Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
<<June 2024>>
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
      01
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: francesco, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

clip image006 212x300 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

clip image008 190x300 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

Dynamite has been making a lot of announcements, and there isn’t even a con coming. Here’s the round-up:

• CEO Nick Barrucci is selling art from his personal collection by Tom Raney, Mark Bagley, Scott Hanna, and Patrick Zircher from books like The Outsiders, The Punisher, Uncanny X-Men, Ultimate Spider-Man, The Order, Robin, and more. A portion of the proceeds will go to benefit the CBLDF. Barrucci owns hundreds of pages of art, and fans can order by artist: orders will be filled randomly for $75 a page.

“Art collecting has been a passion of mine for years,” Barrucci explained. “For the past 30 years, I have been picking up pieces from my favorite artists whenever I can.  I look at my collection on a regular basis, as I love to appreciate the form, and I was looking at some of these pages by great artists including Mark Bagley, Patrick Zircher and one of my favorite contemporary art teams – Tom Raney and Scott Hanna, and thought that while I have a great collection, I couldn’t possibly appreciate it all properly, as with Mark, Patrick, Tom and Scott I have over 400 pages of these fantastic artists and a few other incredible contemporary artists.  I had contemplated selling these via auction houses, but realized that many fans may not have access to original art, and thought it would be cool to offer to the comics fan base first.  This is the ultimate one-of-a-kind comics collectible as there is only one of each piece of original art, which is why we need to fill each order randomly.”

Reanimator01 Cov D Mangum Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

• Reanimator, a character created by H.P. Lovecraft in 1921, is coming back in a four-issue miniseries written by Keith Davidsen and illustrated by Randy Valiente, debuting in April. Variant covers include Jae Lee (Dark Tower), Francesco Francavilla (Afterlife with Archie), Tim Seeley (Hack/Slash), and Andrew Mangum (Wilder).

In Reanimator, Dr. Herbert West heads to New Orleans to continue his life’s work: the revival of the dead by purely chemical means. To accomplish this task, he recruits Susan Greene, a young and wide-eyed pharmacologist fascinated by his macabre experiments. Initially unfazed by West’s unorthodox practices (including how he funds his research – by selling zombie brain fluid as a narcotic), Susan may regret her scientific curiosity as sinister forces – those aligned with Elder Gods and Haitian Voodoo – begin to align against the Reanimator. Reanimator blends mad science, Lovecraftian tentacle terror, backwater Louisianan superstition, and fan-favorite elements of such television shows as Breaking Bad and The Walking Dead.

 

Reanimator01 04 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho Reanimator01 05 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho Reanimator01 06 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho Reanimator01 07 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho Reanimator01 Cov A Lee 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho Reanimator01 Cov B Francavilla 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho Reanimator01 Cov C Seeley 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

 

JGSea3 01 Cov A Cho Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

• Jungle Girl is also coming back in April, with cover art and writing by Frank Cho. Frank Cho and Jungle Girls…it’s like peanut butter and jelly. The series is co-written by Doug Murray (The ‘Nam) and illustrated by Jack Jadson (The Savage Hawkman).

Jungle Girl: Season Three picks up where the previous series left off, following Jana’s escape from an underwater city and a gigantic, otherworldly creature. However, her father soon reveals that those actions have doomed the Lost World in which they all live, as a wormhole appears in the sky and flaming debris begins to fall through. As the jungle burns, Jana and her friends must contend with stampeding behemoths and displaced, murderous natives. Furthermore, the rift presents a new, fearsome threat, for the fire from an alien dimension was not the only thing to come through.

“I’m delighted to be back with my co-creator, Doug Murray, and finish out the final story arc of Jungle Girl,” says Cho. And surely many will be delighted to see him back. What is it people like about jungle girl comics anyway? Could it be…the themes?

“Jungle Girl appeals to readers for the same reason that other such stories do,” says Murray. “We are fascinated by the ‘Noble Savage’, the man or woman who, untainted by society, lives a life filled with the challenge (and pleasure) of the hunt as he/she fights for survival.  It’s a genre that has existed for over a century but was perfected by Edgar Rice Burroughs in Tarzan and associated books. The TV series Lost touched upon the same challenges and appeals.”

LookingGroup01 Cov A Templeton Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

• AND the 2008 Shuster Award winner for “Outstanding Canadian Web Comics Creators” Looking For Group is getting an ongoing series. Written by Ryan Sohmer and illustrated by Lar deSouza, Hawk, Ryan Dunlavey, and Ed Ryzowski, with variant covers by Ty Templeton and Becky Dreistadt, and bonus stories from the Non-Playable Character and Tiny Dick Adventures spin-off series.

Looking For Group follows the adventures of Cale’Anon the elf and Richard the undead warlock, as well as their companions, through Fantasy, Pop Culture, and Gaming tropes, set in a reality and time unlike our own. It’s a place where the eating of small children is not necessarily frowned upon; where beings of extraordinary power can destroy entire villages with only “because I could” as an excuse; where magic and adventure are as commonplace as setting fire to, and then reanimating, a chipmunk into a skeletal minion (it happens more than you’d think); and an epic journey can begin by an accident of fate.

 

LFG PAGE 1 105x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho LFG PAGE 2 105x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho LFG PAGE 3 105x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho LookingGroup01 Cov B Dreisdadt 100x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho NPC 01 pg01 105x150 Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho

0 Comments on Lots of Dynamite news: Art sales, Reanimator returns, Looking for Group and Jungle Girl by Frank Cho as of 1/19/2015 11:29:00 AM
Add a Comment
2. Nice Art: Francesco Francavilla’s Silver Sable

silver_sable_low.jpg
Art blog Comic Twart is taking on Silver Sable, who actually had her own title that lasted a whole 35 issues back in the day.

BTW, we’ve been seeing more and more of Francavilla’s art around, and we approve, wholeheartedly. Artists with fully developed classic illustration sensibilities don’t get much of a chance to develop these days, but that style never really goes away. Fellow Comic Twarter Declan Shalvey was twittering about a bunch of stylish artists who seem to have taken hold more at Marvel these days:

Not to sound biased, but i think that Marvel are currently publishing work with the most varied/interesting group of artists at the top of their game. Guys like Roland Boschi, @jasonlatour, @chrissamnee, Paul Azaceta, @gabrielhardman, @shawncrystal, Jefte Paolo, @mbreitweiser, Gabriel Hernandez Walta, Goran Parlov, etc, the list goes on and on. There’s plenty more; they were just off the top of my head right now.


It’s a good start — and Francavilla, to name just one, has plenty of work coming out from DC. But recently, house styles and obnoxious events seems to have driven a lot of the individuality in comics away — it’s a good reminder that it ain’t necessarily so.

BTW, Francavilla also has his own 31 Days of Halloween thing going on. We won’t compete, just link.

7 Comments on Nice Art: Francesco Francavilla’s Silver Sable, last added: 10/6/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
3. After Breakfast We Went To Texas

MARK: Today I had help from Lucy, age 8, with today’s update. I asked her to talk about our stays in Bryan and Austin, TX while I typed what she said. Full disclosure – I took what she said and changed the order of some sentences so that it goes in chronological order. Otherwise, though, this is what she said. Her comments are in the larger font.

LUCY: When we came into Texas, we were listening to a song named "After Breakfast Let’s Go to Texas.” My mom and dad are in a band that’s called the Church Ladies and it's their song.

We went to Bryan, Texas and stayed with Petey, my mom’s friend. Petey is a really nice man. We walked around Texas A and M. It was really hot out and I liked it a lot. Petey told us about butterflies and Texas Rangers and trees.



MARK: For the Texas A&M football team, there is great importance given to "The Twelveth Man." Here's Karen with her hand on the thigh of that hallowed player.



Also, in Bryan we finally got our antenna fixed! Yay! Here's a picture with Daniel from the Honda dealer.  Such a nice guy!



LUCY: We went to a restaurant. It was my dad’s birthday. It was a Mexican restaurant and I tried Sopapillas and I loved them. In the Sopapillas we put a candle and sang Happy Birthday to my dad.



Another day we went to Aunt Pat and Uncle Frank’s house in Austin, Texas. We saw Suzanne and Stephen my second cousins and Francesco, which is a baby, my new cousin. Francesco was 3 months old when I met him. He was really cute. I love the way that he holded on to my finger.

MARK: Here's Zoe with lovely Francesco, and then my family:




MARK: While we were at in Austin, Lucy decided to play with my aunt’s weight set and promptly dropped a 5lb weight hard on her left ring finger. It then proceeded to turn purple and swell up. It’s still purple and swelled, but a bit better now. And she can move it around, so we’ve decided it must be okay. Yet another adventure with Lucy.

(I have a picture of Lucy's finger but Karen seems to have hidden the camera and she's asleep right now -- the nerve! -- so I can't download it.  But I'll put it up here soon)

LUCY: We went to lots of bookstores and me and Zoe got these little stuffed animals and my brother got a hat. We went in the kids section and played with the trains.



MARK: We loved the beautiful state capital building -- where we arrived just in time for an amazing tour. And we remembered the Alamo...



We visited an amazing independent bookstore in Autsin called Book People. They were very kind to us!


At a Barnes and Noble in Austin we had an unlikely encounter too strange for fiction: I was standing there talking with a bookseller when I heard a woman’s voice behind me say, “Mark? Mark Hughes, is that you?” I turned around and there, out of the blue, stood a familiar face from Rhode Island. Beverly Pettine is a friend of the family who used to work with my mother. Beverly doesn’t live down here in Texas--it was just a strange coincidence that she just happened to be visiting her sister in Austin (who knew?) and just happened to be in exactly the right the bookstore with her sister and niece when she saw a sign announcing that I was going to be appearing here. She looked at the time and my appearance just happened to be exactly when she was here. If I were to put that in a story, no one would believe it. Yet, here’s the proof: Here I am with Beverly in front of our car in Austin, TX, of all places. Whoda thunk? :-)

 

We also had a very nice afternoon with friends of friends. Our neighbor, Jay, grew up in the Dallas area so we were very pleased to meet Brad, Holly, Katie, and Grace, who live in Austin. Lovely people and our new friends in Texas. :-)



LUCY: Yesterday we went to Stephen and Jonathan’s house and they have five dogs. Their names were Max, Casey, Billy, Toby, and Lloyd. They were cute. I loved to pick Max up. He was the littlest but he was 31 years old. We went in Stephen and Jonathan’s pool and swam. Stephen and my dad and mom threw us in. It was really fun.

Right now my brother and sister are filling their stomachs with Cheetos. We’re driving to Dallas, Texas. We’re going to stay with Gigi. We were just listening to High School Musical in the car.

MARK: A sad note: I just got some terribly disappointing news from NPR – they are not going to air the road-trip stories after all. Given their already busy line up and the fact that the producer working with me will be away in Alaska for a month starting this week, they made their decision not to go forward with the road-trip stories. I can’t tell you how disappointed I am about this. I sent out the message about NPRs decision earlier this morning and was truly touched by the many, many the kind emails people sent in reply. I’m grateful to have such a supportive network.

On the other hand, I’ve already learned a great deal from working with NPR so far, and the experience has been a lot of fun. Perhaps after the summer is over I’ll submit some commentaries in the style of the first one, where I talked about quitting my job. We’ll see.

In any case, this is so far the only significant set-back in an otherwise successful and happy road trip/book tour. And I’m determined to get over it before we reach Dallas. :-)

I appreciate your friendship.
-- Mark

LEMONADE MOUTH (Delacorte Press, 2007)
I AM THE WALLPAPER (Delacorte Press, 2005)
www.markpeterhughes.com

Add a Comment
4. Glenrothes, United Kingdom

bens-place.jpg

Glenrothes, United Kingdom

Coordinates: 56 12 N 3 10 W

Population: 38,679 (2001 est.)

Since the mid-1970s the list of silicon-related geographical nicknames has expanded to include half a dozen valleys, two alleys, a forest, a gulf, a desert, a fen (or marsh if you prefer American English), and a glen. (more…)

0 Comments on Glenrothes, United Kingdom as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment