Comix Talk for Monday, November 1, 2010

NOVEMBER? F'r reals? Wow… Okay a short update today – first off congratulations to Kate Beaton on winning Lulu of the Year and all the other Lulu winners.  ABRUPT TRANSITION: speaking of Kate Beaton, she tweeted a pretty obvious TRUE point that apparently led to a reenactment of Crossfire! on twitter.  Anyhow I think Ken Dahl's comic sums it up well (h/t Scott McCloud) and has the benefit of being independently awesome anyhow.

REVIEW: Delos interviews Witch Knots.

INTERVIEW: Bryan Lee O'Malley answers questions about his process.

CRAFT: Benjamin Birdie posts another breakdown of a comic page – he's been doing this somewhat regularly for awhile now.

HYPE: Warren Ellis puts out another call for webcomic plugging at his White Chapel message board.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Kris Straub lays to rest the persistent rumors that he is a gigolo juggalo.

Last but not least please vote in my poll on "how do you read your daily batch of webcomics" – click here to vote and see the results so far.

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Comix Talk for Thursday, October 28, 2010

I think I mentioned that Dave Roman told me at SPX this year about the print graphic novel of his webcomic Astronaut Academy coming out next year – above is a photo of the cover art.  Also in random early this AM thoughts, I saw this flow chart from Fast Company on how to explain the Internet to a 19th Century English street urchin. Comic or not comic?  Definitely funny though.

INTERVIEW

REVIEWS

NOT WEBCOMICS

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Machine of Death Anthology of Short Stories

Machine of Death

Have you bought a copy of the Machine of Death anthology?  

Not webcomics but stories from lots of cool folks including many webcomic types.  Plus illustrations from MANY comic types including Kate Beaton. David Malki! and others have blogged and tweeted all day trying to get this to the top of the Amazon chart TODAY and by gawd they've succeeded – check it out: #1 on the Amazon Best Seller List (time: 2:10 PM EST).  

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Comix Talk for Monday, October 25, 2010

It's Monday already? Over the weekend Warren Ellis asked who else is doing a long form webcomic for print collections a la Freak Angels? – lots of interesting links in the thread.

INTERVIEWWebcomics Community forum interviewed Lora Innes of The Dreamer.

REVIEW

HYPE

NOT WEBCOMICS: Lines and Colors blog links to this site showing incredible close-ups of works of art. The site – Haltadefinizione – (English version here), is an Italian project specializing in high-definition photography and has made available on the web several great masterpieces in what can be considered extreme high resolution.

MAILBAG

Darryl Hughes (creator of GAAK and The Continentals) writes about a new project Chevalier: The Queen's Mouseketeer.  The webcomic is by Hughes along with Tiffany Ross (Alien Dice, Abby's Agency) and is the story of a blacksmith mouse with the heart of a hero who must rescue a kidnapped Princess in order to stop two kingdoms bound for war and claim his destiny. Hughes describes Chevalier as "The Princess Bride meets the Lord of the Rings in a Disney/Pixar movie written in Dr. Seuss rhyme starring a mouse".

James Randell writes about his most recent comic that parodies several newspapers comics including Mary Worth, Spiderman, Pearls Before Swine and many more.  The comic is part of his ongoing series Newspaper Comic Strip, the tale of an amnesiatic comic strip character who somehow becomes self-aware. Newspaper Comic Strip is written by Randell and illustrated by Justin Pasieka and is resuming updates on a biweekly schedule after a temporary hiatus. 

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Comix Talk for Friday, October 22, 2010

Kate Beaton's Kraven the Prom Hunter

Friday! Awesome! Woohoo!  I hope everyone saw that the Comics Alliance blog has a great interview with Kate Beaton — lots of charming anecdotes in there.  She did in fact have the longest lines of fans at SPX this fall.

REVIEW: El Santo reviews Lovecraft Is Missing. He reviewed a bunch of horror-themed webcomics this week.

CRAFT:  T.J. Kirsch shows off his work process on the webcomic he drawsShe Died In Terrebonne (written by Kevin Church).

COPYRIGHT

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Thursday Already?

It is just one of those weeks – next week looks like it might be a lost cause too.  Anyone want a guest blogging spot next week? Have your computer talk to my computer.

I am going to blog about your insolence!

In the meantime I wanted to plug Gordon McAlpin's Multiplex book Enjoy Your Show which definitely deserves a full review (hopefully soon!).  When the comic started I mistook it for another comic about movies when all along it's an epic tale about people who work at a movie theater (many of whom love movies).  This is a collection of the first year — some of the art definitely looks like it, but the writing and pacing is already there.  A really well done production of a book too. And look Bryan Lee O'Malley gave it a plug — "Multiplex perfectly portrays the real foibles and friendships of a lousy job with a couple of perks. Also, it looks round and colorful and sweet, like delicious candy. I recommend reading Multiplex over getting an actual job."

One more note — former ComixTalk contributor Derik Badman has a new column up at the Hooded Utilitarian called Permanent Ink.  Please go check it out – Derik is a very engaging writer who brings thoughtful, knowledgeable criticism to comics.

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Comix Talk for Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Boston Comics Roundtable Halloween Party

Portland gets a lot of ink these days as a comics mecca but I'm always impressed with the work and output of the Boston Comics Roundtable.  It's an independent organization of comics creators in the Greater Boston area created in 2006 to unite Boston-based artists and writers in the spirit of camaraderie and professional development.  The Roundtable recently expanded again, premiering the second issue of its sci-fi anthology, the first issue of its horror anthology, and the development of a new comics trade show, M.I.C.E. – the Massachusetts Independent Comics Show. On October 28th, they're hosting a great Halloween party at Tommy Doyle's in Harvard Square.  And… just out is their latest collection of comics in Inbound 5: The Food Issue. This 176-page trade paperback is their biggest volume ever, featuring 26 brand new stories from dozens of contributors. View book cover and samples at bostoncomicsroundtable.com/inbound-5. More from the press release:

The best and the brightest comics creators from the greater Boston area explore our delectable and complex relationship with food. Where does it come from, and what are we willing to do to get it? From the mythological to the historical, the personal to the fantastical – the range of genres is matched by an equally broad range of graphic styles that exemplifies the fun and creativity of today's independent comics. Contributors to Inbound 5 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.

REVIEWS: The Webcomic Overlooks reviews two horror comics: Walking The Lethe and The Sacrifice — a webcomic based on the Left For Dead videogame.

HYPE:  The first chapter, "Track 1: Radio Free Mars" of the new webcomic The Sisters Grimm is done — a good time to jump in and check it out. Also caught this short piece from the University of Tulsa Collegiate newspaper recommending some webcomics.

BUSINESS? Not sure what to categorize this as but Scott McCloud comments on Flattr, the micro-donations system.

MAILBAG

Kit Fox writes "I have been doing a webcomic called Snap Crackle Pop for several years now and I'm trying to get the word out so hopefully some people will read it…. It's a comic about a girl who draws a comic about her life, aided and hindered by a host of demons, dragons, flying pigs, Buddhist goldfish, monsters and mundane chick stuff.  I live in Hawaii, and often sprinkle bits of scenery into the comic."

Twisted Peel by British artist Peter Roy — celebrates the release of its 250th strip this week. The anniversary strip, "Man Flu Revisited" finds Peel, the quirky anti-hero, receiving a palpable lack of sympathy for his illness.

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Comix Talk for Thursday, October 14, 2010

Just in time for Halloween season — Chris Cantrell has a new comic called The Deadlys

In the I wonder why I don't read every single superhero comic in existence the very funny webcomic Let's Be Friends Again presents the long, complicated saga of Hank Pym: Ant Man, Giant Dude, Robot-Alien-whatever….

THEORY: Dante Shepherd's Surviving The World: Comic or Not-comic?

REVIEWS: Read About Comics blog has a review of Koko Be Good and Sean Kleefeld looks at the self-honesty of Sarah Becan's I Think You're Sauceome.

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