Blogs:

Newsarama Blogs Home > News & Views > Fantagraphics

Friday, February 10

The Lightning Round

October 15th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

20 things Every Superhero Comic Collection Needs.

Laura Hudson talks to Brian Azzarello about his upcoming Joker graphic novel.

– Seth is curating a series of films from the National Film Board of Canada. Drawn! has the details.

The Mindless Ones look at the work of ero-guru artist Suehiro Maruo (note: some images are probably NSFW).

Peter Sanderson looks at the new edition of Patrick Rosenkranz’s seminal history of underground comix, Rebel Visions.

Fantasy.fr has an interview with Devilman creator and manga-ka Go Nagai.

Judith Rosen checks out the Comics and Classics store in Jacksonville Beach, Fla.

– Craig Fischer has a short interview with alt-cartoonist Ben Towle.

Evie Nagy looks at all the political comics coming out this month.

Ooooo, I’m a Johnny Storm!

– Noah Berlatsky did not like David Heatley’s new book. Like, at all.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

The Lightning Round

October 13th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Tom Spurgeon interviews Bill Schelly, who’s new biography of Joe Kubert, Man of Rock, should be out in stores any day now.

In more depressing newspaper news: Acclaimed editorial cartoonist Chip Bok is taking a buyout and leaving The Akron Beacon-Journal. The number of full-time, on-staff cartoonists at daily papers gets smaller and smaller. Of course, so does the number of editors, reporters, photographers …

On the BBC, they’re talking about comics.

The Daily Cross Hatch begins a multi-part interview with Art Spiegelman.

– Go! Comi are so excited about their new 07-GHOST series that they’ve set up a whole Web site for it.

– Cool things to bookmark: Elizabeth Conley, Elena Diaz, Pancha Diaz, Andrew Farago, Shaenon Garrity, Konstantin Pogorelov, Jason Thompson, and Leia Weathington have formed a new group blog, titled The Couscous Collective.

Steven De Souza, who wrote the screenplay for the 1987 Spirit TV-movie (remember that?) offers his thoughts on the upcoming Frank Miller film.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Weekend reviews: Jessica Farm

October 10th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Jessica Farm Vol. 1
by Josh Simmons
Fantagraphics, 104 pages, $14.95.

Josh Simmons first began this book in December of 2000 with the goal of drawing one page a month. The second volume will not be completed until 2016, and the final volume (of a projected seven) won’t be out until 2050, by which point, as some reviewers have noted, many of us will likely be dead, myself included. It’s no joke to say this series will literally be his life’s work.

So yes, it’s another one of those books, one equally if not more obsessed with methodology and experimentation than plot or characterization (though there’s certainly enough of that in here to satisfy). No doubt to the casual reader it all sounds very gimmicky and I suppose to a degree it is, though I think the book largely surpasses it’s gimmicky publishing premise to offer up something haunting and wholly original. (more…)

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

I know how to spend money: Things I bought at SPX

October 9th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Because I love to share, here’s a quick rundown of some of the more new and notable books I picked up at SPX last weekend:

* A bunch of Ignatz books, including Baobab #3, Delphine #3, Interiorae #3, Grotesque #2 and Sammy the Mouse #2. I think a lot of folks tend to focus on the Ignatz books by the big-name artists like Gilbert Hernandez and ignore the rest, and that’s a shame, as there’s some really great work being done throughout this series, and it remains a fantastic way to expose yourself to some unfamiliar artists. (more…)

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Event: DiFilippo, Woodring in Seattle this weekend

October 9th, 2008
Author JK Parkin

More details here.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

The Lightning Round

October 8th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Rick Veitch is planning to unleash a 300-page special edition version of Brat Pack. Most excellent.

Alex Dueben interviews Bill Griffith for CBR.

Stephanie Mangold profiles Good Neighbors authors Holly Black and Ted Naifeh.

Allan Holtz runs into scanner trouble while at the Library of Congress.

Kai-Ming Cha talks to famed illustrator Yoshitaka Amano about his musical influences.

– Norton will be publishing all of Will Eisner’s instructional comics in one volume. Ada Price has details.

James Vance looks at Jerry Siegel and Russell Keaton’s aborted 1936 collaboration on a Superman newspaper strip.

Jennifer de Guzman ponders what Minx’s demise really means for comics.

– Our own Tim O’Shea talks to Paul Sizer about his lates book, BPM.

Bookslut talks to Shannon Wheeler about his Postage Stamp Funnies series.

Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

The Lightning Round

October 6th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

What costume to not buy your kids this Halloween.

Express Night Out profiles Bryan Lee O’Malley.

– Brian Cronin looks at the work of editorial cartoonists Bill Mauldin and David Low.

– Eric Reynolds is apparently into fumetti now.

– The Austin-American Statesman has a two-part interview with Art Spiegelman.

The Associated Press looks at IDW’s Obama/McCain comics.

Chronogram talks to Jessica Abel.

– Did I link to this Steve Bisette essay on royalties? Well, I am now.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Weekend reviews: Most Outrageous

October 3rd, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Most Outrageous: The Trials and Trespasses of Dwaine Tinsley and Chester the Molester
by Bob Levin
Fantagraphics Books, 200 pages, $19.99.

This was a tough book for me to review. I kept finding myself sitting down at the computer to type only to be possessed by a desperate desire to write about something else.

It was also a tough book for me to read at times, the main reason no doubt being that the assumed name author Bob Levin picked for one of the main characters in this sad tale is the same as my young daughter’s.

Yet Most Outrageous is one of the most moving, compelling and important books Fantagraphics will publish this year, not because it advances the cause of comics or offers some great sequential art revelation or shines some light on a heretofore little known but great artist — it’s really only tangentially about comics. Rather, what makes it great is the way it touches upon issues of how art and life intersect in often ugly ways, how families members can damage each other in unforgivable ways, how the ghosts of your past can reappear in ways you never expected and how heartrendingly clumsy our legal system is at uncovering the “truth.” (more…)

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Preview: Abandoned Cars

October 1st, 2008
Author JK Parkin

NY Mag’s Vulture blog has a preview up from the upcoming Abandoned Cars collection by Tim Lane, which was published by Fantagraphics.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

The Lightning Round

September 17th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

– Build your own square-headed Scott Pilgrim.

– Charles Brownstein with the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund passes on a message about Echo creator Terry Moore and his wife Robyn, who live in Houston and were affected by Hurricane Ike:

As you may be aware, the Abstract Studios team, Terry & Robyn Moore, live in Houston where they are set back slightly by Hurricane Ike. They personally are fine, but don’t have any utilities, including electricity and other business necessities. They’re only able to be online for about 10 minutes a day because of very nice neighbors. They want people to know that they’re going to be out of touch for about a week, and ask that you please be patient while they get back up to speed. Please join me in keeping them in your thoughts.

– Congrats to the cartoonist Kaz, who won an Emmy for his story on an episode of Camp Lazlo!

PWCW previews the New York Anime Festival.

– Bid adieu to The Holy Consumption.

Dave Sim reviews Blake Bell’s book about Steve Ditko.

Frank Santoro writes about Frank Franzetta.

Here’s a profile of mangaka Shigeru Mizuki.

Stephanie Mangold looks at Antarctic Press’ future plans.

– Hey, Chester Brown is running for office!

Evie Nagy reports on Oni’s plan to publish “definitive editions” of Queen and Country.

Van Jensen writes about the popularity of Image’s PopGun anthology.

– The Southern California comics retailer Brave New World Comics is hosting a party this Friday to celebrate their Will Eisner Spirit of Retailing Award.

Eight reasons why the G.I. Joe comic was better than the cartoon.

Compiled by JK and Chris.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Love and Rockets changed his life

September 16th, 2008
Author Aron Head

Junot Diaz, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, was interviewed recently by the San Jose Mercury News:

Love and Rockets was not only a revolution in comics, it was a revolution in Latino letters. It was the first time that people were writing about the kind of Latinos that I grew up with where being a Latino was a given. What we really drew or what compelled us in our lives was who we were dating, the music we were listening to, the problems we were getting into.

Do you think some day somebody will say “Final Crisis changed my life”?

Yeah. I thought not.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Cool things to look at: Classic Wilson cartoons

September 15th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Playboy has a large collection of Halloween-appropriate Gahan Wilson gag cartoons up, as well as some interviews with the famed macabre cartoonist. They also reveal that Fantagraphics will be publishing a three-volume collection of every single cartoon the artist has done for the men’s magazine, which will see print in 2009.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Event: Danny Hellman + friends in Seattle this Saturday

September 12th, 2008
Author JK Parkin

More details here.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

The Lightning Round

September 8th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

– The Huffington Post has another preview from MAD Magazine’s political issue.

– So Dylan Horrocks has a sex blog now.

– Tom Spurgeon talks to John Pham, whose book Sublife should be coming out from Fantagraphics soon.

– Heidi MacDonald posts the complete transcript of Wil Moss’ PWCW interview with Comic Foundry creators Tim Leong and Laura Hudson.

– Bidding for the Totoro Forest Project is now open.

– As a kid, I always thought new shoes would make me run faster … so how much faster would these super shoes make me run?

– What comic should Fight Club/Choke author Chuck Palahniuk write?

Read Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere for free.

– Beware of Batman; he brings adware. (Hat tip)

– I didn’t see the rumor about Darkseid appearing on Smallville this season, but Graeme has some tips for the producers if it does wind up happening.

Compiled by JK and Chris.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Cool things to look at: Eric Reynolds sketchbook

August 28th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Having posted samples from his con sketchbook over at Flog, Reynolds has collected the whole darn thing into one nice Flickr set.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

The Lightning Round

August 19th, 2008
Author JK Parkin

– The upcoming Image anthology Liquid City gets a website.

– Registration for the 2009 Comic-Con International is now open.

– Amazon is offering monthly comic book subscriptions now. Via.

Doug Wolk on Blake Bell’s Steve Ditko book.

Frank Santoro muses about Big Numbers.

Tom Spurgeon on the modern comic strip.

Compiled by Chris and JK.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Event: David B. in Seattle this weekend

August 13th, 2008
Author JK Parkin

Epileptic creator David B. will attend several events in Seattle this weekend, including a discussion with Peter Bagge and Jim Woodring on Sunday. Complete details can be found here.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

‘Joe Quesada, it is your moral duty to make this happen’

August 11th, 2008
Author JK Parkin

Although it’s unlikely to ever happen, I thought Eric Reynolds came up with a really good idea involving Bottomless Belly Button creator Dash Shaw and Dr. Strange:

By the way, Fanta has just gone back to press on BBB, which we’re thrilled about. I was thinking this morning that the two artists we’ve published of late with perhaps the most “heat” at the moment are Dash Shaw and Steve Ditko. Which then reminded me of Dash’s unpublished Dr. Strange strip (see below), and inevitably led me to one conclusion: that really, Marvel Comics should give Dr. Strange to Fantagraphics. Marvel doesn’t know what the fuck to do with him. Give him to us and we’ll start an ongoing Dr. Strange anthology with new work by Los Bros, Dash Shaw, Daniel Clowes, Kim Deitch, and other longtime Ditko fans, and include reprints of the classic Ditko Strange as well. Joe Quesada, it is your moral duty to make this happen.

Related: The First Post presents a preview of Bottomless Belly Button.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

Cool things to look at: Last Gig in Shnagrlig

August 4th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Tom Spurgeon has a four-page preview of Gilbert Shelton’s latest story, which will be serialized in the pages of Mome.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe

The Lightning Round

August 4th, 2008
Author Chris Mautner

Deadpool smooching Bea Arthur is just kind of wrong. (Thanks, Rich!)

Oh, for heaven’s sake.

Ooo, I hope Miles Edgeworth puts in an appearance.

– Here’s a virtual symposium on Doug Wolk’s Reading Comics.

– Du9 talks with Dave Cooper.

– Sean Collins did a great interview with the Hernandez brothers for CBR.

– Remember, not every librarian is pro-comics.

– John Byrne shares some starship designs from his IDW Star Trek work.

– The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles are celebrating 25 years with a contest.

Barbie goes to Comic-Con.

– Jamie Coville conducted an in-depth interview with Mark Waid on BOOM! and his Spider-Man work. It’s also available as an MP3.

– The Forbidden Planet blog talks to La Muse creator Adi Tantimedh.

Compiled by JK and Chris.

 
Leave a Reply »
  • Add to delicious
  • Digg It!
  • Save to Newsvine
  • Add to reddit
  • Add to Netscape
  • Email to Friend
  • Subscribe