Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Comics A.M. | Why collectors' market is booming; Homestuck Kickstarter

Comics A.M. | Why collectors' market is booming; Homestuck Kickstarter

Action Comics #1

Comics | Auction prices for comics and original comics art have soared over the past few years, ever since a copy of Action Comics #1 broke the $1-million mark in 2010. Barry Sandoval of Heritage Auctions (admittedly, not a disinterested party) and Michael Zapcic of the comics shop Jay and Silent Bob's Secret Stash discuss why that happened'and why prices are likely to stay high. [Underwire]

Crowdfunding | Homestuck is a phenomenon. Kickstarter is a phenomenon. Put them together and you get ' a Kickstarter to fund a Homestuck game that raises $275,000 in a matter of hours. [Kotaku]

Creators | Brian Michael Bendis looks back on his eight-year run on Marvel's Avengers franchise. [Marvel.com]

A Wrinkle in Time

Creators | Hope Larson discusses the difficulties of adapting prose to comics and her own adaptation of Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time, due out this fall: 'Initially, it seemed like the publisher expected me to compress the book into a couple hundred pages, and I figured that would be doable, but as I sat down and really looked at the meat of the book, I realized the important stuff is the little moments, the emotional shifts, and you can't compress that. It's funny to me how small, delicate scenes take up more space than big, spectacular ones.' [Badass Digest]

Creators | Sean Kleefeld continues his interview with Derek Kirk Kim, discussing how First Second supports the online version of Tune and why Kim decided to stop drawing the comic and hire an artist: 'I just can't stand drawing comics anymore. That's the simple truth. Being a cartoonist ' unlike a lot of other jobs, it's not just about skill. You have to have a very unique, specific sort of personality. You have to be the kind of person that doesn't mind sitting at a desk endlessly and not go batshit stir crazy while you ink a line you've already drawn 3 or 4 times. Times a million. Unless you've done it, you can't imagine the monotony.' On the other hand, Kim says, 'When I'm writing, I feel engaged and alive.' [MTV Geek]

Death

Creators | Eliza Frye, whose first short comic 'The Lady's Murder' was nominated for an Eisner Award, talks about her decision to quit her day job and make comics, her graphic story collection Regalia, and her current webcomic Death. [Hero Complex]

Exhibits | Fans of all ages turned out to visit an exhibit of Peanuts strips at the University of Oregon, curated by English professor (and Eisner judge) Ben Saunders. Some folks wandered in while they were waiting for the football game to start, but everyone got into the spirit of the thing. [The Register-Guard]

Comics | In the 1950s it was a big deal that Elvis read comics; the unlikely celebrity comics fan this week is Ziggy Marley, who credits 'Batman, Superman, The Flash, Green Lantern, Spiderman ' all of those guys' for sparking his creativity. Marley helped create the graphic novel Marijuanaman, (written by Joe Casey and illustrated by Jim Mahfood but based on a character conceived by Marley), and now he wants to do an audio-only release of it'like the old Superman radio shows, only with more weed. [Times-Standard]

SideScrollers

Graphic novels | Teen librarian Robin Brenner, school librarian Esther Keller and mom Lori Henderson discuss the objections raised last week to the inclusion of Matt Loux's SideScrollers on a summer reading list for incoming high school freshmen. [Good Comics for Kids]

Publishing | In response to a question on Quora, Erica Friedman explains the structural differences between the U.S. and Japanese comics industries. [Quora]

Advice | Should you hire a freelance publicist? First Second marketing director Gina Gagliano suggests you consider what your publisher can do for you, and what you really want from a publicist, before moving forward. [First Second Books]

  • September 5, 2012 @ 07:55 AM by Brigid Alverson
  • Tagged: Action Comics, Action Comics #1, adaptations, auctions, Brian Michael Bendis, comic books, comic strips, comics a.m., comics creators, controversy, Derek Kirk Kim, Eisner Awards, Eliza Frye, exhibits, graphic novels, Homestuck, Hope Larson, kickstarter, manga, Marvel, Matt Loux, New Avengers, oni press, Peanuts, publicists, SideScrollers, The Avengers, webcomics, Ziggy Marley

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ComiXology to bring creators into the picture

ComiXology to bring creators into the picture

Creators: Don't let this be you!

Two bits of news about comiXology crossed the radar this morning. The first is that the company is launching a push this weekend at Baltimore Comic-Con to get creators to fill its creator database with photos and information (the creators page on the comiXology website is now bare). Because the digital distributor features the work of more than 6,000 writers and artists, this is quite a task, so comiXology is asking creators to line up in alphabetical order ' the company will focus on those whose names start with the letter 'A' the first week and keep going for 26 weeks.

Anyone who's interested should contact comiXology via Twitter to get the green light and instructions for the next step. It's an interesting shift in focus, as comiXology has always been all about the comics ' you can search for works by a given creator, but there isn't much info beyond that. The displays all focus on individual comics titles and story arcs. There has been a lot of conversation lately about creators' rights and giving credit, and as creators move from one publisher to another ' or to creator-owned works ' it makes sense to give readers a way to connect with them as well as all their works.

And, because sometimes the way you get the news is the news, I'll note that the press release on this came from Ivan Salazar, whose signature indicates he's now 'PR & Events Coordinator' for comiXology. Salazar and Chip Mosher, comiXology's vice president of marketing, PR and business development, were colleagues at BOOM! Studios until Mosher left for comiXology and Salazar moved on to become PR and marketing manager at Studio 407. ComiXology seems to be on a hiring spree, so perhaps more initiatives are in the offing.

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For a comprehensive list of available positions there is our jobs page:

http://www.comixology.com/jobs

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Dredd comic prequel delves into the world of Ma-Ma

Dredd comic prequel delves into the world of Ma-Ma

With a little more than two weeks before director Pete Travis' Dredd 3D arrives in theaters, Lionsgate and 2000AD have released a 10-page prequel comic that delves into the backstory of Ma-Ma (played in the film by Lena Headey), the drug lord responsible for the Slo-Mo epidemic plaguing Mega-City One.

Titled 'Top of the World, Ma-Ma,' the comic is written by 2000AD editor Matt Smith, with art by Henry Flint, colors by Chris Blythe, letters by Simon Bowland and a cover by Greg Staples.

Dredd 3D opens Sept. 21.

  • September 5, 2012 @ 07:00 AM by Kevin Melrose
  • Tagged: 2000AD, Chris Blythe, digital comics, Dredd 3D, Greg Staples, Henry Flint, Judge Dredd, Lionsgate, Matt Smith, movies, Simon Bowland

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Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Talking Comics with Tim | Duplicate's Mark Sable

Talking Comics with Tim | Duplicate's Mark Sable

Duplicate

On Wednesday, Kickstart Comics (not to be confused with Kickstarter) will release Duplicate, the new graphic novel from writer Mark Sable and artist Andy MacDonald. The publisher describes the project as follows: 'A seemingly ordinary family man sees his doppelganger and realizes he's a clone. But not just any clone. A duplicate of the world's deadliest secret agent. A decoy designed to spend time with The Agent's family and otherwise provide cover while the spy is off saving the world.'

In addition to answering my questions about Duplicate, Sable was kind enough to share a slew of exclusive unlettered preview pages, which you will find at the end of the interview.

Tim O'Shea: Given that your publisher Kickstart is not one of the Big Two, I was pleasantly surprised to see they have priced your 88-page original graphic novel, Duplicate, at $8.99. Are you hoping the price point will give indie-comics fans more incentive to give the story a try?

Mark Sable: I hope most readers will check out the book for my story or Andy MacDonald's art, but I'd be lying if I said I didn't hope that the price point would be an extra reason to take a chance on the Duplicate.  It's Kickstart's first foray into a full-size OGNs after doing digest-sized books like Rift Raiders (my previous OGN for them with Julian Totino Tedesco).  I think in an economy like this, with 20 page single issues costing $3.99 or more each, having a complete story arc for $8.99 is our chance to compete with value as well as quality.

Duplicate is a mixture of science fiction and espionage; would you say it is somewhat in the vein of Nick Fury or Casanova?

Books like that, as well as the James Bond novels and films were some of my inspirations and the tone I was going for.  I love darker, hard-edged spy stories like Queen and Country or Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, and I've done that before with books like Unthinkable.   But I want to Duplicate to have a sense of anything-can-happen fun.  Doomsday scenarios, S.P.E.C.T.R.E.-like organizations, volcano headquarters ' that's the tradition Andy and I are operating in.

Folks who have enjoyed Graveyard of Empires know that you love to do research for your stories, what kind of research did you dive into for Duplicate?

With Graveyard, artist Paul Azaceta and I believed that if you had one fantastic element (zombies), everything else (the war in Afghanistan) had to be believable.  In this case, aside from the robot duplicates, every other robot in the book is either real or on the drawing boards.  Books like P.W. Singer's Wired for War about the future of robotics and warfare, as well the Raymond Kurzweil documentary The Transcendent Man about the so-called 'singularity' were helpful.  I even considered creating and programming my own robot with LEGO Mindstorms, but really that would have just been an excuse to play with Legos.

When building your own universe/continuity in a story, half the fun is the background or mythology that proves as a foundation for the book. Can you tell me a little about that process?

I once heard a pre-prequel George Lucas describe how he'd want to put more in a single shot than the mind could process in one viewing to give the audience a sense that there was a detailed world that existed that they'd want to revisit, and I love any excuse to build one.

For Duplicate, the 'good guy' spy organization is T.A.L.O.S., dedicated to ensuring the smooth flow of technological progress named for the world's first automaton from Greek myth. They're opposed by V.U.L.C.A.N., neo-Luddite anarchists who believe that technology only leads to deadlier ways for man to kill themselves, ironically named for the Roman god of metal works. Playing both ends against the one another is I.E.D., a criminal syndicate that believes the singularity ' the hypothetical future emergence of greater-than-human super-intelligence through technological means ' is a good thing, but something they want to control.

But while Andy and I have constructed a highly-detailed secret history of the world that dates back to Archimedes, all that is ultimately there to give our universe a lived-in feel while the focus is squarely on the present and our lead characters.

What prompted you to team with Andy MacDonald on this project?

The short answer is that quite simply, there is no one in comics who draws robots better than him.  The slightly longer answer is that I've known Andy about as long as I've known anyone in the business. He drew NYC Mech, which was written and co-created by Ivan Brandon, who edited by first Image book, Grounded.  I've waited the better part of a decade to work with him and I was thrilled when he said yes.  I should also say that having Nick Filardi ' who colored Andy on NYC Mech and Paul Azaceta on Grounded ' really took Andy's work to another level.

When potential consumers hear the basic premise for the book, they might want to dismiss this as Nick Fury homage. But I think the actual premise behind the hero (The Duplicate) makes it vastly different (and exploring the art of deception in a unique way). Is that what made you want to tell the story? Not every spy story considers the impact on the spy's family, for example '

Duplicate is the story of Zekiel Dax, a family man and roboticist who survives a terrorist attack only to learn he himself is a robot.  And not just any robot, but the robot duplicate for the world's greatest super-spy.  But whereas someplace like S.H.I.E.L.D. might use a Life Model Decoy to protect their agents in the field, our spy uses his Duplicate to be the perfect husband and father while he travels the world, gambles, womanizes and gets into whatever kind of trouble a secret agent with an unlimited expense account can.

Ultimately, the two are forced to work together, and that's what the core of the story is to me.  The Duplicate was created to protect the 'real' Zekiel Dax's family, and the best way to do that is make him overly cautious.  Meanwhile, Dax the spy has lost his sense of responsibility. Duplicate is ultimately about the conflict of these two opposites trying to cooperate to put down what appears to be robot uprising ' and hopefully change one another for the better.

So while we're working in the tradition of Fury and Bond, unlike those franchise icons our heroes are free from the restrictions of having to exist for 50 years and can grow change.  I hate saying my stories are 'this meets that', but I was pitching it to some artists at Los Angeles' Drink and Draw last night and one of them said it's like 'True Lies meets Terminator.'  I don't think that's a bad logline.

Unlike a creator at DC or Marvel, who has the benefit of a marketing team helping to get your name out, the responsibility of marketing your work falls on you. Do you find that to be more challenging or liberating (given that in marketing yourself you do not need to worry about marketing yourself AND the latest company giant crossover)?

It's both challenging AND liberating.  There's part of me that wants to say that I didn't get into writing for the attention, and I'm happiest when I'm concentrating on the writing or getting new pages from my artist.  And I don't consider myself to be the best marketing guy on the planet.

But one of the best things about comics as opposed to any other medium is the chance to interact with readers so directly.  It helped draw me in as a fan and it's what keeps me hear as a creator.

Creatively, the best part of doing creator-owned work is that when I'm lucky to have an editor (in this case, Kickstart's Samantha Olsson), I have the luxury of knowing that any notes I get are going to be solely for the good of the book and not a need to protect a corporation's trademark.

If I have to pay for that with less exposure or having to work a little harder at promotion I'll take that option any time.

What else is in the creative pipeline for you in the near to long term?

I'm really looking forward to 2013.  Aside from the trade for Graveyard of Empires (which will have a surprise from Paul Azaceta in it), I've got a few books I'm hoping will hit shelves.  I'm co-writing/editing a book with The Last Starfighter creator Jonathan Betuel and artist Leandro Fernandez tentatively titled War Toys for Image Comics.  It involves vigilantes using drones to police their city, so there's some overlap in the research I did for Duplicate.  I've also got another book for Kickstart called Blue Sky that deals with a post-apocalyptic world where the survivors are forced to live in airship cities above the clouds.

  • September 3, 2012 @ 09:00 AM by Tim O'Shea
  • Tagged: Andy MacDonald, duplicate, Graveyard of Empires, Grounded, Ivan Brandon, Kickstart Comics, Lego Mindstorms, mark sable, Nick Filardi, NYC Mech, P.W. Singer, Rift Raiders, Samantha Olsson, talking comics with tim, The Transcendent Man, Unthinkable, Wired for War

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Comics A.M. | Ursula Vernon's Digger wins Hugo Award

Comics A.M. | Ursula Vernon's Digger wins Hugo Award

Digger

Awards | The Hugo Awards were announced Sunday evening, and the award for Best Graphic Story went to Ursula Vernon for Digger. [The Hugo Awards]

Legal | Writer Scott Henry details the lengthy attempt to prosecute Dragon*Con co-founder Ed Kramer on charges of child molestation. The case began in 2000 and has yet to go to trial. [Atlanta Magazine]

Publishing | Bandai Entertainment will discontinue sales of manga, novels and anime, with the final shipment of manga going out at the end of October. The company, a subsidiary of Namco Bandai Entertainment, had stopped publishing new work in January and was focusing on sales of its existing properties. [Anime News Network]

Grants | Christopher Butcher reminds us that the deadline for applications for the Queer Press Grant is Oct. 1, and those who aren't considering applying for it might consider donating to it. [Comics 212]

Creators | Geoff Johns talks about drawing on his own background to create Simon Baz, the Arab-American who will wear the Green Lantern ring starting in this week's 'zero issue.' [The Associated Press]

Creators | China Miéville will sketch in some of the backstory of the H-Dial in the zero issue of Dial H: 'I think of it as a pre-echo of the story line we're reading now. This kind of thing that is happening to Nelson has happened before, including a long time before.' [USA Today]

Femme Schism

Creators | Tiffany Pascal, a graduate student at the University of North Dakota, discusses her Kickstarter-funded graphic novel Femme Schism, the story of a Native American woman forced by circumstances to live with a white Christian missionary. [Inforum]

Graphic novels | Librarian Stephen Weiner, author of Faster Than a Speeding Bullet: The Rise of the Graphic Novel, talks about how the field has changed since the first edition of his book in 2003: 'One, we've seen the ascent and to some degree the descent of Manga. One of the things manga's popularity indicated was that American teenagers were interested in stories aside from superhero stories. Two, the development of graphic novel imprints by trade publishers: This is another indicator that general readers are interested in comics but not necessarily in superhero or genre stories. Three, Hollywood's infatuation with superheroes.' The second edition is due out later this year. [Graphic Novel Reporter]

Webcomics | Because webcomics live on the web, it matters how they show up on Google. Larry Cruz tests how a search on 'webcomics' does with Google's new Penguin SEO and finds ' about what you'd expect, including one outlier. [The Webcomic Overlook]

Hoax Hunters

Comics | This list of 'Ten Indie Comics That Prove You're a Better Nerd Than Everyone Else' is clearly geared to a mainstream audience. [Mancave Daily]

Criticism | The Hooded Utilitarian will celebrate its fifth anniversary with a roundtable on the worst comics ever; editor Noah Berlatsky kicks things off with an explanation of why, exactly, he decided to do this. [The Hooded Utilitarian]

Advice | No fewer than five U.S. editors will be attending the Dublin International Comic Expo, and artist Declan Shalvey has some advice for anyone who plans on pitching there ' or anywhere else, for that matter. [Declan Shalvey]

Blogosphere | After a nearly two-year hiatus, the website Comics Bronze Age ' it focuses on comics published between 1970 and 1985 ' has returned. [Comics Bronze Age]

  • September 4, 2012 @ 06:55 AM by Brigid Alverson
  • Tagged: awards, Bandai Entertainment, China Mieville, comic books, comics a.m., comics creators, DC Comics, Declan Shalvey, Dragon*Con, Ed Kramer, Geoff Johns, graphic novels, green lantern, Hugo Awards, Noah Berlatsky, Queer Press Grant, Simon Baz, Stephen Weiner, Tiffany Pascal, Ursula Vernon, Venom, webcomics

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I'm curious: Anyone here familiar with Digger? I like to think that even if I am not interested in everything that's out there, I know what things are. And yet I never heard of this, just like I never heard of Schlock Mercenary till it was nominated for a Hugo.

I am always trying to figure out how the Hugo nominees for comics so rarely reflect the other awards, or broader trends. Fables, long past its peak, is up for a Hugo every year. Nothing from Image ever is. And while I bet Saga sweeps the Eisners and Harveys, I would also bet it's not even on the long list for Hugo nominees next year. This is a very odd category in what I find to be a strange set of awards altogether.

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Synopsis, cover art debut for LOEG stand-alone Nemo: Heart of Ice

It's 1925, fifteen long years since Janni Dakkar first tried to escape the legacy of her science-pirate father, only to eventually take on his mantle and accept her destiny as the new Nemo; the next captain of the legendary Nautilus. A thirty year-old Pirate Jenny, tired of punishing the world with an unending spree of plunder and destruction, is resolved to finally step from her forebear's lengthy shadow by attempting something at which he'd conspicuously failed, namely the exploration of Antarctica. In 1895 her father had returned from that ice-crusted continent without his reason or his crewmen, all of whom appeared to have mysteriously perished or to otherwise have disappeared. Now Captain Nemo's daughter and successor plans to take her feared and celebrated black submersible back to the world's South Pole in an attempt to lay her sire's intimidating ghost forever.

There are others, though, who have become as tired of Janni's freebooting as she herself. An influential publishing tycoon, embarrassed by the theft of valuables belonging to a visiting Ugandan monarch, sets a trio of America's most lauded technological adventurers on the pirate queen's trail, commencing a nightmarish chase across the frozen landscape with the pinnacles of the forbidding mountains where Prince Dakkar's sanity had foundered growing ever nearer'

In a fast-paced, self-contained adventure, Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill thrillingly expand on one of Century's most memorable characters, venturing into dazzling polar territories and fictional domains including those of Edgar Allen Poe and H. P. Lovecraft, with all of these vectors headed for an unforgettable encounter at the living, beating and appallingly inhuman HEART OF ICE.

Hardcover, 48 pages, £9.99.
Due February 2013



Monday, September 3, 2012

What Are You Reading? with Paul Allor

What Are You Reading? with Paul Allor

Happy Labor Day, Americans, and welcome, everybody, to What Are You Reading? Today our special guest is Paul Allor, writer of IDW's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles spinoff, Fugitoid, as well as his own anthology Clockwork.

To see what Paul and the Robot 6 crew have been reading, click below:

*****

Michael May

National Comics: Looker

I debated doing a whole Women of Action column on Ian Edginton and Mike S. Miller's National Comics: Looker, but it's just a one-shot, so I don't think I will. I quite liked it though and I wasn't sure I would. I'm a fan of Edginton's work and Miller is a good artist, but you have to fight hard to get me to read a new vampire story and making the vampire a supermodel wasn't enough to pull me in. I ended up trying it solely because I'm interested in comics named after their female leads, though even that was an error on my part, because the New 52 'Looker' isn't a character, but the name of her modeling agency.

Edginton makes a nice comparison between vampires and people who get off on other people's drama. I wish he'd done more with that, but it's there and maybe he doesn't need to belabor the point. What I really like about the comic though is the main character, Emily Briggs, a former model who had to go behind the scenes in the industry and start her own agency when she became a vampire. She's a mean, shallow person at the beginning of the story, but by the end has just begun down the path to redemption. I'm a sucker for that kind of growth and Edginton smartly leaves plenty of work for her to do after the last page. I hope DC finds more for him to do with this character (and her supporting cast, whom I also like) later, either in a longer National Comics arc or a series of some kind.

In contrast, I think I'm done with Aquaman after #12. I've enjoyed it as an experiment in having one of DC's most successful writers reboot one of their least successful characters, but the experiment isn't working for me. Aquaman's gone through a major character change over the last year and it's one that's described in the series as a regression. I don't care to watch him descend into darkness only to fight his way back to being like he was in the first issue. I also don't care to watch him impale henchmen through their backs. Geoff Johns needs a new schtick.

Finally, I read the second volume of Magdalena: Origins. I mentioned how I didn't care at all for the first volume, but this one has Brian Holguin correcting a lot of mistakes made in the character's earliest appearances. Instead of throwing a cool concept over multiple, interchangeable characters, Holguin creates one woman and makes her THE Magdalena. She's still not all that interesting or original, but it's a step in the right direction. There's at least something there for later writers to build on and I'm curious to see how they (especially Ron Marz) did that.

Mark Kardwell

Read my first Marvel comic in a year or two this week. The collected edition of Marvel Universe Versus The Punisher. Maberry's script is an unoriginal I Am Legend retread, hitting loads of obvious fan service notes, but goddamn, Goran Parlov' that Croatian guy can sure push a brush around. Waiting eagerly for his Fury Max work with Garth Ennis to be collected.

Brigid Alverson

SideScrollers

As soon as I heard that some parent had complained about Sidescrollers as a summer reading assignment, I had to get a copy to see what the fuss was about. Fortunately, I live in permissive Massachusetts, so my library had a copy in the YA section. As a parent, I was less bothered by the language than the hijinks (trashing a car, liberating a tank of lobsters) and the fact that the plot turns on a football player's plan to get a girl to have sex with him, capture it on his webcam, and text it to the whole school. It's really about standing up to bullies, though, and the three main characters, all recent graduates from high school who spend their days playing video games and eating junk food, work together to thwart the football player's plan. It's all over the top and very funny, and I wouldn't snatch it away from a teenager on account of the language or the plot'they see plenty worse on TV every day.

Issue 4 of X-O Manowar has a lot of talking heads, but the middle section, where Aric gets to really give the suit a workout, is a humdinger, thanks to artist Cary Nord's powerful depiction of the action scenes. Meanwhile, the plot is getting more tangled. This is more than just the story of a fifth-century Visigoth transported to modern times in a powerful super-suit'it looks like shadowy forces are at play, and we get a hint of the back story of The Vine, the aliens who first captured Aric, and what they are about. Plus their arguments about the suit, which is sacred to them, and why it chose a human to wear it, are an interesting little side trip into the nature of religion, if you choose to read them that way. If there's a flaw (other than the overuse of red in the Vine scenes, which makes it hard to read in digital format), it's that the suit is a little too good; not only does it make Aric invincible, it apparently also teaches him history and modern Italian. Still, this is a smart comic and a fun read.

Tim O'Shea

Wolverine and the X-Men #15: In all the drama and chaos of A vs X, it's nice to have an issue like this'where Aaron is able to let his sense of humor shine in certain scenes. Throughout most of this new series, in the back of my mind I have thought'this is a book where Charles Xavier would stick out like a sore thumb. This was not Xavier's X-Men or school. And yet, I was wrong'sure it's not his school, but Xavier fits right in wherever he goes in the mutant dynamics. Speaking of humor, Aaron's ability to pull it off only works when teamed with the right artist. Fortunately Jorge Molina Is such an artist. In one scene between Logan/Wolverine and Bobby/Iceman'they are bonding over shots. At the end of the scene, Logan makes a snarky comment to Bobby as he walks away from him. Molina has Logan toss his shot glass on his desk as an afterthought. It's a little moment in a very busy issue, but it seals the tone of the interaction between the two characters.

Avenging Spider-Man #11

Avenging Spider-Man #11: My pal Dugan Trodglen predicts that Zeb Wells might be the next major writer of Spider-Man when Dan Slott steps down. Judging by this standalone story featuring Aunt May and Peter observing the anniversary of Uncle Ben's murder, I hope Dugan is right. This is a genuine tearjerker of a story (as in some way it touches upon the feelings many of us have in the process of mourning), not an experience I expected from a comic. But Steve Dillon was the worst artist for this story. Dillon's faces have two emotions: anger and shock. Honestly Aunt May looks angry or malevolent in almost every panel. Fortunately the script is far better than the art. I think Dillon is a great artist, just not for this tale.

Winter Soldier #9: Hey Marvel, stop slapping stock covers on your books. This issue (in which Natasha has been brainwashed) has no appearance from Black Widow, but guess who is on the cover. And as much as I love Steve Epting's art, it is weird how he draws Winter Soldier with a mullet'I do not think Bucky has had a mullet since before he became Cap. Winter Soldier looks really goofy with a mullet'it's like the senior portrait you never want to see again. Now on to the positive aspect. Yippie! Michael Lark (inked by Brian Thies with Stefano Gaudiano) doing full ballet scenes (Natasha's brainwashed cover is in a ballet) colored by Bettie Breitweiser. Yes, it Is as compelling as you would expect it to be. Lark and Breitweiser are a combo I hope to see more and more of in years to come. Hell, come to think of it, any artist looks great when colored by Breitweiser. But when it is someone as unique and distinct as Lark, it is a real treasure to behold.

Hulk #57: Goodbye General Thunderbolt Ross, you were a fun character to read when written by Jeff Parker. I have said it before, but it bears repeating. Ross was a useless one-dimensional character to me, but Parker turned him into one of my favorite Marvel characters. Parker explored Ross' childhood without using lame clichés or predictable stereotypes. I look forward to She-Hulk and to see how much of the supporting cast stays (Parker has promised me I get to see more of Aaron/Machine Man). Another bonus to this arc's conclusion, Dale Eaglesham gets to redesign Machine Man and draw his beloved Alpha Flight one more time.

X-O Manowar #4: The story really picks up as it moves to the modern day with this issue. Artist Cary Nord clearly relishes pitting the book's lead character against fighter jets. His layouts made for some fun action in this issue. I think this series continues to have legs'and I hope the sales reflect that since I would like to read the comic for a long time to come. Time will tell.

Paul Allor

Mars Attacks
John Layman and John McCrea
IDW Publishing

Mars Attacks

You think you understand how this is going to go; cartoonishly evil Martians attack Earth; Earth fights back; good times are had by all (or, at least, by the reader).

But from the start it becomes clear that writer John Layman has something different in mind. The book opens with a sympathetic portrait of one Martian's disturbing encounter with some of humanity's worst impulses. Layman and artist John McCrea are crafting a complex war story, a broad canvas with heroes and villains on each side.

Don't get me wrong: no one would ever mistake Mars Attacks for a sober-minded dissertation on war and its consequences. These deeper intentions are packaged inside a series of madcap adventures, delivered with Mr. Layman's usual structural insanity, and some jaw-droppingly gorgeous art from Mr. McCrea.

As a result, the book is fun as heck, but I read it with a growing sense of disquiet. My loyalties are already divided, and I suspect they will become moreso, the deeper we go. What an unexpected delight.

The Push Man and Other Stories
Yosihiro Tatsumi
Drawn & Quarterly

The first in a series of English-version Tatsumi collections, put out by Drawn & Quarterly, The Push Man collects 16 of Tatsumi's short comic stories from 1969.

These stories are at turns brutal and sexual and perverted and unrelentingly brilliant. With an open, minimalist art style, Tatsumi introduces us to characters who are lost and confused. Women and (mostly) men who are struggling to make sense of a world that has no use for them.

The phrase 'slice of life' is overused, but it absolutely applies here. In these stories, we bear witness to one small part of an ongoing struggle. Nothing ends. Nothing is resolved or overcome. We see, quite literally, a small slice of the characters' lives. And then we move on.

Petrograd
Philip Gelatt and Tyler Crook
Oni Press

Petrograd

When I read a comic like Petrograd, it makes me wonder why there aren't more comics like Petrograd. This book is so many things; epic historical fiction; a gripping spy story; an affecting personal drama. Writer Philip Gelatt and Tyler Crook have created something truly special, here.

It helps that the book involves the murder of Rasputin, one of history's most fascinating chapters. Both Gelatt and Crook imbue the book with a incredible sense of verisimilitude, and Crook's exterior scenes perfectly convey the bitterly-cold world these characters inhabit.

From its fascinating opening scene to its heartbreaking final image, Petrograd is an absolute masterpiece. Put a copy of this book in every mailbox in America, and the comics industry would no longer bear the burden of a niche readership.

Old City Blues
Giannis Milonogiannis
Archaia/new issues published on the web

This book is just an absolute joy to read. I recently caught up with the most recent issues on the web, and was thrilled to find that they matched and even exceeded the quality of the first arc (which has since been collected by Archaia).

Old City Blues reads like a thank you note/love letter to the stories that creator Giannis Milonogiannis grew up on (and in the interest of full disclosure, I should note that Giannis and I worked together on a short comic for the upcoming Clockwork, Volume 2). He mashes together so many of the great cyberpunk and sci-fi dystopia tales of the last 50 years, and comes out with something that feels vibrant and new. This is thanks, in part, to Milonogiannis' extraordinary artistic skills, and in part to the fact that he's simply a darned talented writer.

OCB is also incredibly fast-paced, with the plots moving along at a furious clip. In a way, Milonogiannis is writing in shorthand. Because this story owes so much to what came before, we don't need every detail to be drawn out and hammered home. Old City Blues' target audience already understands these stories; we see them in our dreams.

Captain Marvel
Kelly Sue DeConnick and Dexter Soy
Marvel Comics

Captain Marvel #3

I enjoyed the first couple of issues of Captain Marvel a great deal, but the third issue was where they really got me. In particular, a scene where Captain Marvel delivers a message to an enemy pilot. It is an incredibly well-written scene, and it tells you everything you need to know about Carol Danvers. This is a person who clearly feels she has something to prove. She has pride to burn, and more than a little anger, which she's so far kept nicely in check. I can't help but feel like those things are gonna bite her in the ass before too long.

One of the things I love about DeConnick's work is that she goes deep into the psyche of these comic book characters, both hero and villain. Her work has a level of emotional depth and resonance that many mainstream superhero books lack.

The upshot: Captain Marvel combines a killer adventure story with a complex and fascinating character. This book is just getting started, and I can't wait to see where it goes.

  • September 2, 2012 @ 12:00 PM by JK Parkin
  • Tagged: Alpha Flight, Aquaman, Avenging Spider-Man, Brian Holguin, Captain Marvel, Cary Nord, comic books, Dexter Soy, Elizabeth Breitweiser, Giannis Milonogiannis, Goran Parlov, graphic novels, hulk, I am Legend, Ian Edginton, Jason Aaron, jeff parker, john layman, John McCrea, Jonathan Maberry, Jorge Molina, Kelly Sue DeConnick, Looker, machine man, Magdalena, Mars Attacks, Michael Lark, Mike S. Miller, mullets, National Comics, Old City Blues, Paul Allor, Petrograd, Philip Gelatt, SideScrollers, Steve Dillon, Steve Epting, The Punisher, The Push Man and Other Stories, Tyler Crook, what are you reading, Winter Soldier, Wolverine and the X-Men, X-O Manowar, Yoshihiro Tatsumi, Zeb Wells

5 Comments

OMG Tim! That's the bad guy on the cover of Winter Soldier! I thought it was Bucky too at first'until I read the comic and was reminded. But hey, the cover is in line with his others, of which he's done a bunch, so the blame can go partially to Mr. Epting for not making this new guy distinctive enough. Just a little of the blame though! : )

And Natalia is in the book plenty, just out of costume.

DDD

She's in ballet gear, DDD, not in the Widow costume. But yeah my bad on not recognizing mullet guy. Give a guy props for his Spidey writer prediction and this is his thanks: Bucking of a no-prize. ;)

Bucking FOR that is (I make mistakes even when I talk trash, for the love of God)

I just read the 80's Marvel mini 'Contest of Champions', via the TPB The Avengers: The Contest'which means I also read the 1987 Avengers and West Coast Avengers annuals, where they fight the Grandmaster's version of the Legion of the Unliving:
-Squadron Sinister Hyperion
-Squadron Supreme Nighthawk
-Skurge the Executioner
-Bucky
-Green Goblin
-Dracula
-Swordsman
-Korvac
-Baron Blood
-The first Black Knight (Sir Percy of Scandia)
-Death Adder of the Serpent Society
-Drax the Destroyer
-Mar-Vell
-Terrax
-The original Red Guardian
This mini is my first exposure to the writing style of Bill Mantlo. Not a bad series at all.

I just read 'V for Vendetta' for the first time this week. A travesty I didn't read it sooner, I know.
I also got through the first GIJoe: COBRA miniseries where Chuckles goes undercover into the COBRA organization. It was'ok. The art was too polished for how dark the story was hyped to be.
I also read through the new Channel Zero collection from Dark Horse. Brian Wood's art reminded me of Bill Maus in the 90s and Becky Cloonan's art in the Jenny One mini was a breath of fresh air. Channel Zero was the Nightly News for the 90s.

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