Inbound #5: The Food Issue

Inbound #5: The Food Issue

The Boston Comics Roundtable sure seems like one of the most viable and interesting local comics collectives around.  They've put out several issues now in a couple of different anthology series (ComixTalk reviewed previous books Outbound #2 and Inbound #3).  The latest edition of the Inbound anthology series (subtitled "Comics From Boston") is The Food Issue which focuses on comics featuring food.  The first half of the book is titled "Food Facts" and includes stories about food and autobiographical tales with food as a prominent part of the story. The second half of the book is titled "Food Fiction" and is a more wide-ranging selection of comics, none of which purport to be nonfiction.  

The book is 176 pages and features 26 brand new stories. The contributors include: E.J. Barnes, Eric Boeker, Jerel Dye, Franklin Einspruch, Patrick Flaherty, Bob Flynn, Joel Christian Gill, Andrew Greenstone, Danny Gonzalez, Raul Gonzalez, Beth Hetland, Erik Heumiller, Allie Kleber, Braden D. Lamb, Cathy Leamy, Jackie Lee, Jesse Lonergan, Dan Mazur, Mar-T Moyer, Line O, David Ortega, Shelli Paroline, Adrian Rodriguez, Roho, Aya Rothwell, Katherine Roy, Adam Syzm, Laura Terry, Jason Viola, Rebecca Viola, Katherine Waddell, Ryan Wheeler, and Andy Wong.

Continue Reading

Comix Talk for Friday, November 12, 2010

Lots of reviews this week at ComixTalk – be sure to check it all out: Road: A Sordid City Blues Graphic Novel by Charles Snow, Multiplex: Enjoy Your Show by Gordon McAlpin, Guinea PI and Adventures in Cartooning, and mini comics from J. T. Yost.

Lucy Knisley with a personal "It Gets Better" comicMore on "It Gets Better" efforts here.

INTERVIEW: Brian Heater posts part one of his interview with Tracy White.

iWEBCOMIC: Brigid Alverson buys an iPad and blogs about her first experiences with it.

MANGA: Brigid Alverson links to a report that 37 Japanese publishers are working together to set up a North American digital distribution portal for manga.

WE'RE HERE TO HELP M'AM: Susie Cagle comics about working for the U.S. Census.

HYPE: Why have I not seen this webcomic before?!? Comics Alliance hypes American Barbarian, a webcomic by Thomas Scioli.  You gotta love the About page description: "A red-white-and-blue-haired hero must defend a post-post-apocalyptic world from the immortal Two-Tank Omen."

EVENT: Super Art Fight in DC on November 17th with art-warriors: Jami “Angry Zen Master” Noguchi, Chris “Impact” Impink, and Brandon J Carr.

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Comix Talk for Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Gary has your New England Webcomic Weekend 2 wrapup.  Also Faith Erin Hicks is posting on the web a comic called The Adventures of Superhero Girl she's been doing for her local free weekly alt-paper (h/t Journalista)  That's like a holiday present early!

HYPE: Do you think you would laugh at a single panel comic about a serial killer? Lee Adam Herold's Chopping Block returns with new comics to show you that in the hands of a talented creator, you'll laugh, dabnagit. The webcomic ran pretty consistently from 2000-2004 with some more limited runs of new comics since than.  It really is amazing how Herold can put the most disturbing and creepy scenarios into the comic and still grab you for that laugh.

iWEBCOMICS: Hanvon Technology, a Chinese company, is debuting this week a color e-reader that uses e-ink.  Up until now e-ink has only supported black and white display. E-ink has key advantages over LCD (the current method for displaying color) including less battery power consumption and that it is readable in direct sunlight. Sounds promising — I hope we get to see some examples of how this device handles comics soon.

CRAFT: Dustin Harbin explains how to use the Ames Lettering Guide.

INTERVIEW: Mike Rhode interviews Jamie Noguichi — creator of Yellow Peril and artist on Book 1 of Erfworld.

REVIEW: El Santo reviews Newton's Law.

MILESTONE: Peter Tarkulich's webcomic Bardsworth turned five years old this past Sunday (November 7th). Bardsworth is a fantasy story about Mike Cosley, a high school nobody who finds a doorway to another world — in his closet of all places.  In this world exists Bardsworth University, a college where magic is taught. Mike enrolls and finds himself amidst elves, fairies, a demon who loves to bake, and a host of usual (and unusual) teenage problems. With about 600 strips in the archives, now is a good time to check it out!

MAILBAG: Troops of Doom features photos of action figures acting in comics. Kraig Furtado's webcomic has almost 300 installments in the archives so give it a look!

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Road: A Sordid City Blues Graphic Novel by Charles Snow

 A Sordid City Blues Graphic Novel

Road is a new short graphic novel from Charles Schneeflock Snow.  It originally appeared as part of his webcomic Sordid City Blues which is a favorite of mine. I've always liked Sordid City Blues — it's probably suffered in awareness online because of some hiatuses from Snow.  There's also it's willingness to acknowledge and grapple with the Christianity of its characters.  Anytime an author puts an agenda over telling a good story, whether it's religion, politics or an ideology, well that can just kill the chances of a good story.  But incorporating any topic, even religion, politics or ideology, into a story isn't the same as having an agenda above the story.  And Snow does not have an agenda, but rather has a number of characters who deal with issues of faith and religion in a pretty honest and interesting way.

Road is one of the better stories from Snow and is very worthy of its book treatment.  It's the tale of the very small band Owns Big Mecha doing a short East Coast tour.  This is one of those classic — play small clubs, stay in friends' basements kind of deal — with the band driving in a van, eating bad food, getting lost and everything that goes along with that.  The band does feature three of the main characters from the ongoing webcomic, but Road feels pretty self-contained and I don't think you need any backstory to enjoy it on its own terms.   

Continue Reading

Enjoy The Book: Multiplex In Print

Gordon McAlpin is the creator of Multiplex, a webcomic about the staff at a neighborhood theater.  I first encountered McAlpin's work when he was creating the short nonfiction comic pieces under the banner of Stripped Books.  Those works, although perhaps dated now were a clue that McAlpin had ambitions to create quality work.  So I was a reader of Multiplex from the beginning (ComixTalk has interview McAlpin twice, once in 2006 and once in 2008).  McAlpin recently put out a book collecting the first year of the webcomic, titled Multiplex: Enjoy Your Show: Book One.

Continue Reading

Comix Talk for Friday, November 5, 2010

WWII

Have fun at Webcomics Weekend Gary.  Here's hoping there's a WWIII (the webcomic kind) so maybe I can make it next year…

INTERVIEW: Wow – an absolutely fantastic interview with Berke Breathed by Mike Russell of CulturePulp today.  Long, but totally enjoyable with some revealing comments from the creator of Bloom County, Outland and Opus.

BUSINESS: Bill Roundy has two posts up with lots of numbers on his sales of his books at conventions (part one and part two).  Roundy is a nice guy – I met him at SPX around 2005 I think.  Definitely interesting to read through although he's very much got a lo-fi art, mini-comic approach and I don't know how much extrapolation you can pull from his experiences. (h/t JOURNALISTA!!)

REVIEW: El Santo reviews the anime-influenced and grape-focused webcomic Seedless.

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Comix Talk for Thursday, November 4, 2010

For some reason Google Reader is showing EVERY entry on every RSS feed (instead of only the unread ones) – if anyone can help me with getting this back to the way it's supposed to work please tell me how!  Thanks.  I'm still busy but one thing that caught my eye this week was the Supreme Court case on videogames which the CBLDF actually has a couple of blog posts up on – one a roundup of news and the other a reaction from new CBLDF counsel Bob Corn-Revere.  Based on questions quoted her, the current Supreme Court seems to me to be much less friendly to First Amendment rights than the Court in the 90's that gave the Internet and the Web the full protection of the First Amendment.  This quote in particular from new Justice Alito describing video games as “a new medium that cannot possibly have been envisioned at the time the First Amendment was ratified” is really quite startling.  Most "mediums" are newer than the passage of the First Amendment, comics included.

REVIEW: This Week In Webcomics reviews MS Paint Adventures.

NOT (QUITE) WEBCOMICS: Lauren Davis has a nice recap of the non-comics anthology Machine of Death reaching #1 for a day at Amazon and what it might mean for webcomics.

MAILBAG

Rick Smith writes about his webcomic Yehuda Moon & The Kickstand Cyclery which tells the story of two guys who run a bike shop and the challenges they face in the store and on the road. Yehuda's the utilitarian advocate; Joe's the go-fast pragmatist. Thistle Gin, a wrench and biking mom, rounds them out.  I'm a fan of Smith's work from his comic Shuck and although I haven't been following Yehuda, it looks pretty good. I'm not really much of a cyclist but that didn't seem to be an issue with enjoying the series so far.

Richard Pulfer writes about his new superhero webcomic called Blue Yonder. Written by Pulfer and Luke Perks and illustrated by Diego Diaz, it's billed as a coming-of-age superhero tale:

Jared Davenport was born to be a superhero. The son of high-flying crime-fighter Albatross, Jared is used to saving the world before curfew as the sonic superhero Blue Yonder. When a mysterious enemy unleashes a brutal vendetta against the Davenports, Jared finds himself on the run in the back alleys of Venture City, with his only allies the washed-up superheroes dwelling on the other side of the tracks. But the enemy is closer than Jared suspects, and he must learn who he can trust before it’s too late.

Continue Reading

Uncategorized

Comix Talk for Tuesday, November 2, 2010

?Um Norte Americanos en Estados Unidos? Please remember to vote today.

AWARDS: The WCCAs which lasted for most of this decade as an awards program for webcomics don't show any public signs of resurrection. The long-running webcomic-focused site The Webcomics List started an award last year that they are returning for a second edition this year.  Here's a press release with a run-down on this year's edition.

INTERVIEW: Audio interview with Ben Costa, Shi Long Pang (warning audio starts up automatically).

CRAFT

MAILBAG!

  • Zach Kagin writes about the online debut of his comic Slightly On Center a three-year long comic strip printed three days a week in local New Haven newspapers. Kagin describes it as "a cross between xkcd and Cyanide & Happiness, ranging from the nerdy to the existential and inappropriate."
  • Tommy Phillips writes about the horror in space webcomic The Horror of Colony 6.  Phillips does the art for the comic and he does a nice job so far.

Continue Reading

Uncategorized