder. A lot of that narrative sense is informed by heavy metal of the 1970’s and 1980’s, in which lots of lyrics focus on a narrator expressing disbelief at a fantastic event occurring before his very eyes. Bruce Dickinson does a fine, fine job at conveying that sense of wonder and disbelief.

Blog@: Is there anything you’d like to say to young people out there who are not sure about where their lives are heading?

NP: It’s all true—no one is sure where their lives are headed, and death is the inevitable result. There is no objective meaning or order. Find your own. (I’m not trying to be a downer, but people always try to cram structural frameworks down people’s throats. I mean what I say—make your own meaning, your own noise.)

Blog@: There’s your comments in your comcis about how the X-Men provided you with a social conscience. Anything you’d like to add to that? Maybe some other influences in books, movies, your life? I would think someone like yourself, drawing comics since you were four, is really tuned into the world.

NP: The two biggest (and earliest) political influences in my life were X-Men and speed/thrash metal. I got into both in mid-1990 right as I turned twelve, and both finally seemed to rip open dialogues about war, nationalism, intolerance, alienation, and idealism. Specifically, the 1985-87 Claremont X-books, and the band Anthrax. Growing up with hair bands and G.I.Joe comics, I really didn’t have much of a concept of art and music even having any real content. It blew my mind that folks were making songs and stories about being a misfit, about disaffection, about struggling against the dominant schema. One reason that punk was a natural step was thanks to Anthrax and Chris Claremont.

Also of great importance was growing up with my brother Peyton, who’s six years older than me and has high-functioning autism and a few learning disabilities. It wasn’t until I was 20 or so that I realized I grew up with a unique and specific view of families, communication, affection, and child development. That’s one of my prime motivators for working with folks who have disabilities, and for trying to be more aware of both my social privileges and perspectives I take for granted.

Blog@: Lastly, we all look forward to your next book with Top Shelf, Any Empire. Any other comments about that or working with Top Shelf in general?

NP: I couldn’t imagine working with a better, more approachable, supportive bunch than the Top Shelf folks. Any Empire falls somewhere between being a graphic novel and a comics essay. It’s largely about living in a culture of distrust, and about how much energy goes into keeping people afraid of each other. About how, when, and why we might work to break free from that framework. Specifically, it’s how paranoia, racism, and distrust serve the interests of a state, and how any state’s prime directive is its own survival, even in defiance of a democratic majority. The personal elements intertwined have to do with being a military-obsessed kid, moving from home to home, growing awareness of being a misfit, looking for love and peace, and trying to quiet those paranoid and self-destructive voices within myself.

The book will hopefully be out at the end of 2010. I’m also simultaneously drawing a graphic novel called The Silence of Our Friends, written by Mark Long and Jim Demonakos, and hopefully published by First Second Books (though we have no solid publisher at present). That’ll hopefully be released at the end of 2010 as well.

 
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