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1. On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

As I suggested in my early con impressions, WonderCon had a reasonable amount of space and handled the numbers of attendees pretty well. It was no surprise that Saturday brought bigger numbers than Friday, and the crowding was more obvious, but still never reached that feeling of pushing and shoving that can easily erupt at crowded cons. The floor occasionally got backed up, particularly around the constantly slammed DC Comics booth, where big names like Scott Snyder appeared frequently for signings and the DC booth’s location, at the very front of the con entrance, contributed to some difficulty getting onto the floor. I noticed that the retail side of things was fairly busy, too, with some crowding and difficulty navigating, suggesting that plenty of fans were there to buy back issues and memorabilia, as well. The artists alley at WonderCon was a little on the scanty side in terms of size and numbers of tables, but those artists who were present were very engaging and passionate about their work. They seemed to have regular followers who were coming in to buy their artwork and there was a strong representation of the fine art side of fantasy prints and original work, as well as handmade arts and crafts.

mbrittany plaza 200x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo GalleryOpen areas like the food court and outside atrium were a welcome oasis, but it also continued to be easy to exit the con into the outdoor plaza areas for a rest and there was no difficulty with re-entry. Though the floor only allowed a couple of doors for access, the many exterior doors were open for comings and goings, with several food trucks outside, far enough from the entrance not to cause back ups. One other surprise was that Sunday seemed just as busy as Saturday, as I heard retailers commenting. They were turning over sales at just as high a rate that day. This feeling may be due to the fact that there were slightly fewer panels on Sunday, making the floor more of a feature, or simply that people waited to do their shopping on the floor on Sunday. When I stumbled into the Arena, a venue I hadn’t seen before, I was impressed with the numbers it could hold, and also that it was completely full for a Joss Whedon Shakespeare film adaptation event. This suggested to me that the con was handling numbers well, since I generally had no idea that so many people were even at the con on top of the numbers moving in the open spaces of the con. It was Easter Sunday the last day of the con, and it closed a little early, at 5PM, perhaps for this reason, but fans still had a sense that they would have been happy for the con to go on a little longer, a good sign regarding WonderCon’s appeal.

One final follow up: I suggested initially in my coverage that people might find WonderCon in Anaheim appealing due to Disneyland access, and that this would appeal to people will kids particularly. Though this turned out to be true, I also underestimated the appeal of Disneyland to singles and younger congoers. I went to Disneyland the following Monday and found that quite a number of WonderCon attendees were there too, from a younger demographic than I expected. You could tell from their conversations and generally less pastel clothing what guests were in town for the con, and I’d say about 1 in 10 were from the con in the massive crowds Disney drew on that post-Easter day.

mbrittany dark horse 200x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo GalleryFinal thoughts: it was a well run and appealing con, offering plenty of choice in terms of panels, keeping up with what’s going on in comics and pop culture right now. Marvel were a little under represented, though Dan Slott was participating in panels, and several pros who were there for DC panels were formal Marvel people. Marvel didn’t have a booth on the floor, driving up the demand for DC variants and signings, which they happily accommodated. I was also impressed by the energetic presence of the mid-sized presses like Dark Horse, Archaia, Image, IDW, and ComiXology, for taking the opportunity to flourish and interact with fans when given a little more space to do so. The mid-sized presses really shone in their engagement with fans on the floor, their foresight in bringing new and upcoming books to purchase and get a sneak-peak at, and also through their involvement on panels. This gave the general impression that mid-sized presses are on the rise and taking on the role, collectively, as contenders for the Big Two. Good for them!

Whether WonderCon is in Anaheim again or back in San Francisco in the future, the planning and structure of the con should continue to hold up to make it a comfortable as well as enjoyable, exciting event for fans. This won’t be one of the cons where you have to sacrifice personal amenities just to see your favorite artists speak or get the variant your collection is calling for. They have a sense of putting the customer first at WonderCon and let’s hope that continues; it sets a good model for the growing con industry, and there are some bigger cons who could learn a thing or two from this.

Without further ado, some highlights of the con in photos from my trusty partner in crime Michele Brittany who proved her moxie as a pop culture photographer at WonderCon 2013 in spades. Thanks Michele!

mbrittany anime 207x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

mbrittany artist alley 300x256 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

mbrittany batman 224x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

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mbrittany holly hoxx graphic 300x200 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

mbrittany golden comics 300x200 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

mbrittany marvel art 300x212 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

mbrittany moxie 193x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

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mbrittany shredder 119x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

mbrittany small press alley 300x180 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

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mbrittany super hero stuff 300x200 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

mbrittany tom hodges 211x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

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mbrittany wreck it ralph 212x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery

 

Photo Credits: All photos in this article were taken by semi-professional photographer and pop culture scholar Michele Brittany. She’s an avid photographer of pop culture events. You can learn more about her photography and pop culture scholarship here.

Hannah Means-Shannon writes and blogs about comics for TRIP CITY and Sequart.org and is currently working on books about Neil Gaiman and Alan Moore for Sequart. She is @hannahmenzies on Twitter and hannahmenziesblog on WordPress.

5 Comments on On the Scene: WonderCon 2013 Recap and Photo Gallery, last added: 4/28/2013
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2. Zoe Saldana in talks to play Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy

article 2060897 0EC1A29900000578 842 468x634 Zoe Saldana in talks to play Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy

hero189 GAMORACVR Zoe Saldana in talks to play Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy

Zoe Saldana might just add to her geek cred by adding Gamora from Guardisna of the Galaxy to her nerd icon roles as Lt. Uhura in the Star Trek reboot and Neytiri in Avatar.

If the gets the role, it would not be her first comic book performance. She played Aisha in The Losers, a role which required her to fearlessly do summersaults clad only in white panties, a useful skill should Gamora’s ultra-skimpy costume be adapted for the film. Saldana is known for being physical in her roles, so she’d be perfect as the tough assassin Gamora. Plus, they both look good in green.

GUARDIANS has previously cast Chris Pratt as Star-Lord, and former wrestler Dave Bautista as Drax the Destroyer.

3 Comments on Zoe Saldana in talks to play Gamora in Guardians of the Galaxy, last added: 4/4/2013
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3. Marvel to Publish Some More Superior Books

Marvel have announced that they’ll be publishing two new titles soon, both tying-in to their Superior Spider-Man series, and both of them focusing on villains. Which means the Spider-Man franchise at Marvel will now be made up of six titles, all of which feature a villain-of-sorts in the main role. We have Scarlet Spider and Venom currently on the go, and now July will see The Superior Foes of Spider-Man and Superior Carnage both released into the world (presumably picked up by a cup/coaster combination, and subsequently thrown out a window).

spiderfoes Marvel to Publish Some More Superior Books

The creative teams are pretty good! The Superior-Spider Foes will focus on the five-strong member of the current Sinister Six, who are made up of Speed Demon, Shocker, Beetle, Overdrive and Boomerang. This is being billed as an ongoing series, and will be written by Nick Spencer, drawn by Steve Lieber. Boomerang appears to be the central character here, although I’m not sure what the ongoing premise of the book will be. It seems like it’ll be a look at life as a for-hire supervillain, and all that entails. Double-crosses, failed heists, an inevitable upcoming appearance from Spider-Man…

superiorcarnage 02 Marvel to Publish Some More Superior Books

Superior Carnage follows the previous two successful Carnage miniseries Marvel have put out recently. Zeb Wells won’t be writing this one, but another member of his writing room at Robot Chicken will be - Kevin Shinick. And whilst Clayton Crain will only be on covers this time round, that does make space for Steven Segovia to come in as artist for the five-issue mini. The mini will focus on another attempt to take over and control the ‘Carnage’ symbiote, but this time it’ll be a villain trying to cause trouble, in the form of The Wizard.

Both books are out in July.

1 Comments on Marvel to Publish Some More Superior Books, last added: 4/5/2013
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4. The Owl Signals The Return of Project Superpowers

Owl01 Cov Ross 200x300 The Owl Signals The Return of Project SuperpowersAfter roughly a three year absence, Dynamite is returning to the Project Superpowers universe with the July debut of The Owl.  The title will be written by J.T. Krul, currently writing Superman Beyond for DC and Jirni for Aspen.  Heubert Khan Michael, recently drawing Vampirella, will be the artist.

Project Superpowers ran primarily from 2008-2010, with a few spin-offs like Black Terror.  It was driven by Alex Ross and Jim Krueger, reviving a number of 1940s characters.  The Owl was originally a Dell character from 1940-43.  Ross, a co-plotter on the original P.S. material is only listed as a cover artist here.  Dynamite is describing this as “a bridge series for more to come.”  This isn’t totally surprising, since they’ve previously mentioned another run with the property at conventions.

This is also a return to Dynamite for Krul, who wrote a Highlander mini-series for them and an issue of Red Sonja back in the 2006-08 period.

Official PR follows:

J.T. KRUL! ALEX ROSS! THE OWL! DYNAMITE!

SAN DIEGO COMIC-CON LAUNCH FOR DYNAMITE’S HIGH FLYING HERO!

April 3, 2013, Mt. Laurel, NJ -The Owl returns to comics in his own limited series.  Written by the critically acclaimed , J.T. Krul, with art by Heubert Khan Michael, and covers by Alex Ross and special Subscription Only Exclusive Covery Ardian Syaf, The Owl #1 hits stores this coming July!

In issue #1, lost for 50 years in an ethereal limbo, the Owl has come back to find a violent and desperate world of strangers.  The woman he loved is gone, but he remains determined to continue his fight for justice.  Can the Owl withstand the challenges awaiting him… or will this new reality crush his body and spirit?

“With a character like the Owl, I get to explore the heart of a true hero whose greatest threat seems to be the soul of the entire world around him,” says writer J.T. Krul. “Nick Terry used to live in a golden age it seemed, but he now finds himself in our present day – and a world filled with greed, apathy, and utter desperation at every turn. It’s the mark of a true hero, staying true to one’s ideals when there is little hope to be found. In this story, he’ll see what his mission and legacy has become and it will scare him more than anything else.”

“We at Dynamite extremely excited to work with J.T. again, hot off his DC Comics Exclusive,” adds Dynamite CEO / Publisher Nick Barrucci.  ”We hope that this is the first of many more projects with J.T. and we are all in such anticipation for The Owl to ‘take flight’!  The Owl is a bridge series for more to come from Dynamite, and we couldn’t be happier.”

Owl01 Cov Syaf Subscription 200x300 The Owl Signals The Return of Project Superpowers

6 Comments on The Owl Signals The Return of Project Superpowers, last added: 4/11/2013
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5. REVIEW: Green Lantern’s ‘Wrath of the First Lantern’ Event

Geoff Johns’ final storyline as Green Lantern Chief is ‘Wrath of the First Lantern’, a storyline which will conclude with issue #20 of the main book. The event has brought in, as is always the case, the other three Lantern titles as a crossover, and tells the story of a new/old threat to the Lantern Corps. And while it’s a solid storyline, it’s also a very strange one for Johns to bring to the table at this point…

GL Cv19 5bx105yup9 REVIEW: Green Lanterns Wrath of the First Lantern Event

Wrath of the First Lantern sees the very first Green Lantern ever, Volthoom (get used to hearing some very silly names, guys), escape a prison he was put in and subsequently go on a rampage around the Universe. He moves from one lantern to another at a time, therefore creating the crossover, and goes on the offensive. The strange thing about the storyline is that each time he catches up to one –  be it John Stewart, Atrocitus, Kyle Rayner, or whoever – he effectively recaps their origin to them, making this one of the best stories to jump onto in a while.

Yes – the very last storyline from Geoff Johns is also essentially a series of origin stories for every single one of the main characters in the Green Lantern franchise. It’s rather strange. Volthoom’s power appears to be that he can rewrite timestreams, going backwards and forwards in time to change the lives of other people. So he can create a world where Hal Jordan’s father doesn’t die, or he can maintain the status quo and keep Poppa Jordan dead. For the last few weeks, Volthoom has gone over to a series of different characters, shown them alternate lives they could’ve lived, and then refused to change them – every week that’s happened. Readers get a potted history of whomever Volthoom has caught now, and by the end of the issue Volthoom has refused to change the origin, and also captured the hero.

This does allow Johns access to a reset button should he choose to take it. The last ten years have been one of change for the franchise, with grand sweeping gestures and smaller character-focused moments all built up on each other for a series of pretty successful storylines. Some of the stories have been better than others, but for the most part the Geoff Johns era of Green Lantern has been a pretty amazing success, creatively. Not only does Green Lantern now support four titles simultaneously, but it also tells stories which change the sweep of the DC Universe – from Sinestro Corps War to Blackest Night. There’s a clear vision for the characters, who have all been developed fairly well for ten consecutive years.

That can all be reset and cleared away if Geoff Johns wants to, via Volthoom. I’m hoping he doesn’t choose to take this route, because Volthoom hasn’t really worked as a villain so far. As a character, the villain has mainly existed as a fountain of exposition, narrating the lives of Guy Gardner or Carol Ferris like some kind of malevolent David Attenborough. He hasn’t had a particularly visible goal as a villain, and his progress has been very repetitive indeed. The saving grace has been that his powers offer artists a chance to try out some fantastically experimental page layouts, as they pull apart the lives of characters and arrange the important moments into spider-webs, and tapestries.

The story has served to underline the strength of the main characters. There are now around 20 characters in the Green Lantern franchise who could be used as the lead for one of the books, which speaks to how well the writers have managed to pick out underused, well-conceived characters already floating around in the DC Universe. There are several characters who had fallen into obscurity over the years, and writers like Peter Tomasi have done brilliant work in repurposing them. If nothing else, Wrath of the First Lantern has proven to be an excellent showcase for the franchise itself, and the directions new writers and artists could choose to take it in. Hopefully they won’t choose to, y’know, murder half of them.

Wrath of the Green Lanterns isn’t finished yet – Green Lantern #20 is the finale for the storyline, and for Geoff Johns’ run as a whole. It’s been very strange to take this moment in the run and start retelling everybody’s origin storyline – but it’s been a nice little showcase for the characters, and given the various creative teams a chance to experiment a bit with their storytelling. Fun, if a little unnecessary.

3 Comments on REVIEW: Green Lantern’s ‘Wrath of the First Lantern’ Event, last added: 4/5/2013
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6. Preview: Jeffrey Brown’s A Matter of Life

amatteroflife80dpi lg Preview: Jeffrey Browns A Matter of Life
Jeffrey Brown been busy in the past year or so with his best selling Star Wars cartoon books—Darth Vader and Son and Vader’s Little Princess—and an indie film based on his work—Save the Date— but he’s coming back to the genre that made his name with June’s A Matter of Life, a full-color exploration of three generations of men: Brown, his minister father and his son, Oscar. You can pre-order the book now. meanwhile here’s a sneak peek:

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1 Comments on Preview: Jeffrey Brown’s A Matter of Life, last added: 4/3/2013
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7. Court rules digital resales are a no-no

hdoudav Court rules digital resales are a no no
Can you sell “used” digital copies of books and music? You used to be able to via services such as ReDigi which allowed you to upload a digital file while removing it from your computer. However a court has ruled that this resale does not come under the first sale doctrine, since it isn’t a physical copy. Under first sale doctrine, once you purchase a copyrighted work like a book, dvd or CD you can resell it. The court ruled digital copies were not the same. Brigid Alverson unpacks the decision a bit here:

The digitally curious might want to read the entire ruling (linked above), because it goes into some detail about this concept. But the bottom line is this judge sees the first sale doctrine as applicable only to physical media — so if you want to sell your iPad or Kindle loaded with digital comics, that would be fine, but you couldn’t sell the comics one by one as digital files.

What does it mean to sell a used digital file, anyway? And why would you bother? It might seem like a strange idea, but both Amazon and Apple are working on it. Part of this may have to do with cost: There is a persistent perception that digital comics and e-books are worth less than their hard-copy counterparts, in part because they can’t be passed along to a friend or resold. On the other hand, a used digital file is indistinguishable from a new one, except for price, so publishers have a strong incentive to fight resales.


James Grimmelman has further analysis in terms we can all understand:

ReDigi said yes: the copy that emerges from its tramsporter is the same copy that goes in. It is, after all, bit-for-bit identical.Judge Sullivan, however, said no, because the new Kirk-copy is a different “material object” than the old one, made up of different atoms, stored on a different hard drive. Indeed, to borrow an idea from Parfit, consider what would happen if the transporter malfunctioned and instead functioned just like the Internet—that it is, as a “transporticator.” Old Kirk is still standing on the Enterprise; new Kirk is standing on the planet.ReDigi's solution is worthy of Evil Spock: set phasers on kill, execute the old Kirk, and toss him out the airlock.


While used digital comics sales haven’t been a huge story yet, this ruling makes it less likely that they ever will be.

6 Comments on Court rules digital resales are a no-no, last added: 4/5/2013
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8. Pre Order Astronaut Academy and get a sketch

201304031142 Pre Order Astronaut Academy and get a sketch
Call this the easy peasy version of a Kickstarter reward: Preorder a copy of Dave Roman’s Astronaut Academy Re-Entry from bookstore WORD! and you’ll get a free sketch.

From now till May 9th, I will sign, personalize, and draw in every copy (of either book 1 or 2) ordered through WORD, you’ll get a free bookmark, andyou’ll be entered into WORD’s exclusive contest. One lucky person will win an Astronaut Academy style portrait of themselves (or whoever the book is a gift for), hanging out with the character of their choice!


Astronaut Academy Re-Entry is the second volume in the series about kids learning to be spacefarers. It’s a lighthearted romp with some fun soap opera elements, manga-infused in appeal but not necessarily art style.

0 Comments on Pre Order Astronaut Academy and get a sketch as of 4/3/2013 6:51:00 PM
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9. RIP: Fred

201304031133 RIP: Fred
French cartoonist Frédéric Aristidè who worked under the name Fred has died at age 82. Winner of the 1980 Grand Prix at Angoulême, Fred was best known for Philémon, a long running fantasy strip about a youth who falls through a well to a magical world, accompanied by his loyal donkey. Fred co-created the satirical magazine Hara-Kiri, and was published in the New Yorker, among Engish language projects. A final Philémon book was piublished just this year.

2013040311331 RIP: Fred

201304031134 RIP: Fred

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10. Preview: Judge Dredd, Suicide Watch

In Dredd’s long and illustrious career we’ve seen many a female Judge stepping up to the plate, from Anderson to McGruder, but the iconic British strip has never been written by a woman. Until now.

grud Preview: Judge Dredd, Suicide Watch2000 AD, a sci-fi anthology that has run continuously since 1977, has enjoyed a reputation for creating fantastic women characters (Halo Jones!) in the various strips that focus on personality first, and gender last. Judge Anderson is perhaps the most well known example, and her portrayal in the 2012 film Dredd by Olivia Thirlby cemented that wonderfully by showing her as Dredd’s equal in every respect – including costume. In fact that very under-appreciated film is one of the strongest comic book movies of all time in terms of gender politics, carried out in a very “no big deal” manner.

It’s little wonder then that women make up a significant sector of the 2000 AD readership, and yet despite both the wealth of women characters in the book, and the number of women creators in the UK, it’s also long held a reputation as being a boys club when it comes to writers and artists.

hamida Preview: Judge Dredd, Suicide Watch

You can imagine my delight then in our roundtable review of Prog 1824 last month when I saw Emma Beeby’s name attached to a new strip, Survival Geeks. I first came across Beeby a couple of years ago at Glasgow Comic Con, and she is perhaps best known for her Doctor Who audio stories along with her co-writer both there and at 2000 AD, Gordon Rennie. Rennie of course has been writing great stories at 2000 AD for years, and is thrilled to be working with Beeby.

Not only is this the first time Judge Dredd has been written by a woman, but Suicide Watch also sees the introduction of the strips first ever Muslim Mega-City One Judge, Judge Hamida. It’s really refreshing to see a publisher stepping up to the plate in terms of diversity both on the page and behind it, and with a world of solid and well-rendered characters at 2000 AD, I hope it leads to the progs being read by an even wider audience.

jinn Preview: Judge Dredd, Suicide Watch

As with all Judge Dredd strips, Suicide Watch is completely readable to newcomers while containing elements of previous storylines. The city is decimated since the Day of Chaos events with 87% of the population wiped out, and Suicide Watch looks at the psychological damage to the survivors as suicide cults become ever more popular in the desperate slums.

Something worse though is hunting in the shadows, something that Dredd can’t quite remember… Psi-Judge Hamida is on the case!

Suicide Watch will be told in three episodes, with the first appearing in Prog 1826 this very week.

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Judge Dredd: Suicide Watch (Prog 1826-1828)
Writer: Gordon Rennie, Emma Beeby
Artist: Paul Davidson
Colourist: Chris Blythe
Letters: Annie Parkhouse
Editor: Tharg the Mighty, Matt Smith
Publisher: 2000 AD

7 Comments on Preview: Judge Dredd, Suicide Watch, last added: 4/4/2013
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11. Preview: Sonny Liew’s and Gene Yang’s retro superhero book

retrocover Preview: Sonny Liews and Gene Yangs retro superhero book

Over at his blog, Sonny Liew’s been posting some lettered pages from his as yet untitled upcoming book with Gene Yang for First Second, and it looks pretty great, particularly that 50′s inspired pulpy cover. As a fan of Liew’s work, I’ve been keeping up with this project for a while, (although aware of Yang  -as the author of American Born Chinese and Level Up- I’ve yet to get round to reading any of his books), so I knew it was a retro superhero book, but that’ s about it. Here’s an exclusive, and intriguing, little synopsis from Liew:

‘It’s basically a origins story of a character created back in the 40s – his distinction being that he was meant to be Asian American. Gene has been exploring identity issues with his comics, of course, so this is another angle.

One of the interesting things about the comic was that the artist and creator (Chu Hing) has to go out of his way never to show his face in the comic – which apparently was due to his publishers or editors not wanting to reveal too  clearly that he was, in fact, Asian! We did try to incorporate those elements into the book.’

Chu Hing is credited for working on 29 issues in the 40′s and 50′s, 4 of which were on a title called Blazing Comics (the book Liew’s homaged in the cover above). These books featured the character Yang and Liew are reviving: Green Turtle- ‘the first Asian superhero’, a ‘mysterious individual who almost never let anyone see his face (the reader included). Armed only with his wits, combats skills, a remarkable light aircraft (the Turtle Plane,) and a mystic jade dagger, he and Burma Boy, a youngster he saved from the Japanese, flew across Asia battling the Imperial Japanese Army. While having no obvious powers granted by his jade dagger, he did seem to cast a shadow that had a bright pair of eyes and face.’ (via Comic Vine)

No projected release date for this yet, but another title to add to your list of ‘books to keep an eye on.’

slp1 Preview: Sonny Liews and Gene Yangs retro superhero book

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sl2 Preview: Sonny Liews and Gene Yangs retro superhero book

slp2 Preview: Sonny Liews and Gene Yangs retro superhero book

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slp3 Preview: Sonny Liews and Gene Yangs retro superhero book

3 Comments on Preview: Sonny Liew’s and Gene Yang’s retro superhero book, last added: 4/3/2013
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12. Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous Project

An exciting new original graphic novel from Serena Obhrai and Jennie Gyllblad following the epic adventures of a not so ordinary girl.

cover Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous ProjectOne of the huge benefits to co-organising the Women in Comics Europe community (and its communal output page) has been getting to know many of the extremely talented women in the industry and keeping up with their various projects. One such artist is Jennie Gyllblad, whose bi-weekly Jenspiration webcomic has become part of my regular reading, and I was thrilled to hear that she was involved in a new project that really showcased her work.

struggle 216x300 Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous ProjectElysia is a 300 page urban fantasy and sci-fi graphic novel written by the prolific Serena Obhrai, that is currently causing a storm on Kickstarter. With 21 days still to pledge the project has already achieved 74% of the funding required and shows no sign of abating. In other words, get in quick!

Part of the popularity is surely down to the pitch itself, a tale of a fictional future where angels and humans have to coexist side by side, the former guarding the latter but never to enter a relationship with each other. Elysia is the result of a broken rule, and is not only struggling with the usual perils of growing up, but with the clash of cultures and identities within her, as well as being the key to saving the world! Importantly it’s established in the blurb that this is not a religious tale, the angels instead being led by “planetary alignments”.

page3 209x300 Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous ProjectA story of angels is not something I’ve quite come across in comics before – save of course for Preacher, which is an entirely different sort of story! – and it strikes me as one that will have mass appeal. Angels in Young Adult fiction were rather overdone a couple of years ago, but the focus was always on the tragic suffocating love story rather than the sci-fi and fantasy aspects that the idea is surely ripe for.

The art is stunning with fully painted pages and excellent character design. The Kickstarter video makes it clear just how much work has already been done on this project in terms of design and planning, and this video is, I think, also key to the popularity of the project (go watch it now!). As is a rather clever pledge feature – a ticket to the exclusive launch signing in London. The higher tier pledges also offer fans a chance to appear in the comic themselves.

char Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous Project

Obhrai and Gyllblad are clearly ambitious with this just the first volume of many, and future plans to turn Elysia into an animated TV series and computer game.

The Kickstarter campaign is for the 300 page Volume 1, split into three chapters of 100 full colour pages with the first scheduled for release in September 2013.

Kickstarter: Join Elysia On Her Journey…

cover text 150x150 Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous Projectpage 150x150 Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous Projectpage2 150x150 Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous Project

1 Comments on Kickstarter Alert: Elysia, A Gorgeous Project, last added: 4/16/2013
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13. Fully Dressed Redesigns of Superheroines

A project by Michael Lee Lunsford – of Supernnormal Step webcomic fame – that sees some of our favourite women superheroes dressed in non-revealing costumes has been causing a splash on the internet today.

Supergirl Fully Dressed Redesigns of SuperheroinesAll illustrations from Michael Lee Lunsford’s tumblr here. 

Point of this: An exercise in character design, attempting to clothe the heroines nearly all the way and not making them painted-on, while still keeping the look of their original costumes in some way. Hopefully keeping them looking as iconic as the originally were. Just showing what can be done with a costume breaking outside the barrier of the norm.

NOT the point of this: some moral code I’m trying to push on you.

Zatanna 194x300 Fully Dressed Redesigns of SuperheroinesJudging by the reaction on my own Twitter and Facebook, the overall response is incredibly positive and the negative responses somewhat revealing in themselves. There’s criticism that all the women are wearing trousers for example, or look frumpy, with fellow Beat writer Steve Morris noting that he was somewhat initially taken back by the fact that these women are drawn with realistic body shapes – not something superhero comic readers are perhaps used to.

Other negative comments followed the predictable paths of, “but superhero men are half naked too!”, “they look like men in drag!”, “prudes!”, and the ever popular, “TWILIGHT!!”. Criticising superhero outfits is, of course, a favourite past time of all superhero comics fans, but when it comes to the women characters such criticism can skate worryingly close to the sexist edge (if not outright flying right over it).

elekra 194x300 Fully Dressed Redesigns of SuperheroinesSo it’s easy to see why Lunsford is keen to point out that he is not pushing a moral code here. Let’s remember too, that women who like these outfits are not out on a crusade to ban all bare legs and boobs from superhero comics (Vampirella’s famous costume for example was designed by the wonderful and feminist Trina Robbins). But it is nice to see that these characters remain as iconic and powerful without all having to bare skin. Just as all superhero men should not have to sport the Namor speedo look. (Although actually, another illustrator has done almost exactly that to further illustrate this very point!)

Vampirella 194x300 Fully Dressed Redesigns of SuperheroinesI really love these, and it’s heartening to see the positive reactions. In my own world, superheroes would have more than one outfit because while some days we all feel like sex kittens, other days we just want to wear our pyjamas and veg out while reluctantly saving the world. And who wants to wear the same thing every day? Stick to a colour scheme to be recognisable, but work that capsule wardrobe folk. Lunsford is now working on a series called Super-Casuals, starting with Spider-Man.

Some of these characters of course have had (or currently have) equally non-revealing outfits. I think what sets these illustrations apart though is that realism in body shapes that Stephen spotted, and the fact that these also look like everyday wear for everyday women. I would totally wear that Supergirl outfit (minus the cape!).

(And wouldn’t these be great for real all-ages comics that aren’t just for kids but are suitable for them too?!)

Wonder 150x150 Fully Dressed Redesigns of Superheroines Psylocke 150x150 Fully Dressed Redesigns of Superheroines
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Source: Tumblr via Geek Native

15 Comments on Fully Dressed Redesigns of Superheroines, last added: 4/3/2013
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14. On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are ‘Interactive’

“I’m sorry I’m late with my book”, Jimmy Palmiotti said rather humbly, opening a “spotlight” panel on March 31st 2013 at WonderCon, and asked the audience if he ought to put on some “background music”.  Amanda Conner, his co-spotlighter, and Palmiotti explained, tongue in cheek, that if the panel appeared “random”, months of deep thought had allowed them to “plan it to be random”. Attendees were already engaged by the humor, and probably by their avid fandom of both Conner and Palmiotti’s work, in this panel Conner and Palmiotti hoped would be “interactive”.

mbrittany palmiotti and conner 1 300x126 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are InteractiveFor the first part of the panel, they followed a rough chronology of the story of their working and personal relationship together, but Q &A was welcome throughout. Palmiotti explained that the “magic started” between the couple when he inked a GARGOYLES cover for Conner and a friendship developed between them. This friendship allowed them to learn the “horrible, wonderful sides” of each other, Conner commented. Palmiotti added that they “knew each other insanely well” long before they started dating.

Their first big collaboration, where both provided their own input for a personally satisfying project, involved the VAMPIRELLA comic when Conner asked Palmiotti to create a script where she would be allowed to portray the title character “on the toilet”. Palmiotti, in gallant fashion, concocted a plot involving laxative-laced candy on Halloween, a child-eating demon, and a heroic devourer in Vampirella. Palmiotti encouraged writers to play to the desires of artists and “give them stuff they really want to draw” to produce great results. That’s been their “theme ever since”, he said. Comics have been their “career of choice”, Palmiotti reflected, even though their were “other choices” possible. Conner’s other choices, for instance, included working in advertising, and prior to that, owning a comic book store.

mbrittany palmiotti and conner 2 300x120 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are InteractiveThis chronological tour abruptly leapt to the present as both Palmiotti and Conner commented on keeping late hours, particularly at the con. The “number one rule”, Palmiotti shared sagely, is “never look at the clock. It ruins the night the next morning, worrying about it”. Then the “only indication”, he said, “is hearing birds. I don’t like that”. This commentary had the audience in uniform, vocal agreement. Conner and Palmiotti introduced another recurring topic in the panel, the sheer number of shoes Conner has managed to assemble. She insisted she had no more than 20 pairs of shoes, but Palmiotti remained dubious, putting the number at more like 600.

This speculation was interrupted by a question from the floor about the “timetable” on the planned collaboration CAPTAIN BROOKLYN. Conner explained that she’s working on a “glut of covers” at the moment, but when she’s finished those off, she’s going to stop other work and focus on BROOKLYN. Conner confirmed that they are “thinking about” the possibility of doing a Kickstarter for the project. CAPTAIN BROOKLYN, Palmiotti explained, is about a garbage man in Brooklyn, with a “house full of cats” and “Russian massage parlor girls next door” who has to devise a financial means of helping his sickly grandfather. On top of that, he comes to possess “superpowers that really don’t help his life”. Palmiotti says the book, as scripted, is “funny” but he trusts Conner to “bring it down to earth” and “ground it”, a power he feels is her particular strength as an artist. Her work “has a soul”, he said, “The eyes have a soul”, but he jokingly threatened her with finding a replacement if she doesn’t pick up the production pace.

mbrittany jimmy palmiotti 300x260 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are InteractiveSince the panel declared itself to be “interactive”, I asked Conner about her background studying comics art at the Kubert School in New Jersey, and whether she felt it was beneficial to study comics specifically in order to become a professional comics artist. The benefits, she said, of specialized study, is that she now knows how to “use a lot of other tools besides drawing specific to what I want to do”. At the time that she attended the Kubert School, she said, “most other art colleges frowned on comic art” and it was “not respected”. She feels things are “more open now”, but at  the time, she said, the Kubert School was “exactly what I needed”. Palmiotti commented that at that time, the Kubert School also had very few women, about 4 in her class, Conner recalled. Now comics are a “little more accepted”, Palmiotti said, and the word “geek” is on the rise.

“Now we’re the cool kids and can talk about stupid stuff”, Palmiotti commented, including channeling child-like behavior to geek out about things like films. Both Conner and Palmiotti revealed that they are avid film watchers, and particularly Palmiotti, who goes to the movies a couple of times a week. Conner focuses on particular films that catch her attention, which she watches “repeatedly”. As a kid, she was a huge fan of The Poseidon Adventure, then Star Wars, The Terminator, The Long Kiss Goodnight, and more recently, Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang.  Palmiotti’s most recent film enthusiasm is for the film Upside Down, particularly fascinated by this love story featuring reverse gravity fields and conflict between differing worlds.

mbrittany amanda conner 300x286 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are InteractiveAn audience member brought up the subject of the completion of Conner’s run on SILK SPECTRE from the BEFORE WATCHMEN series, a project that ran only four issues rather than a possible six. “It could have stretched to 6”, Conner said, but she found it wasn’t necessary to do so. She declared herself relieved to have finished the job, since it was “labor and research intensive” to make sure she “blended it into the original storyline” of the mid to late ‘60’s. Her goal, which made the job more difficult, was to present “not people’s perception of the 60’s, but actually the ‘60’s” in contrast to our current, commercial views of the time period. This quest led her to contact her mother and her aunts, the youngest of which was “Laurie’s age” during the same time period. Palmiotti, who witnessed Conner’s rather excruciating commitment to historical accuracy in her art, came to call SILK SPECTRE “that effin’ book’ (which was the PG-13 version of the phrase).

Palmiotti said that Conner “became obsessive with every building” she drew, as well as clothing. The “layout” for Laurie’s house, apparently, was drawn from a single panel featuring a single room in the house in WATCHMEN. Conner built an “entire house” around a living room contained in the original comic. Palmiotti reminded the audience, who then applauded, that Conner’s work on SILK SPECTRE has since been nominated for a Reuben Award in “good company” with Evan Dorkin, and Bernie Wrightson, two of their favorite creators.

I asked Conner and Palmiotti what, particularly, they are looking for that they find attractive in a project in terms of character and plot. Palmiotti replied that he’s looking for several things, including the “soul of a character”, “what they want”, “what they fear” and “something at stake”. He’s very drawn to idea of romance in comic books. “It’s there even in JONAH HEX”, he said. “I like the idea of two people who have something in common, a goal”, Palmiotti explained. Even if he’s writing “horrible people”, he’s “looking for a likeable trait”. His example prompted a lot of laughter from the audience, proving the maxim “It’s funny because it’s true”. He said that even “Hitler’s dog thought Hitler was awesome” because the dog, being fed and tended by his master, could find a likeable trait. You have to “find those things in the characters”, he said, and ask yourself, “Why would we care?”.

mbrittany palmiotti and conner 3 300x115 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are InteractiveConner’s particular take on character focuses on the idea of perfection and imperfection. “I try not to make the character so perfect”, she said, preferring to create a character who is “someone like you know”. She wants her comics audience to react by thinking, “I know somebody who’s just like that”. That’s one of the reasons Palmiotti finds Spielberg films compelling, he explained, since they “start with the hero screwing up” and “we relate”. If a hero is “too perfect, there’s push-back”. He doesn’t respond to films where there’s a “super handsome guy and a perfect girl”, finding them “boring”.

An audience member’s question about Conner’s work drawing BARBIE in the past led to an energetic discussion of Wonder Woman as a character and the possibilities of new directions for her books. “I would love to write WONDER WOMAN”, Palmiotti admitted; he sees her as “more down to earth, less superior” than some other creators since being “too perfect” is a turn-off, though he thinks some solid work has been done on WONDER WOMAN. He observed that in some WONDER WOMAN comics he’s read, the creators “make everyone else more interesting” than Wonder Woman and he can’t understand that approach. “She’s the most interesting person in the room”, he pointed out, not her surrounding characters. Of course, he added, he would only want to write WONDER WOMAN with Conner as the artist on the project.

BW SILK SPECTRE 1 Cvr 195x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are InteractiveThe last few questions fielded by Palmiotti and Conner included their typical work schedules, which they revealed to be opposite, and therefore difficult in timing, Conner’s recollections about her work for indie magazines, which she described as “guerrilla comic book making”, and what comics they like to read right now. Conner cited Terry Moore, finding herself “rivetted” by every story. Palmiotti’s a big fan of Darwyn Cooke’s work, but also always comes home with a “stack” of comics from the shop on Wednesdays. He buys every #1 issue from every company, he revealed, and continues to “try everything… like it’s my job”.

Conner and Palmiotti certainly presented a fully interactive panel, so much so that when panel time ran out, it felt like an interrupted conversation with plenty more to say. Hearing stories from their daily life and their work suggested that the divide, especially for these collaborators, is artificial, with influences moving back and forth constantly. Maybe that’s the secret to their wide-ranging output in comics, and a glimpse of the reason behind the energy they continually bring to the industry. The panel illustrated well the benefits of the “spotlight” approach to con appearances giving enough time and focus on particular creators to generate a conversation with their audiences.

 

Photo Credits: All photos in this article were taken by semi-professional photographer and pop culture scholar Michele Brittany. She’s an avid photographer of pop culture events. You can learn more about her photography and pop culture scholarship here.

Hannah Means-Shannon writes and blogs about comics for TRIP CITY and Sequart.org and is currently working on books about Neil Gaiman and Alan Moore for Sequart. She is @hannahmenzies on Twitter and hannahmenziesblog on WordPress.

2 Comments on On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti Are ‘Interactive’, last added: 4/28/2013
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15. Starstruck is back with Harry Palmer on Kickstarter

9d05c6dadea5abf20a9327adf64a2ff7 large Starstruck is back with Harry Palmer on Kickstarter
Okay, comics just got a little cooler. Elaine Lee and Mike Kaluta have started a Kickstarter to produce Harry Palmer: Starstruck, a long in the making continuation of heir Starstruck storyline.

If you read this when it came out or in the recent IDW reprinting, you know it’s one of the most fantastic space operas ever produced in comics.

Given the fluid nature of all the various versions of Starstruck over the year it is only far to ask: “So, what’s in the book?”

• 176 pages of Starstrucky goodness, including 140 pages of sequential art, plus gallery, glossary and special features to immerse you deeply in Harry’s corner of the Multiverse. 
• A terrific science fiction story about what it means to be human, even when you’re not quite sure you are human. 
• 60 pages of Harry Palmer’s 140 page-plus story will be reprinted from the Marvel/Epic Startruck series, episodes #2 and #3, but the pages will be expanded from within with exciting flashbacks of Harry’s former life as a rebel soldier and mercenary “proldier.”
• 80 brand new story pages, detailing Harry’s past—as a rebel fighter in the revolution and a proldier fighting for Cyberforms in the Droid Wars—then taking us further into his very strange future. Yes, 80 never-before-seen pages of Kaluta’s unforgettable art… beautifully painted, if we meet our secondary goal. 
• More action, adventure and intrigue! More dirt on the private lives of androids and clones! The scoop on “Running in Place,” the most popular, most dangerous, and most addictive means of life extension in the Starstruck Multiverse. 
• Your book will be printed in stunning black & white, if we make our basic goal, in glorious, all-new, fully-painted, digital color, if we make a bit more. (Help us find donors, you’ll get an upgraded book and additional rewards. It’s up to you!)
• And so you won’t be kept waiting too long, everyone who pledges enough to receive the book, will also receive PDFs of each chapter, approximately 22 pages in length, as the chapters are finished! 


This books needs to be in color so we suggest giving as generously as you can!
b66203d1129142da5a22d9cbfbc798ad large Starstruck is back with Harry Palmer on Kickstarter

7 Comments on Starstruck is back with Harry Palmer on Kickstarter, last added: 4/11/2013
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16. On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdist’s Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan Empowerment

While the Nerdist Industries’ arena event at WonderCon this year was ostensibly about the future of the Youtube based pop culture conglomerate, and, indeed, plenty was said about upcoming projects, the question and answer period really expanded into a call to arms for fans to help directly determine the future of pop culture.

mbrittany hardwick panel 1 300x146 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdists Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan EmpowermentNerdist founder Chris Hardwick took the stage, joined by panellists Paul Provenza, Troy Conrad, and Matt Bennett, on March 31st, in the lead up to the season finale of The Walking Dead. Hardwick’s job as host of Talking Dead meant there was plenty of frisson in the audience about the upcoming show, and Hardwick teased, but didn’t deliver, spoilers on the show’s finale several times. In fact, he informed the audience that he was about to “get into a car to film Talking Dead” following his WonderCon appearance. Envy at his early viewing of the finale was palpable.

mbrittany chris hardwick 1 300x298 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdists Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan EmpowermentWhile Hardwick has a cult following as host of Talking Dead, and also from plenty of Nerdist projects, his presence live is even more dynamic, bringing with it plenty of his stand up comedy background. Since it was also Easter Sunday, Hardwick opened with a relevant quip: “That’s one person who came back from the dead and didn’t do it to rip someone’s heart out. Just put the love in it”. About a thousand attendees found this hilarious. Hardwick showed a promo video preview of upcoming Nerdist projects, often punctuated by applause and cheers from the audience when they recognized an anticipated segment or a celebrity guest coming up on a project, and followed by discussing several of the projects in a little more detail with his panellists.

mbrittany chris hardwick 3 248x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdists Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan EmpowermentBennet’s new series, currently being filmed, entitled Nerdy Jobs, a play on Dirty Jobs, got particular attention. The series will involve him visiting nerdy “cool” companies like tech industries and comic book shops to give an insider’s view of working there. Hardwick pondered what Bennett would find to say if he visited NASA for the show: “Uh, sorry about your funding?”. Another big push for Nerdist is the launch of a comedy combination of stand up and improv based on the British series concept Setlist, a competition that will tour around the world. As a veteran of stand up, Hardwick was particularly enthused, commenting that forcing stand up comedians into an improv situation is like “looking for the God particle of comedy”. His request to the audience about the upcoming new shows: “Please don’t feel compelled to say horrible things IN ALL CAPS in comment threads”.

mbrittany hardwick panel 2 300x133 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdists Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan EmpowermentThis led Harwick to speak for a moment about Youtube as a venue for hosting programming. Though delivered in a comically serious tone, the message had some bite: “No longer do companies tell us what to watch”. It was the first of several comments that indicated that Hardwick still has a lot to say about the role of open access and its giant-killing capabilities in relation to big media. Nerdist Industries, he said, is going to be expanding, but not along the lines of some of their peers on Youtube, who branch out into “piles of channels”; instead, they are aiming for a “hyper-curated partnership” with 6-8 channels and plenty of intensive “cross promotion”. They are also considering a move, based on fan request, to try out video podcasts, though Hardwick is a little skeptical of why people would want to watch them. Demand has been high enough that he’s prepared to yield to the experiment. Upcoming guests for the video podcast will include Seth Rogan, Steve Young, Scott Adsit and “surprises” too. Nerdist will also, finally, launch a major app to link to its content and, even more surprisingly, will be venturing into filmmaking following their purchase by Legendary Entertainment. They hope to work as producers on smaller budget films in this new role.

mbrittany hardwick panel 3 300x131 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdists Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan EmpowermentWhile Hardwick was delivering his energetic spiel, Provenza interjected, “Do you ever sleep?”. It was true, Hardwick looked a little peaked. “I have a robot heart”, he intoned, and continued on to the question and answer period. Questions began with a repeat offender from SDCC who Hardwick had once hugged in the past for his super fandom regarding Superman. “Comic Con is about getting super freaked out about stuff you love”, Hardwick reminded the audience (and he would deliver another hug later to a girl dressed as Wario in sympathy with his own Mario Brothers t-shirt). Harwick was then asked what he would do if his girlfriend was found to be “patient zero” in a potential zombie apocalypse. “Oh, I’d shoot her in the fucking head. That’s what you do for your loved ones”, he said without hesitation, to much hilarity, and added that he hoped she’d do the same for him.

mbrittany chris and mario 300x233 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdists Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan EmpowermentHe seemed pretty serious about that topic, but not as serious as he became immediately after the question on the subject of open access production. “There is literally no excuse for you not to pursue things that you love now. You are living half a life if you do not pursue the things that you love”, he said, referring to the tools now available for fans and pop culture creators alike. When a middle school teacher asked him for ideas to keep her students interested in pop culture in their newly formed lunch club, he gave a very invested answer, repeating that the most important thing the teacher could do for them would be to get them to “make things”, whether videos, or other media. “Teach them to be creators vs. consumers”, he pleaded, to much approbation from the crowd.

mbrittany chris hardwick 2 278x300 On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdists Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan EmpowermentOne of Hardwick’s winning qualities that keeps him from drifting too far from his fanbase  due to his ever increasing media success is his earnestness, often placing himself in the role of the fan once more. He described himself as a “lamprey” feeding off the “giant sperm whale” of pop culture products and feeling grateful, trying not to “impose” when working with actors from major shows. The Nerdist panel emphasized again that Hardwick still sees himself as an outsider in the mainstream, and an insider to “nerd” culture, no matter how many celebrity friends he accrues. That lends credence to his requests and his advice that fans continue to interact directly with the things they love through becoming “creators” too.

 

Photo Credits: All photos in this article were taken by semi-professional photographer and pop culture scholar Michele Brittany. She’s an avid photographer of pop culture events. You can learn more about her photography and pop culture scholarship here.

Hannah Means-Shannon writes and blogs about comics for TRIP CITY and Sequart.org and is currently working on books about Neil Gaiman and Alan Moore for Sequart. She is @hannahmenzies on Twitter and hannahmenziesblog on WordPress.

4 Comments on On the Scene: WonderCon 2013, Nerdist’s Chris Hardwick Pushes Fan Empowerment, last added: 4/2/2013
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17. Madefire teams with Deviant Art for more motion comics

MF dA Hero Image 1 Madefire teams with Deviant Art for more motion comics
Madefire—the VC-funded IoS-based comics starter— and DeviantArt, the 7th largest social network on the internet, have teamed up to share art and technology.

Madefire will allow its motion comics technology to be available on DV to present comics; and DV users will user this technology to create new limited animation comics.

Todd Allen previewed the union at Publishers Weekly: Comics produced in the motion comics app will be available for download—either for free for a fee set by the creators. Madefire’s comics will be available on the DV portal, some free and some for ten cents.

As you all know, DV is a huge repository for comics art of all kinds—but you may now have knwn how huge:

While it isn’t well known outside the DeviantART community, the site does have its own cartoonists. Sotira was quick to point out the work of an artist named Yuu Mei. Her signature piece, a Flash-based comic titled “1000 Words,” has been viewed 1.35 million times, downloaded another 38,000 times, has 114,000 “favorite” votes and even has 25,000 comments, a huge humber that underscores the power of the DeviantArt community.


MF dA Hero Image 2 Madefire teams with Deviant Art for more motion comics

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18. INTERVIEW: Stephen Mooney Goes Creator-Owned for ‘Half Past Danger’

Later this year IDW will be publishing Half Past Danger, a new series written, drawn, and created by Stephen Mooney. After working as artist on several IDW titles including Star Trek and Angel for the last few years, Mooney decided it was time to set up a creator-owned project, which he’d have full control over. In order to do so, he had to set aside a year in which he scripted, designed, pencilled, inked, coloured and lettered the project – six months in which he wasn’t earning money from any other gigs. It was quite the risk, taking himself out of the comics scene for a year in order to focus on a comic he had no idea would ever see the light of day.

However! The good news is that IDW decided to pick up the book, starting with issue #1 this May – preorderable now! I spoke to Stephen about making the leap into creator-owned work, the inspiration for Half Past Danger, and how the experience has been.

hpd1 INTERVIEW: Stephen Mooney Goes Creator Owned for Half Past Danger

 

Steve: Half Past Danger is dedicated to your father, “who took me to the movies”. What kind of films would you go see? Were there any in particular which served as inspiration for Half Past Danger?

Stephen: Oh wow, yeah. Loads! The first film I can remember my dad taking my brothers and I to see was E.T. in the Savoy cinema in Dublin in 1982, when I was five years old. Still my favourite cinema to this day. I can remember it like it was yesterday; its one of my first real memories. The whole experience made such a huge indelible dent on my psyche, in so many ways. The bustling anticipatory atmosphere of the jam-packed theatre, the crowd reactions as the movie ebbed and lowed. I was absolutely hooked. It also started my love affair with Spielberg’s eighties ouevre. Films that followed included The Return of The Jedi, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, The Goonies, Back To The Future, Big Trouble In Little China, Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade, and many, many more.

The most obvious influences on Half Past Danger filmically-speaking are undoubtedly the first three Indiana Jones movies. They really colour and inform my entire storytelling style. That bang-zip-wallop rapid-fire action beats-ridden kind of a narrative, with a few gags interspersed. Half Past Danger aspires to be that style of tale. Strong influences also would be the very early Connery Bond films, and pulpy matinee-style fare like The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. Then of course you have the classic Harryhausen dino movies. Great stuff, all.

Steve: How did the story of Half Past Danger start to come together? When did you first have the idea for it?

Stephen: The idea has been in my mind in some shape or form for years now, in that I’ve always known that if and when I ever attempted a story of my own that it would be 100% mired in that kind of pulpy action-adventure style, simply because that’s the genre I feel most comfortable in, and know so well. I always knew also that I’d want the main character to be an Irishman, since that’s the one thing I’ve been all my life, and nobody could tell the story of that particular character better than me, to my mind. I guess somewhat inevitably I injected much of my own personality and traits into a somewhat idealised version of myself, and placed him squarely into this scenario I’d begun to dream up. Hell, the guy even looks like me. If that’s not vanity wit large, I dunno what is.

The story came together over the last couple of years, I knew the high concept from the start, Nazis versus dinosaurs, but I wanted to really take my time and write something that hadn’t specifically been seen before, since as everybody knows, a lot of these themes have been done before on many occasions. The real trick is to give readers something they haven’t experienced as of yet, and I didn’t want to press too far ahead until I was sure I’d come up with a new spin on what in some ways could be seen as an old tale.

Once I figured out the main wheres, whys and whats, the rest came fairly rapidly.

Steve: This is your first creator-owned work – how did you decide that Half Past Danger was the right project to get off the ground?

Stephen: Well, it’s the only project that I’ve ever completely fleshed out, to be honest. I had this one idea that I thought was really strong, and it was bang in the middle of my wheelhouse, or more specifically what I wanted my wheelhouse to be, so I ran with it. To be honest I didn’t question it too much. Do I have other ideas? Yeah, but they all revolve around this universe! I guess I just had a single, enormous itch I needed to scratch for the time being, and I’ll see where I go from there.

hpd2 INTERVIEW: Stephen Mooney Goes Creator Owned for Half Past Danger

Steve: You’ve said that you took six months off to focus on this project, writing, drawing, inking, colouring, lettering…. Where did you start with the project?

Stephen: With the writing. I didn’t put pencil to paper drawing-wise until the full series was totally written and put to bed. Then pencilling, inking, coloring, lettering, in that order. Then back to the start again for issue 2 and go again; rinse and repeat.

Steve: Did you work issue-by issue on the story, or plot out an entirety and then start filling it in? How did you approach the story once you had the concept locked down, in essence.

Stephen: I worked out the entire plot first. I’d be terrified to embark on a story without knowing how it was going to end. To be honest, I’d probably never GET to the end in that scenario, I’d just circle the drain narratively until I eventually flushed the project. In order to commit myself to this massive body of work, I had to make sure everything was utterly and clearly signposted. Otherwise I wouldn’t be able to visualize my goal, and I’d be second-guessing myself all the while. Because the writing was the only element that I’d never approached before, I wanted to give it all of the respect it deserved, and to take the time to get it done right. Or, at least as right as I could get it!

Steve: How long has each issue taken you to complete? Did you find yourself surprised by how difficult certain aspects of the process were?

Stephen: Man, too long! The writing took about 2 months all-in, including research. That was fine. It was when I got stuck into the art side of things that I began to get bogged down a little. One of my dreams for the book was to do absolutely everything myself; complete creator control. That proved to be somewhat of a pipe dream in a way, though. The first issue of the book took me four months to pencil, ink, colour and letter. That was just unsustainable, the book would take another two years at that rate, and I was already six months in. Hence the addition of Jordie Bellaire as series colorist from issue 2 onward.

Something had to give, and of all of the aspects visually, I was spending the most time on the colours, which was crazy. Jordie is a very close friend, and when she saw me floundering she offered to dive in and help me out. She’s an amazing colorist, and a big fan of a lot of the same source material as I am, so it was a pretty seamless transition really. It also doesn’t hurt that Jordie’s a phenomenally talented colorist, in constant demand at all the biggest companies. I’m certainly beyond delighted that she chose to climb aboard.

With Jordie alongside, I’ve been spending two months a piece on the subsequent issues, almost all of that time spent drawing and inking the 26-odd pages per issue, then a couple of days of lettering at the end.

hpd3 INTERVIEW: Stephen Mooney Goes Creator Owned for Half Past Danger

Steve: I was really struck with a blog post you wrote about the role of writing and art in comics - http://www.halfpastdanger.com/2011/10/writing-vs-art-this-time-its-personal.html . Now you’re further into the story, how have you found the balance between writing an issue and drawing it?

Stephen: It’s very hard for me to separate the two, if I’m being honest. In this instance, it’s all just the story. When I was writing it, I knew exactly how every beat and scene would look on the page (or at least how I’d like it to look), and now that I’m drawing it, I almost know off by heart the entire story and script, so it all just flows onto the page. Again, it’s all just utmost inseparable elements of the story, for me. The script is more a broad outline with fairly tight dialogue than anything. Stage directions.

Steve: I’ve read the first issue of the series, and really enjoyed the central character, Tommy Flynn. Did you find the design process easier for a character you created, and would be writing yourself? Has it been easy translating your ideas to the page, rather than interpreting an established work, as you’ve done before for IDW?

Stephen: Yeah, I think it has. I wouldn’t say easy, but I certainly haven’t had to wrestle it into submission or anything like that. Probably because the main character is a bit of a cypher, in that he acts and reacts pretty much the way I would assuming I were a lot braver and a tad more selfless. Working with the established characters, like say Angel or Spike wasn’t that difficult either though, in terms of working what was written on the page, because I had such bloody good writers whom I trusted implicitly. I’ve been very lucky that way. I’ve never had trouble portraying any given character on the page, the acting and character beats are one of the very few aspects of the drawing that come totally naturally to me.

Steve: With more control over the final product, have you noticed yourself experimenting more with pacing and panel layout?

Stephen: Oh god, yeah. WAY more. I’m very respectful of a given writer’s script when I get it on a work-for-hire job, I’m loathe to mess with what they’ve asked for in their direction. They spent time working that stuff out, so I stick pretty religiously to it when at all possible, even when I might disagree on the shots called for. Or maybe there might be a crazy talking order or something going on that just isn’t feasible without the addition of an extra panel or the use of a slightly different angle. Perhaps I should go more with my own gut, I don’t know. Usually I just want to make the writer happy. If there’s leeway there, I’ll certainly take it. This kind of touches on that article on the Half Past Danger process blog that you mentioned in one of the earlier questions.

On my own book, I’m much freer to go with my initial instincts, storytelling-wise. It’s one of the most satisfying elements of the whole venture, and one of the reasons I actually wanted to attempt it. I think one of the reasons that people seem to be responding to how ‘cinematic’ the storytelling is, is because that’s my natural modus operandi, and my default setting.

Steve: How has the experience of working on a creator-owned project been for you?

Stephen: Absolutely wonderful, so far. Dizzying highs, terrifying lows, creamy centres. It’s as hard as I’ve ever worked, and in even more of a vacuum than before. It’s incredibly scary and daunting, because at the end of the day, for better or for worse, it’s all me on the page; nobody to hide behind. But at the same time, that’s pretty much the most incredible aspect. Where else can a sole creator be responsible for almost every aspect of production? Film? Animation? It just doesn’t happen, and that’s one of the reasons I love comic books so much.

Steve: Do you see yourself doing more creator-owned work in future, or are you looking to alternate with some more work-for-hire projects?

Stephen: In a perfect world, I’d love to do further HPD series every year or two in the Hellboy model, with the odd work-for-hire gig interspersed between. But obviously, that all depends on how the first series is received. I’ll certainly stick around for as long as Chris Ryall and the amazing guys at IDW will have me, I genuinely don’t think that there’s a better home for Half Past Danger.

hpd4 INTERVIEW: Stephen Mooney Goes Creator Owned for Half Past Danger

Steve: Jordie Bellaire will be coming on as colourist as of issue 2, as you’ve mentioned, whilst I believe Declan Shalvey will be drawing a backup strip for each issue. There seems to be quite a growing community of comics creators in Ireland recently. How important is it to have that sense of a creative community? Is it helpful to have people to bounce these ideas off?

Stephen: Oh, it’s invaluable. it really is. Having guys (and gals!) like Dec, Jordie and also Nick Roche, Will Sliney, Stephen Thompson and all the other Irish pros to bounce stuff off and get opinions from is simple indispensable. We’re a very close network. Almost collaborators in a way. I couldn’t do this without their help, I mean that. Otherwise I’d just be floating along in a nebulous void of gibberish. And I wouldn’t even know if it was good gibberish. So yeah, absolutely essential.

Steve: What advice would you give to anybody looking to create their own comics?

Stephen: Get off the pot and do it. Let go of the doubts and the maybes, and just make it happen. Everybody is afraid; everybody wonders if they’re actually good enough. I know I do. The only way to find out is to light that touch-paper, and have at it.

At the end of the day, even if Half Past Danger doesn’t hit that sweet spot critically or commercially, I’ll still have the satisfaction of knowing I tried.

I did my best. Otherwise, as dramatic as it sounds, I’d go all the way to the grave wondering what might have been.

 

Many thanks to Stephen for his time! If you’d like to find out more, you can read all about the process on his blog, which has been constantly updating with information and thoughts on the creation process for the last few months. You can find his pencilling, inking, colouring, bits of script, all sorts of things on there – I really recommend you have a look. You can also find him on the twitters! Half Past Danger #1 is out in May.

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19. Lady Gaga cast as the Dazzler…beware the First of April!

The rumor’s provenance was impeccable: director Bryan Singer.


But given the date…

Still, casting Gaga as the resident mutant singer/dancer/disco queen, it would kinda be genius.

201304011826 Lady Gaga cast as the Dazzler...beware the First of April!

201304011828 Lady Gaga cast as the Dazzler...beware the First of April!

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20. On the Scene: Unpacking comics history at the Asbury Park Comicon 2013

asburyparkcomicon On the Scene: Unpacking comics history at the Asbury Park Comicon 2013

by Peter Sanderson

While WonderCon, one of the nation’s largest comics/multimedia conventions was going on in Anaheim, last Saturday New York and New Jersey area comics fans were listening to comics greats speak in the more intimate setting of the Wonder Bar at the Asbury Park Comicon, now in its third year.

The convention took place in Asbury Park, New Jersey, along the celebrated Jersey Shore. Founded in the 1870s, the town still has picturesque Victorian architecture. But the town is now most famous for its prominence in popular music history from the 1970s on, most notably the early career of Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band.

Only a year ago founders Cliff Galbraith and Robert Bruce held the Asbury Park Comicon in Asbury Lanes, a combination music club and bowling alley. But this year the main venue for the con was the grand old Asbury Park Convention Hall, part of an enormous complex that includes the Paramount Theatre and was constructed in the 1920s on the boardwalk along the beach. Exhibitors filled two floors of the Convention Hall. The theatre and arcade are connected by an arcade, where a 1960s style Batmobile and a Back to the Future DeLorean were displayed; the arcade was also the site of the Comicon’s cosplay competition. If anyone wanted to take a break from con activities, they could gaze out the windows to see the light glittering on the Atlantic Ocean on a beautifully sunlit day.
Panels were held across the street at the Wonder Bar, decorated with images of Tillie, a grinning cartoon figure who is an icon of Asbury Park history. Starting roughly forty-five minutes after the Comicon opened at 10 AM, the remarkable line-up of panels ran until closing time, with the Beat’s own Torsten Adair as master of ceremonies. This was a pleasant venue, with a stage on one end, but food and drinks were being served at the other end of the tavern, and the noise from people talking down there rose in volume during the course of the day, becoming a problem by late afternoon.

First up was “Of Clerks and Comic Book Men.” Asbury Park is not far from Red Hook, New Jersey, the location of Kevin Smith’s comic book store Jay and Bob’s Secret Stash, the setting of AMC’s reality television series Comic Book Men. Present on this first panel of the day were Ming Chen, Bryan Johnson, and Mike Zapcic, all regulars on the show, and Brian O’Halloran, the lead actor in Smith’s films Clerks, Clerks II, and the forthcoming Clerks III. The panelists bantered entertainingly, sometimes aiming funny but affectionate insults at one another, while reminiscing about how they first met Kevin Smith. It came as something of a shock when it was pointed out that the original Clerks is now nearly twenty years old. Asked how he got the role of Dante in Smith’s film, O’Halloran started by claiming he “had some provocative pictures of his [Smith's] mom,” but then told the story seriously, how he auditioned to be an extra and unexpectedly ended up getting a lead role. As for Clerks III, which Smith is now writing, O’Halloran said that from what he knows about it, “I think it will be one of his best written pieces.” Johnson pronounced it “pretty amazing” and “really funny.”

Asked about Stan Lee’s appearance on Comic Book Men, Johnson noted “how nice” and “cool” Stan is. Then he recalled how when he was riding in a limousine with Lee during the making of the episode, he asked Stan “if he was that excited about always getting comic book questions.” After getting an unexpected response, Johnson said, “I swore to him I would not tell his answer.” Was it “shocking,” he was asked. “A little bit,” Johnson replied.

Then came the Comicon’s keynote address by Michael Uslan, an executive producer on all the Batman live action movies from director Tim Burton’s 1989 Batman onwards and author of the memoir The Boy Who Loved Batman. This keynote was a variation on Uslan’s familiar, well-crafted presentation, recounting his life starting with being a young boy engaged in the then lonely hobby of collecting comics, who saw the debut of the 1960s Batman TV show, was appalled that it was a comedy, and vowed (not unlike the young Bruce Wayne, as he says) to devote his life to showing the world that Batman could be done as a serious hero. And then Uslan recounts how he achieved his dream, teaching the first academic course on superhero comics, becoming a writer at DC Comics, and after ten years of struggle to make a serious live action Batman film, finally triumphing with the Burton blockbuster.

What made this version of his speech different were his many references to the Jersey Shore. As a boy Uslan lived in nearby Ocean Township, but regularly came to Asbury Park. “It is so cool to be back home,” Uslan declared. It was in “a place twelve miles from here,” a flea market called Collingwood Auction, that Uslan said he began amassing his colossal collection of Golden Age comics, paying only a nickel for each. He also recalled driving around “the Circuit” in Asbury Park in the late 1960s, trying to pick up girls; unfortunately, Uslan said he wore a Batman helmet to try to look cool, and “it didn’t work.” Uslan said that the last time he had been in the Wonder Bar, where he was giving his speech, was when he had his very first drink!

At noon comics historian and publisher Craig Yoe, introduced by Torsten Adair as “the Indiana Jones of comics archaeology,” interviewed cartoonist Bob Camp. “I have him up on a pedestal,” Yoe said about Camp. “And I’m afraid of heights,” replied Camp, setting the tone for this witty look back at his lengthy career in comics and animation.

As for just when he started cartooning, Camp said, “I don’t remember not drawing. It’s all I ever did,” joking, “It’s why I have no other skills.” He was fascinated by animated cartoons as a boy, especially Warner Brothers cartoons, but also “any cartoon I could watch,” singling out Famous Studios’ Herman and Katnip series and Terrytoons’ Gandy Goose and Sourpuss. Camp likened Gandy and Sourpuss to two famous characters he later worked on, Ren and Stimpy., “One mean guy, one happy-go-lucky guy, and they’re both gay.”

Camp talked about learning his craft by drawing caricatures in Provincetown on Cape Cod. He said he knew nothing about comic books when he started working at Marvel. “Blame Larry Hama,” he said, since Hama hired him, and Camp began cartooning for Marvel’s humor magazine Crazy. He also did art corrections in Marvel’s Bullpen, where, he said, he learned to imitate the styles of every 1980s Marvel artist, including John Byrne and Bill Sienkiewicz. Camp also confessed that editor in chief “Jim Shooter scared me,” and reminisced about the stories inker Vince Colletta would tell about crime.

Camp then segued into recounting his career in animation, talking about working with animator Bruce Timm on The Real Ghostbusters, working alongside “the greatest guys in animation” on Tiny Toon Adventures, and meeting animator John Kricfalusi, leading to their collaboration on Ren & Stimpy. But, quoting Charles Dickens, Camp referred to his time on that show as “the best of times, the worst of times,” describing what he saw as Kricfalusi’s self-destructive relationship with the Nickelodeon network and his own falling out with Kricfalusi.

Camp ended by talking about his current work, including a Kickstarter project that he and Larry Hama have launched for an animated cartoon called “Hard Heart an Strong Arm.”

Next, at 1 PM, came “Al Jaffee: 57 Years of Going Mad.” Jaffee, now 92 but as sharp as ever, provided his characteristic snappy answers to the far from stupid questions put to him by comics writer and editor Danny Fingeroth. “I have never hosted a panel in a bar before,” Fingeroth began, adding, “Is everyone drunk?”

Fingeroth and Jaffee explored Jaffee’s life going back to his childhood in Savannah, Georgia. “I think I started cartooning a day after I was born,” Jaffee said. His mother took him to live for years in what Jaffee called “the Siberia of Lithuania.” There comics proved to be “critical” to his survival, Jafgfee said, explaining that “It was like the 18th century where I lived in Lithuania,” but his father sent him a collection of Sunday and daily newspaper comic strips from America every six months. “My brother and I spent hours copying all the cartoons.”

Returning to America “in the depths of the Depression,” in 1936 Jaffee entered the High School of Music and Art, newly founded by New York’s legendary (and comics-loving) Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia. “I think he saved all our lives,” Jaffee said, whose best friend there was future Mad co-worker Will Elder.

Unable to get work from advertising agencies, Jaffee and other artists turned to comic books instead, and Jaffee started by selling his idea Inferiorman, which he called “a shameless takeoff on Superman,” to Will Eisner, who put him to work in his studio.

Then Jaffee started a long relationship working for Stan Lee at Timely Comics, the company we now know as Marvel. “Stan was 19. I was 20. I immediately saw what a firebrand Stan was. He had just taken over from Simon & Kirby” as editor of Timely Comics. For Timely Jaffee wrote and drew Ziggy Pig and Silly Seal, and later took over Patsy Walker. Under Fingeroth’s questioning, Jaffee also recounted how he took over another Timely funny animal series, Super Rabbit, and gave the character believable problems, even “fits of depression,” and Fingeroth pointed out this prefigured Spider-Man. Jaffee said his “relationship with Stan Lee was not close, but it was warm,” and Lee never edited him, giving him a free hand.

Referring to the Senate hearings condemning comic books as causes of juvenile delinquency, Jaffee declared “In my opinion the U. S. Senate was causing juvenile delinquency,” to applause from the audience.

Jaffee began discussed his work with Harvey Kurtzman, whom he called a “strange genius,” on the short-lived magazines Trump and Humbug, and then his going to work for editor Al Feldstein on Mad. Fingeroth and Jaffee went through the familiar and surefire stories of how Jaffee created his best-known Mad features, “Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions” and the Mad Fold-Ins. Jaffee had thought his first Fold-In “was a one-shot gag,” and believes that if Kurtzman had still been editing Mad, there never would have been a second one, since Kurtzman was always looking for new ideas. But Feldstein directed Jaffee to come up with a second one. “And that was 49 years ago,” concluded Jaffee, who has been doing Fold-Ins all during those years, and teased the audience by telling them the set-up for the one he is woking on now—but not the punch line.

At 2 PM one of the Comicon’s organizers, Cliff Galbraith, interviewed underground cartoonist John Holmstrom, who in 1975 co-founded the magazine Punk, which chronicled the punk rock movement in its heyday.

Then at 3 PM it was back to the Golden Age of Comics, with Fingeroth back onstage, this time interviewing another of the few survivors of that period, artist Allen Bellman. In 1942, when he was a teenager, Bellman started working for Timely Comics, as Marvel was known in the 1940s, drawing backgrounds for artist Syd Shores’ work on Captain America. Bellman was hired by artist Don Rico and did not meet Stan Lee until two weeks later. His initial image of Stan was as a young man following around his uncle Robert Solomon, the brother-in-law of Timely publisher Martin Goodman. Bellman recalled that the Timely Bullpen was divided into two separate rooms, one for “the animators,” his name for the funny animal artists, and the other for “the illustrators,” the superhero artists such as himself. The first series that Bellman drew on his own was The Patriot, but he also worked on Marvel’s trinity of stars, The Human Torch, Sub-Mariner, and Captain America.

Perhaps surprisingly, Bellman never met Jack Kirby and never met Joe Simon until 2007. At the Comicon earlier that day Bellman was reunited with Al Jaffee. “I was so happy to see him.”

Bellman was one of the hundreds of comic book professionals who were forced to leave the business thanks to the outcry against comics in the 1950s. Referring to Dr. Fredric Wertham’s Seduction of the Innocent, Bellman said, “That book put me out of commission.”

Bellman is well aware that he is one of the few survivors left from the Golden Age of Comics. After reminiscing about the late Gene Colan, Bellman commented, “There’s not many of us left.” And at the end of the panel, asked about his former colleagues, Bellman said simply, “They’re all gone but me.”

Following at 4 PM was “Marvel Days,” a panel surveying the history of Marvel Comics from the 1960s onward. Moderated by Christopher Irving, the author of Leaping Tall Buildings, a book of interviews with comics creators, the panel also included Sean Howe, author of the recent history Marvel Comics: The Untold Story. However, the discussion was dominated by Herb Trimpe, longtime Marvel artist who started collaborating with Stan Lee on The Incredible Hulk back in the Silver Age of the 1960s, and Papercutz editor Jim Salicrup, who rose from messenger to editor at Marvel, where he became best known for editing the Spider-Man titles.

Oddly, both Trimpe and Salicrup had anecdotes about Stan Lee’s hair. Trimpe said that when he first worked at Marvel, Stan, who was in the process of undergoing a hair transplant, “hated” Trimpe’s thick hair. In recalling his early days at Marvel as a messenger, Salicrup recalled going on a mysterious mission to an East Side town house to pick up an equally mysterious package, which turned out to be Stan’s toupee!

Salicrup got his foot in the door at Marvel by sending in a postcard and getting hired by Roy Thomas, just as Marvel was starting a massive expansion in the early 1970s; as Salicrup observed, it is hard to believe that anyone could get hired this way by today’s corporate Marvel. “I loved it when Stan was there, for the first ten years I was there,” before Lee moved out to California to promote Marvel properties as potential TV shows and movies.

Trimpe explained that the “problem he had at Marvel” was that he considered himself a artist more in the cartoon-like style of Jack Davis, who instead had to try for a “classic look” like that of Marvel mainstay John Buscema. Trimpe turned to the work of Jack Kirby. “As far as I know, Stan never ordered anyone to copy Kirby’s stuff,” Trimpe said. “Kirby’s stuff had a language to it” that was “very powerful stuff. He is the central comic book artist.”

Asked about office politics at Marvel, Salicrup said that he was aware of it at the time, but preferred to avoid it. “Marvel was big enough that I could easily get lost in it,” he said. “I was just enamored about being a kid from the Bronx who was in this Oz-like place like Marvel Comics in the 1970s.”

Questioned by Irving, Salicrup gave his take on the now familiar tale of how Chris Claremont and John Byrne’s “The Dark Phoenix Saga” evolved, and how editor in chief Jim Shooter ordered that the ending be changed so Jean Grey would die, thereby, in Salicrup’s view, transforming the saga into a classic.

Salicrup also spoke of Shooter’s emphasis on “clarity of storytelling” and noted that nowadays “some DC and Marvel books can be very hard to read” for newcomers to the medium, such as the kids who read Salicrup’s Papercutz comics. Hence, Salicrup said, “Sometimes I feel like I’m deprogramming” artists from Marvel and DC, by “having to explain the real basics of storytelling” in comics, like leaving enough room for the word balloons!

Finally, from shortly after 5 PM till the convention’s closing time, Jon B. Cooke, editor of the magazine Comic Book Artist, interviewed Jay Lynch, a leading member of the original generation of underground comix creators. In 1968 in Chicago Lynch launched and edited Bijou Funnies, one of the pioneering underground comix. He was also one of the principal artists for Topps’ Garbage Pail Kids and Wacky Packages.

Lynch recounted how he first saw Harvey Kurtzman’s original version of Mad in 1953. “When I saw Mad, I decided to be a cartoonist.” But Lynch said he initially did one-panel gag cartoons. “I didn’t start doing comix until Zap came out,” Robert Crumb’s landmark underground comic. Lynch likened underground comix to other cultural phenomena of the 1960s, including the Free Speech movement and the taboo-breaking comedy of Lenny Bruce. Lynch recalled how he, Crumb, and another underground comix pioneer, Gilbert Shelton, would trade their comic books, with each other. Thus enabling them to keep in touch with each other’s work. Lynch also explained that President Richard Nixon launched a pornography investigation that made publishers nervous about possible prosecution, thereby sending sales of underground comix into decline.
Turning to Lynch’s work for Topps, Cooke asked, “Is that what you’re best known for—Garbage Pail Kids?”

“No,” replied Lynch, “I think my performance of Swan Lake.”

Nowadays, Lynch said, he is doing paintings which he sells on eBay.

Lynch wound up the panel by recounting an anecdote which captured some of a sense of the good and bad sides of the 1960s. It was the day that the Beatles’ White Album came out, Lynch was working for Topps, and “everyone on the subway has a copy of the White Album.” Lynch went to see fellow underground cartoonist Spain Rodriguez, who was living in a building in an area ridden with crime and drug addicts. Lynch went out and bought pizza for both of them, but on his way back was accosted by thugs, who asked him what he was carrying. Lynch lied and said it was the Beatles’ White Album, whereupon one of the thugs, impressed, said, “Okay, we’ll let you go.”

Photo © Danny CenturyMany more photos of the con in the link.

2 Comments on On the Scene: Unpacking comics history at the Asbury Park Comicon 2013, last added: 4/9/2013
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21. Nice Art: End of the Hunt II print by Levon Jihanian

rudolph21 Nice Art: End of the Hunt II print by Levon Jihanian
This unsettling image is one of several prints available from Levon Jihanian, a cartoonist/animator perhaps best known for his Ignatz-nominated Danger Country. Check ‘em all out.

0 Comments on Nice Art: End of the Hunt II print by Levon Jihanian as of 4/1/2013 11:15:00 PM
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22. DCU and Vertigo collection schedule: Deluxe Invisibles, DMZ, DC One MIllion and Planetary Omnibuses, etc.

201304020345 DCU and Vertigo collection schedule:  Deluxe Invisibles, DMZ, DC One MIllion and Planetary Omnibuses, etc.
DC has released its graphic novel schedule into February 2014, and it’s a huge list of 147 books. The whole list is below, with Vertigo first and then the DCU.

A couple of notes: The Invisibles and DMZ are getting the deluxe hardcover treatment; Brian K Vaughan’s Swamp Thing run is finally being collected; and in the entire list there is exactly one new original graphic novel: The Unwritten: Tommy Taylor and the Ship that Sunk Twice. That doesn’t mean there might not be some more announced, but the program seems to be on hold for now.

On the DC Comics side, it’s mostly all new 52 collections proceeding in an orderly fashion — new hardcover and previous paper back paired. Planetary is getting an Omnibus, as is the DC ONe Million stunt from years back—yet another Grant Morrison led project—The Authority is getting the hardcover collection treatment. Various recent notable Batman story lines are being collected — Court of Owls and Grant Morrison again. Various cool older things are being collected like Deadshot and old Joker and so on.

Also, given how the digital versions are selling, we’ll be curious to see how the Injustice: Gods Among Us video-game tie-in sells. Our guess: very well.

DC Comics title scheduled for September 2013:

World of Warcraft: Pearl of Pandaria TP
Writer: Micky Neilson
Artist: Sean “Cheeks” Galloway
Original graphic novel
$16.99 US, 128 pg

DC Comics title scheduled for December 2013:

Gears of War Book Three: Dirty Little Secrets TP
Writers: Joshua Ortega and Karen Traviss
Artists: Julius Gopez, Colin Wilson, Pop Mhan and Leonardo Manco
Collects: Gears of War #14-24
$19.99 US, 256 pg

DC Comics title scheduled for February 2014:

Masters of the Universe Vol. 2: Origins of Eternia TP
Writers: Keith Giffen, Joshua Hale Fialkov and Brian Keene
Artists: Frazer Irving, Ben Oliver, Keith Giffen, Scott Koblish and Pop Mhan
Collects: Masters of the Universe: The Origin of Skeletor #1, Masters of the Universe: The Origin of He-Man #1, Masters of the Universe: The Origin of Hordak #1 and Masters of the Universe #1-4
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Vertigo titles scheduled for September 2013:

American Vampire Vol. 4 TP
Writer: Scott Snyder
Artists: Jordi Bernet, Roger Cruz, Riccardo Burchielli and Rafael Albuquerque
Collects: American Vampire #19-27
$16.99 US, 208 pg

Neil Young’s Greendale TP
Writer: Joshua Dysart
Artist: Cliff Chiang
Original graphic novel
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Preacher Book Two TP
Writer: Garth Ennis
Artist: Steve Dillon
Collects: Preacher #13-26
$19.99 US, 368 pg

The Unwritten: Tommy Taylor and the Ship that Sunk Twice HC
Writer: Mike Carey
Artists: Peter Gross, Kurt Higgins and Zelda Devon
Original graphic novel
$22.99 US, 160 pg

Vertigo titles scheduled for October 2013:

The Fables Companion HC
Writers: Jess Nevins and Bill Willingham
Artists: Various
Original reference volume
$39.99 US, 256 pg

Fables: Werewolves of the Heartland TP
Writer: Bill Willingham
Artists: Craig Hamilton, Jim Fern, Ray Snyder and Mark Farmer
Original graphic novel
$14.99 US, 152 pg

Lucifer Book 2 TP
Writer: Mike Carey
Artists: Peter Gross, Jon J Muth, Dean Ormston and Ryan Kelly
Collects: Lucifer #14-28 and Lucifer: Nirvana #1
$29.99 US, 416 pg

Sandman: Endless Nights TP New Edition
Writer: Neil Gaiman
Artists: Glenn Fabry, Milo Manara, Miguelanxo Prado, Frank Quitely, P. Craig Russell, Bill Sienkiewicz and Barron Storey
Original graphic novel
$19.99 US, 160 pg

The Unexpected TP
Writers: Dave Gibbons, G. Willow Wilson, Alex Grecian, Joshua Dysart, Jeffrey Rotter, Mat Johnson, Joshua Hale Fialkov, Brian Wood, Selwyn Seyfu Hinds, Al Ewing, Toby Litt, Cecil Castellucci, Joe Kubert, Neil Kleid, Mary H.K. Choi, Paul Pope, David Lapham, Gilbert Hernandez and Geoff Johns
Artists: Dave Gibbons, Robbie Rodriguez, Jill Thompson, Farel Dalrymple, Lelio Bonaccorso, David Lapham, Rahsan Ekedal, Emily Carroll, Denys Cowan, Don Hudson, Rufus DayGlo, Mark Buckingham, Victor Santos, Amy Reeder, Joe Kubert, John McCrea, Phil Jimenez, Andy Lanning, Paul Pope, Gilbert Hernandez and Jeff Lemire
Collects: The Unexpected #1 and Ghosts #1
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Vertigo titles scheduled for November 2013:

Ex Machina Book One TP
Writer: Brian K. Vaughan
Artists: Tony Harris and Tom Feister
Collects: Ex Machina #1-11
$19.99 US, 272 pg

The Sandman Omnibus Vol. 2 HC
Writer: Neil Gaiman
Artists: Duncan Eagleson, Vince Locke, John Watkiss, Jill Thompson, Dave McKean, Dick Giordano, P. Craig Russell, Bryan Talbot, Alec Stevens, Mark Buckingham, Michael Allred, Shea Anton Pensa, Gary Amaro, Steve Leialoha, Tony Harris, Marc Hempel, D’Israeli, Glyn Dillon, Charles Vess, Teddy Kristiansen, Richard Case, Jon J Muth, Kevin Nowlan and Michael Zulli
Collects: The Sandman #38-75 and stories from Vertigo Jam #1 and Vertigo: Winter’s Edge #3
$150.00 US, 1,040 pg

Vertigo Visions: Frank Quitely HC
Writers: Bruce Jones, Neil Gaiman, Ilya, Doselle Young, Warren Ellis, Grant Morrison, Robert Rodi, Doug Moench, Bronwyn Carlton, Gahan Wilson, Paul Yellovich, George Hagenauer, Paul Kirchner, John Wagner and Carl Posey
Artist: Frank Quitely
Collects: Stories from The Big Book of Conspiracies, The Big Book of Death, The Big Book of Freaks, The Big Book of Hoaxes, The Big Book of Little Criminals, The Big Book of Losers, The Big Book of Martyrs, The Big Book of Weirdos, Flinch #12, Heartthrobs #2, Gangland #1, The Invisibles #1, The Sandman: Endless Nights, Strange Adventures #1, Transmetropolitan #31 and Weird War Tales #3
$24.99 US, 144 pg

Vertigo titles scheduled for December 2013:

100 Bullets: The Deluxe Edition Book Five HC
Writer: Brian Azzarello
Artist: Eduardo Risso
Collects: 100 Bullets #81-100
$59.99 US, 512 pg

Fables Vol. 19: Snow White TP
Writer: Bill Willingham
Artists: Shawn McManus, Mark Buckingham and Steve Leialoha
Collects: Fables #124-129 and backup stories from Fables #114-123
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Saga of the Swamp Thing Book Five TP
Writer: Alan Moore
Artists: John Totleben, Rick Veitch and Alfredo Alcala
Collects: Swamp Thing #51-56
$14.99 US, 168 pg

Spaceman TP
Writer: Brian Azzarello
Artist: Eduardo Risso
Collects: Spaceman #1-9 and a story from Strange Adventures #1
$19.99 US, 224 pg

Vertigo titles scheduled for January 2014:

Animal Man Vol. 5: The Meaning of Flesh TP
Writer: Tom Veitch
Artists: Steve Dillon, Tom Mandrake, Dick Giordano, David G. Klein, Mark Badger, Bret Ewins, Jim McCarthy and Steve Pugh
Collects: Animal Man #38-50
$24.99 US, 352 pg

DMZ Deluxe Edition Book One HC
Writer: Brian Wood
Artists: Riccardo Burchielli, Kristian Donaldson and Brian Wood
Collects: DMZ #1-12
$29.99 US, 304 pg

Fables Deluxe Edition Book Eight HC
Writer: Bill Willingham
Artists: Mark Buckingham, Steve Leialoha and Andrew Pepoy
Collects: Fables #60-63 and 65-69
$29.99 US, 232 pg

Hellblazer Vol. 7: Tainted Love TP
Writer: Garth Ennis
Artist: Steve Dillon
Collects: Hellblazer #62-71, Hellblazer Special #1 and a story from Vertigo Jam #1
$19.99 US, 320 pg

Preacher Book Three TP
Writer: Garth Ennis
Artists: Steve Dillon and Steve Pugh and
Collects: Preacher #27-33, Preacher: Saint of Killers #1-4 and Preacher: Cassidy — Blood and Whiskey #1
$19.99 US, 352 pg

Swamp Thing by Brian K. Vaughan Vol. 1 TP
Writer: Brian K. Vaughan
Artists: Roger Petersen, Joe Rubinstein, Mark Lipka, Rick Magyar, Steve Lieber, Guy Davis and Paul Pope
Collects: Swamp Thing #1-9, Vertigo Secrets and Origins: Swamp Thing #1 and a story from Vertigo: Winter’s Edge #3
$19.99 US, 240 pg

The Unwritten Vol. 8 TP
Writer: Mike Carey
Artists: Peter Gross and Dean Ormston
Collects: The Unwritten #42-49
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Vertigo titles scheduled for February 2014:

The Invisibles Vol. 1 Deluxe Edition HC
Writer: Grant Morrison
Artists: Steve Yeowell, Duncan Fegredo, Jill Thompson, Dennis Cramer, Chris Weston, John Ridgway, Steve Parkhouse, Kim DeMulder, Paul Johnson, Phil Jimenez, John Stokes, Tommy Lee Edwards, Dick Giordano, Mark Buckingham and Mark Pennington
Collects: The Invisibles #1-25 and a story from Absolute Vertigo #1
$29.99, 328 pg

Strange Adventures TP
Writers: Selwyn Seyfu Hinds, Talia Hershewe, Peter Milligan, Lauren Beukes, Jeff Lemire, Ross Campbell, Kevin Colden, Paul Cornell, Brian Azzarello, Duane Swierczynski, Andy Diggle, Ming Doyle, Ann Nocenti, Nnedi Okorafor, Steve Orlando, Robert Rodi, Kevin McCarthy and Michael Allred
Artists: Denys Cowan, John Floyd, Juan Bobillo, Sylvain Savoia, Inaki Miranda, Jeff Lemire, Ross Campbell, Kevin Colden, Goran Sudzuka, Eduardo Risso, Ramon Bachs, Davide Gianfelice, Ming Doyle, Fred Harper, Michael Wm. Kaluta, Francesco Trifolgi, Sebastian Fiumara, Kevin McCarthy, Kyle Baker and Michael Allred
Collects: Strange Adventures #1 and Mystery in Space #1
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Unknown Soldier TP New Edition
Writer: Garth Ennis
Artist: Kilian Plunkett
Collects: Unknown Soldier #1-4
$14.99 US, 112 pg

WE3 TP
Writer: Grant Morrison
Artist: Frank Quitely
Collects: WE3 #1-3 plus new pages from the Deluxe Edition
$14.99 US, 144 pg

DC Comics Collected EDitions

DC Comics titles scheduled for September 2013:

Ame-Comi Girls Vol. 1 TP
Writers: Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti
Artists: Amanda Conner, Tony Akins, Walden Wong, Sanford Greene, Ted Naifeh, Mike Bowden and Santi Casas
Collects: Ame-Comi Girls #1-5
$14.99 US, 168 pg

Animal Man Vol. 3: Rotworld: The Red Kingdom TP
Writers: Jeff Lemire and Scott Snyder
Artists: Steve Pugh, Timothy Green II, Joseph Silver, Yanick Paquette, Marco Rucy, Dan Green, Andy Owens and Andre Balinger
Collects: Animal Man #12-17 and Swamp Thing #12 and 17-18
$16.99 US, 208 pg

Arrow Vol. 1 TP
Writers: Marc Guggenheim and Andrew Kreisberg
Artists: Mike Grell, Jorge Jimenez, Sergio Sandoval, Julian Totino Tedesco, Eric Nguyen, Omar Francia and Xermanico
Collects: Arrow #1-5
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Batman/Judge Dredd Collection TP
Writers: Alan Grand, John Wagner
Artists: Simon Bisley, Cam Kennedy, Carl Critchlow, Dermot Power, Glenn Fabry, Jim Murray, Jason Brashill, Val Semeiks and John Dell
Collects: Batman/Judge Dredd: Judgment on Gotham #1, Batman/Judge Dredd: Vendetta in Gotham #1, Batman/Judge Dredd: The Ultimate Riddle #1, Lobo/Judge Dredd #1 and Batman/Judge Dredd: Die Laughing #1-2
$19.99 US, 304 pg

Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight Vol. 1 TP
Writers: Damon Lindelof, Jonathan Larsen, Tom Taylor, B. Clay Moore, Steve Niles, T.J. Fixman, Andrew Dabb and Joshua Hale Fialkov
Artists: Jeff Lemire, J.G. Jones, Nicola Scott, Wayne Faucher, Ben Templesmith, Trevor Hairsine, Christopher Mitten, Giorgoi Pontrelli, Tan Eng Huat, Phil Hester and Eric Gapstur
Collects: Legends of the Dark Knight #1-5
$14.99 US, 168 pg

Batwoman Vol. 2: To Drown the World TP
Writer: J.H. Williams III and W. Haden Blackman
Artists: Amy Reeder, Richard Friend, Rob Hunter and Trevor McCarthy
Collects: Batwoman #6-11
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Batwoman Vol. 3: World’s Finest HC
Writer: J.H. Williams III and W. Haden Blackman
Artists: J.H. Williams III and Trevor McCarthy
Collects: Batwoman #0 and 12-17
$22.99 US, 160 pg

Green Arrow Vol. 3 TP
Writers: Ann Nocenti and Jeff Lemire
Artists: Freddie Williams II, Rob Hunter, Tom Derenick, Art Thibert, Robin Riggs and Andrea Sorrentino
Collects: Green Arrow #0 and 14-20
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Green Lantern: Rise of the Third Army HC
Writers: Geoff Johns, Peter J. Tomasi, Tony Bedard and Peter Milligan
Artists: Doug Mahnke, Christian Alamy, Keith Champagne, Mark Irwin, Cafu, Scott Hanna, Fernando Pasarin, Chriscross, Marlo Alquiza, Andrei Bressan, Amilcar Pinna, Aaron Kuder, Miguel Sepulveda and others
Collects: Green Lantern #13-16, Green Lantern Corps #13-16, Green Lantern New Guardians #13-16, Red Lanterns #13-16, Green Lantern Corps Annual #1 and pages from Green Lantern Annual #1
$29.99 US, 416 pg

Justice League Vol. 2: The Villain’s Journey TP
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artists: Gene Ha, Carlos D’Anda, Ivan Reis, Joe Prado, Jim Lee, Scott Williams, Mark Irwin, Jonathan Glapion, Sandra Hope, Batt, Rob Hunter, Joe Weems, Alex Garner and Trevor Scott
Collects: Justice League #7-12
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Justice League Vol. 3: Throne of Atlantis HC
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artists: Ivan Reis, Joe Prado, Pete Woods, Pere Perez, Paul Pelletier, Marlo Alquiz, Ruy Jose, Sean Parsons, Cam Smith and Art Thibert
Collects: Justice League #13-17 and Aquaman #14-16
$24.99 US, 192 pg

Legends of the Dark Knight: Jim Aparo Vol. 2 HC
Writer: Bob Haney and Cary Burkett
Artists: Jim Aparo, John Calnan and Joe Staton
Collects: The Brave and the Bold #123-136 and 138-151
$49.99 US, 520 pg

Secret Society of Super-Villains Vol. 1 TP
Writers: Gerry Conway, David Kraft, Bob Rozakis and Paul Levitz
Artists: Pablo Marcos, Rich Buckler, Arvell Jones, Dick Ayers, Dick Dillin, Mike Vosburg, Ric Estrada and others
Collects: Secret Society Of Super Villains #1-10 and a story from Amazing World of DC Comics #11
$19.99 US, 208 pg

Shazam! Vol. 1 HC
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artist: Gary Frank
Collects: Stories from Justice League 0, 7-11, 14-16 and 18-21
$24.99 US, 192 pg

Stormwatch Vol. 3 TP
Writer: Peter Milligan
Artists: Will Conrad, Cliff Richards, Eduardo Pansica and Julio Ferreira
Collects: Stormwatch #0 and 13-18
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Wonder Woman Vol. 2: Guts TP
Writer: Brian Azzarello
Artists: Cliff Chiang, Tony Akins and Dan Green
Collects: Wonder Woman #7-12
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Wonder Woman Vol. 3: Blood HC
Writer: Brian Azzarello
Artists: Cliff Chiang, Tony Akins, Dan Green and Amilcar Pinna
Collects: Wonder Woman #0 and 13-17
$24.99 US, 176 pg

DC Comics titles scheduled for October 2013:

Batgirl Vol. 2: Knightfall Descends TP
Writer: Gail Simone
Artists: Ardian Syaf, Vicente Cifuentes, Alitha Martinez and Ed Benes
Collects: Batgirl #7-13 and 0
$16.99 US, 192 pg

Batgirl Vol. 3: Death of the Family HC
Writers: Gail Simone, Ray Fawkes and Scott Snyder
Artists: Ed Benes, Daniel Sampere, Greg Capullo, Jonathan Glapion, Mark Irwin, Vicente Cifuentes and Admira Wijaya
Collects: Batgirl #14-19, Batman 19 and Batgirl Annual #1
$24.99 US, 224 pg

Batman Vol. 3: Death of the Family HC
Writer: Scott Snyder
Artists: Greg Capullo and Jonathan Glapion
Collects: Batman #13-17
$24.99 US, 176 pg

Batman, Incorporated Vol. 2 HC
Writer: Grant Morrison
Artists: Chris Burnham, Jason Masters
Collects: Batman, Incorporated #7-13
$22.99 US, 160 pg

Batman: Odyssey TP
Writer: Neal Adams
Artists: Neal Adams, Josh Adams, Michael Golden, Kevin Nowlan, Bill Sienkiewicz, Scott Williams and Paul Neary
Collects: Batman: Odyssey Vol. 1 #1-6 and Vol. 2 #1-7
$19.99 US, 368 pg

Batman Unwrapped by Andy Kubert HC
Writers: Grant Morrison, Neil Gaiman and Mark Waid
Artist: Andy Kubert
Collects: Batman #655-658, 664-666, 686 and 700, Detective Comics #853 and a story from 52 #46
$34.99 US, 272 pg

Batman: The World’s Finest Archives Vol. 3 HC
Writers: Bill Finger, Edmond Hamilton, William Woolfolk, Alvin Schwartz, David Vern and others
Artists: Bob Kane, Ray Burnley, Dick Sprang, Charles Paris, Jim Mooney, Lew Sayre Schwartz, Sy Barry, Stan Kaye, Sheldon Moldoff and others
Collects: Stories from World’s Finest Comics #33-70
$75.00 US, 512 pg

Catwoman Vol. 3: Death of the Family TP
Writer: Ann Nocenti
Artists: Adriana Melo, Julio Ferreira, Rafa Sandoval, Jordi Tarragona, Emanuela Lupacchino and Jaime Mendoza
Collects: Catwoman #0 and 13-18 and a story from YOUNG ROMANCE #1
$16.99 US, 176 pg

DC Comics One Million Omnibus HC
Writers: Grant Morrison, Mark Millar, Mark Schultz, Chuck Dixon, Ian Edginton, Dan Abnett, Andy Lanning, Dennis O’Neil, Doug Moench, Alan Grant, Devin Grayson, D. Curtis Johnson, Len Kaminski, Mark Waid, Michael Jan Friedman, Ron Marz, Garth Ennis, William Messner-Loebs, John Francis Moore, Tom Peyer, John Ostrander, James Robinson, Jerry Ordway, Karl Kesel, Peter David, Christopher Priest, Chris Roberson, Dan Jurgens and Geoff Johns
Artists: Val Semeiks, Phil Jimenez, Mike Wieringo, Richard Case, Georges Jeanty, Cully Hamner, Flint Henry, Norm Breyfogle, Dusty Abell, Ron Lim, Will Rosado, Tom Grindberg, Vince Giarrano, Yvel Guichet, Mark Buckingham, Jim Balent, J.H. Williams III, Shawn Martinbrough, Greg Land, Josh Hood, Bryan Hitch, John McCrea, Craig Rousseau, Howard Porter, Keith Giffen, Sean Phillips, Greg Luzniak, Tom Mandrake, Scott McDaniel, Jerry Ordway, Butch Guice, Staz Johnson, Peter Snejbjerg, Tom Grummett, Dusty Abell, Norm Breyfogle, Anthony Williams, Michael Collins, Todd Nauck, Angel Unzueta, Roberto Flores, Jesus Merino, Dan Jurgens and others
Collects: DC One Million #1-4, Action Comics #1,000,000, Adventures of Superman #1,000,000, Aquaman #1,000,000, Azrael #1,000,000, Batman #1,000,000, Batman: Shadow of the Bat #1,000,000, Catwoman #1,000,000, Chase #1,000,000, Chronos #1,000,000, The Creeper #1,000,000, Detective Comics #1,000,000, The Flash #1,000,000, Green Arrow #1,000,000, Green Lantern #1,000,000, Hitman #1,000,000, Impulse #1,000,000, JLA #1,000,000, Legion of Super-Heroes #1,000,000, Legionnaires #1,000,000, Lobo #1,000,000, Martian Manhunter #1,000,000, Nightwing #1,000,000, Power of Shazam #1,000,000, Resurrection Man #1,000,000, Robin #1,000,000, Starman #1,000,000, Superboy #1,000,000, Supergirl #1,000,000, Superman #1,000,000, Superman: The Man of Steel #1,000,000, Superman: The Man of Tomorrow #1,000,000, Wonder Woman #1,000,000, Young Justice #1,000,000, JLA in Crisis Secret Files, DC One Million 80-Page Giant #1, Booster Gold #1,000,000 and Superman/Batman #79-80
$99.99 US, 1,024 pg

Deadshot: Beginnings TP
Writers: John Ostrander, Kim Yale, Steve Englehart, Doug Moench, Gerry Conway and Paul Levitz
Artists: Luke McDonnell, Marshall Rogers, Terry Austin, Don Newton, Alfredo Alcala and Bruce Patterson
Collects: Deadshot #1-4, Batman #369 and Detective Comics #474 and 518
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Green Lantern Vol. 2: The Revenge of Black Hand TP
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artists: Doug Mahnke, Christian Alamy, Renato Guedes and Ethan Van Sciver
Collects: Green Lantern #7-12 and Green Lantern Annual #1
$16.99 US, 192 pg

Green Lantern Volume 3 HC
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artists: Doug Mahnke, Christian Alamy, Keith Champagne, Mark Irwin, Tom Nguyen, Marc Deering, Szymon Kudranski and Ardian Syaf
Collects: Green Lantern #0 and 13-20
$24.99 US, 224 pg

I, Vampire: Wave of Mutilation
Writer: Joshua Hale Fialkov
Artists: Andrea Sorrentino, Dennis Calero, Scott Clark and Fernando Blanco
Collects: I, Vampire #0 and 13-18
$16.99, 192 pg

Injustice: Gods Among Us Vol. 1 TP
Writer: Tom Taylor
Artists: Jheremy Raapack, Mike S. Miller, Marc Deering, Axel Gimenez, Bruno Redondo and others
Collects: Injustice: Gods Among Us #1-4
$14.99 US, 168 pg

JLA Earth 2 Deluxe Edition HC
Writer: Grant Morrison
Artist: Frank Quitely
Original graphic novel
$24.99 US, 144 pg

The Joker: Death of the Family HC
Writers: Ann Nocenti, Gail Simone, Adam Glass, Peter J. Tomasi, Kyle Higgins, John Layman, Scott Lobdell and Fabian Nicieza
Artists: Rafa Sandoval, Jordi Tarragona, Ed Benes, Daniel Sampere, Mark Irwin, Vicente Cifuentes, Fernando Dagnino, Patrick Gleason, Tomas Giorello, Mick Gray, Keith Champagne, Eddy Barrows, Eber Ferreira, Jason Fabok, Andy Clarke, Timothy Green II, Wayne Faucher, Brett Booth and Norm Rapmund
Collects: Catwoman #13-14, Batgirl #13-16, Suicide Squad #14-15, Batman and Robin #15-16, Nightwing #15-16, Detective Comics #15-16, Red Hood and the Outlaws #15-16 and Teen Titans #15-16
$29.99 US, 376 pg

JSA Liberty Files: The Whistling Skull TP
Writer: B. Clay Moore
Artist: Tony Harris
Collects: JSA Liberty Files: The Whistling Skull #1-6
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Smallville Season 11 Vol. 3: Haunted TP
Writer: Bryan Q. Miller
Artist: Jorge Jimenez
Collects: Smallville Season 11 #9-12
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Suicide Squad Vol. 3 TP
Writers: Adam Glass and Ales Kot
Artists: Fernando Dagnino, Henrik Jonsson, Sandu Florea and Timothy Green II
Collects: Suicide Squad #14-20
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Superman Vol. 2: Secrets &amp; Lies TP
Writers: Dan Jurgens, Keith Giffen, Scott Lobdell and Fabian Nicieza
Artists: Dan Jurgens, Jesus Merino, Kenneth Rocafort, Pascal Alixe, Marco Rudy, Tom Raney, Elizabeth Torque and Mico Suayan
Collects: Superman #7-12 and Superman Annual #1
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Superman Vol. 3 HC
Writer: Scott Lobdell
Artist: Kenneth Rocafort
Collects: Superman #0 and 13-19
$24.99 US, 192 pg

Superman: Dark Knight Over Metropolis TP
Writers: John Byrne, Roger Stern, Dan Jurgens and Jerry Ordway
Artists: Bob McLeod, Brett Breeding, Arthur Adams, Dick Giordano, Dan Jurgens, Art Thibert, Jerry Ordway and Dennis Janke
Collects: Superman #44, Adventures of Superman #466-467, Action Comics #653-654 and Action Comics Annual #1
$14.99 US, 168 pg

DC Comics titles scheduled for November 2013:

All-Star Western Vol. 3: The Black Diamond Probability TP
Writers: Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti
Artists: Moritat, Phil Winslade and Staz Johnson
Collects: All-Star Western #0 and 13-16
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Aquaman Vol. 2: The Others TP
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artists: Ivan Reis and Joe Prado
Collects: Aquaman #7-13
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Aquaman Vol. 3: Throne of Atlantis HC
Writer: Geoff Johns
Artists: Ivan Reis, Joe Prado, Julio Ferreira, Pete Woods, Pere Perez, Paul Pelletier, Art Thibert and Sean Parsons
Collects: Aquaman #0 and 14-16 and Justice League #15-17
$24.99 US, 176 pg

Batman Vol. 2: The City of Owls TP
Writers: Scott Snyder and James Tynion IV
Artists: Greg Capullo, Jonathan Glapion, Rafael Albuquerque, Andy Clarke and Jason Fabok
Collects: Batman #8-12 and Batman Annual #1
$16.99 US, 208 pg

Batman and Robin Vol. 2: Pearl TP
Writer: Peter J. Tomasi
Artists: Patrick Gleason, Mick Gray, Lee Garbett, Andy Clarke, Ray McCarthy, Keith Champagne, Dustin Nguyen and Tomas Giorello
Collects: Batman and Robin #9-14 and 0
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Batman and Robin Vol. 3: Death of the Family HC
Writers: Peter J. Tomasi and Scott Snyder
Artists: Patrick Gleason, Mick Gray, Greg Capullo, Jonathan Glapion, Keith Champagne, Ardian Syaf and Vicente Cifuentes
Collects: Batman and Robin #15-18, Batman #17 and Batman and Robin Annual #1
$24.99 US, 176 pg

Batman, Incorporated Vol. 1: Demon Star TP
Writers: Grant Morrison and Chris Burnham
Artists: Chris Burnham and Frazer Irving
Collects: Batman, Incorporated #0-6
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Batman: Detective Comics Vol. 2: Scare Tactics TP
Writer: Tony S. Daniel
Artists: Tony S. Daniel, Sandu Florea, Szymon Kudranski, Ed Benes and Rob Hunter
Collects: Detective Comics # 8-12, 0 and Detective Comics Annual #1
$16.99 US, 232 pg

Batman: Detective Comics Vol. 3: Emperor Penguin HC
Writer: John Layman
Artists: Jason Fabok and Andy Clarke
Collects: Detective Comics #13-18
$24.99 US, 192 pg

Batman: Night of the Owls TP
Writers: Scott Snyder, James Tynion IV, Tony S. Daniel, Judd Winick, Peter J. Tomasi, Duane Swierczynski, Gail Simone, Scott Lobdell, Kyle Higgins, Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti
Artists: Jason Fabok, Tony S. Daniel, Joel Gomez, Sandu Florea, David Finch, Richard Friend, Marcos To, Ryan Winn, Patrick Gleason, Mick Gray, Travel Foreman, Jeff Huet, Ardian Syaf, Vicente Sifuentes, Kenneth Rocafort, Guillem March, Eddy Barrows, Ruy Jose, Eber Ferreira and Moritat
Collects: Batman #8-11, Nightwing #8-9, All-Star Western #9, Catwoman #9, Batgirl #9, Batman: The Dark Knight #9, Batman and Robin #9, Birds of Prey #9, Red Hood and the Outlaws #9, Batman Annual #1 and Batwing #9
$19.99 US, 368 pg

Green Arrow Vol. 1: Hunter’s Moon TP
Writer: Mike Grell
Artists: Ed Hannigan, Dick Giordano and Frank McLaughlin
Collects: Green Arrow #1-6
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Joe Kubert Presents TP
Writers: Joe Kubert, Brian Buniak, Sam Glanzman and Paul Levitz
Artists: Joe Kubert, Brian Buniak and Sam Glanzman
Collects: Joe Kubert Presents #1-6
$19.99 US, 304 pg

The Joker: The Clown Prince of Crime TP
Writers: Dennis O’Neil, Elliot S. Maggin and Martin Pasko
Artists: Irv Novick, Dick Giordano, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Ernie Chua, Vince Colletta, Tex Blaisdell and Frank McLaughlin
Collects: The Joker #1-9
$16.99 US, 176 pg

The Judas Coin TP
Writer/Artist: Walter Simonson
Original graphic novel
$14.99 US, 104 pg

Justice League of America Vol. 1 HC
Writers: Geoff Johns and Matt Kindt
Artists: David Finch and Scott Clark
Collects: Justice League of America #1-6
$24.99 US, 176 pg

Red Hood and the Outlaws Vol. 3: Death of the Family TP
Writers: Scott Lobdell and Fabian Nicieza
Artists: Pasqual Ferry, Ig Guara, Brett Booth, Norm Rapmund, Timothy Green II, Pascal Alixe, Wayne Faucher, Ardian Syaf, Robson Rocha, Ken Lashley, Jaime Mendoza and Le Beau Underwood
Collects: Red Hood and the Outlaws #0 and 14-17 and Teen Titans #15-16
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Red Lanterns Volume 3 TP
Writer: Peter Milligan
Artists: Ardian Syaf, Vicente Cifuentes, Miguel Sepulveda and Will Conrad
Collects: Red Lanterns #0 and 13-20
$19.99 US, 224 pg

Superman: H’el on Earth HC
Writers: Scott Lobdell, Tom DeFalco and Mike Johnson
Artists: Kenneth Rocafort, R.B. Silva, Rob Lean, Roger Robinson, Iban Coello, Amilcar Pinna and Mahmud Asrar
Collects: Superman #13-17, Superboy #14-17 and Supergirl #14-17
$29.99 US, 296 pg

Swamp Thing Vol. 3: Rotworld: The Green Kingdom TP
Writers: Scott Snyder and Jeff Lemire
Artists: Marco Rudy, Dan Green, Andy Owens, Kano, Yanick Paquette, Andre Balinger, Steve Pugh, Timothy Green II and Joseph Silver
Collects: Swamp Thing #12-18 and Animal Man #12 and 17
$16.99 US, 208 pg

Worlds’ Finest Vol. 2 TP
Writer: Paul Levitz
Artists: Kevin Maguire, George Perez, Sandra Hope, Cliff Richards, Cafu, Yildiray Cinar, Phil Jimenez, Barry Kitson and Geraldo Borges
Collects: Worlds’ Finest #6-12
$14.99 US, 160 pg

DC Comics titles scheduled for December 2013:

The Authority Vol. 2 HC
Writers: Mark Millar, Doselle Young, Tom Peyer and Grant Morrison
Artists: Frank Quitely, Trevor Scott, Scott Williams, Mark Irwin, Chris Weston, Garry Leach, Derek Fridolfs, Sal Regla, John McCrea, Dustin Nguyen, Richard Friend, Jason Martin, Arthur Adams, Tim Townsend and Gary Erskine
Collects: The Authority #13-29
$34.99 US, 416 pg

Birds of Prey Vol. 3: A Clash of Daggers TP
Writers: Duane Swierczynski and Gail Simone
Artists: Romano Molenaar, Vicente Cifuentes, Juan Jose Ryp, Daniel Sampere and Admira Wijaya
Collects: Birds of Prey #13-17 and Batgirl Annual #1
$14.99 US, 160 pg

The Creature Commandos TP
Writers: J.M. DeMatteis, Mike W. Barr and Robert Kanigher
Artists: Pat Broderick, John Celardo, Fred Carillo, Bob Hall, Jerry Ordway and Dan Spiegle
Collects: Weird War Tales #93, 97, 100, 102, 105, 108-112, 114-119, 121 and 124
$19.99 US, 288 pg

Deadman Book Four TP
Writers: Bob Haney, Len Wein and Gerry Conway
Artists: Ric Estrada, Dick Giordano, Jose Luis Garcia-Lopez, Jim Aparo and Frank Chiaramonte,
Collects: DC Special Series #8, DC Comics Presents #24 and stories from Adventure Comics #459-466
$14.99 US, 168 pg

Doctor Mid-Nite New Edition TP
Writer: Matt Wagner
Artist: John K. Snyder III
Collects: Doctor Mid-Nite #1-3
$14.99 US, 160 pg

The Flash Vol. 2: Rogues Revolution TP
Writers: Francis Manapul and Brian Buccellato
Artists: Francis Manapul, Marcus To, Scott Kolins, Diogenes Neves, Oclair Albert, Marcio Takara, Wes Craig and Ray McCarthy
Collects: The Flash #9-12 and The Flash Annual #1
$16.99 US, 176 pg

The Flash Vol. 3: Gorilla Warfare HC
Writers: Francis Manapul and Brian Buccellato
Artists: Francis Manapul, Marcus To, Ryan Winn and Marcio Takara
Collects: The Flash #13-19
$24.99 US, 176 pg

The Fury of Firestorm: The Nuclear Men Vol. 3: Takeover TP
Writers: Dan Jurgens and Joe Harris
Artists: Dan Jurgens, Ray McCarthy, Yildiray Cinar, Marlo Alquiza and Karl Kesel
Collects: The Fury of Firestorm: The Nuclear Men #13-18
$16.99 US, 176 pg

Green Lantern Corps Vol. 2: Alpha War TP
Writer: Peter J. Tomasi
Artists: Fernando Pasarin, CAFU, Scott Hanna and Marc Deering
Collects: Green Lantern Corps #8-14 and 0
$16.99 US, 192 pg

Green Lantern Corps Vol. 3: Rise of the Third Army HC
Writer: Peter J. Tomasi
Artists: CAFU, Scott Hanna, Fernando Pasarin, Chriscross and Marlo Alquiza
Collects: Green Lantern Corps #15-20 and Green Lantern Corps Annual #1
$24.99 US, 192 pg

I, Vampire Vol. 3: Wave of Mutilation TP
Writer: Joshua Hale Fialkov
Artists: Andrea Sorrentino, Dennis Calero, Scott Clark and Fernando Blanco
Collects: I, Vampire #0 and 13-19
$16.99 US, 192 pg

Nightwing Vol. 3: Death of the Family TP
Writers: Tom DeFalco, Kyle Higgins and Scott Snyder
Artists: Andres Guinaldo, Mark Irwin, Eddy Barrows, Eber Ferreira, Juan Jose Ryp, Roger Bonet, Greg Capullo and Jonathan Glapion
Collects: Nightwing #13-18 and Batman #17
$16.99 US, 176 pg

The Savage Hawkman Vol. 2: Wanted TP
Writer: Tom DeFalco
Artists: Joe Bennett, Art Thibert,
Collects: The Savage Hawkman #0 and 9-20
$19.99 US, 288 pg

Superman: Action Comics Vol. 2: Bulletproof TP
Writers: Grant Morrison, Sholly Fisch and Max Landis
Artists: Rags Morales, Gene Ha, Cully Hamner, Karl Story, Ben Oliver, CAFU, Brad Walker and Ryan Sook
Collects: Action Comics #9-12 and 0, and Action Comics Annual #1
$16.99 US, 224 pg

Superman: Action Comics Vol. 3: At The End of Days HC
Writers: Grand Morrison and Sholly Fisch
Artists: Travel Foreman, Rags Morales, Mark Propst, Brad Walker, Andrew Hennessy, Chris Sprouse and Karl Story
Collects: Action Comics #13-17
$24.99 US, 224 pg

Superman Vs. Mongul TP
Writers: Len Wein, Paul Levitz and Alan Moore
Artists: Jim Starlin, Dick Giordano, Frank McLaughlin, Romeo Tanghal, Curt Swan, Dave Hunt and Dave Gibbons
Collects: DC Comics Presents #27-28, 36 and 43 and Superman Annual #11
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Teen Titans Vol. 3: Death of the Family TP
Writers: Scott Lobdell and Fabian Nicieza
Artists: Brett Booth, Norm Rapmund, Eddy Barrows and Eber Ferreira
Collects: Teen Titans #14-20
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Young Justice: Invasion TP
Writer: Greg Weisman
Artist: Christopher Jones
Collects: Young Justice #20-25
$12.99 US, 128 pg

DC Comics titles scheduled for January 2014:

Batman—The Dark Knight Vol. 2: Cycle of Violence TP
Writer: Gregg Hurwitz
Artists: David Finch, Richard Friend, Mico Suayan and Juan Jose Ryp
Collects: Batman—The Dark Knight #10-15 and 0
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Batman—The Dark Knight Vol. 3: Mad HC
Writer: Gregg Hurwitz
Artist: Ethan Van Sciver
Collects: Batman—The Dark Knight #16-21
$22.99 US, 144 pg

Batman: Arkham Unhinged Vol. 2 TP
Writer: Derek Fridolfs
Artists: Jorge Jimenez, Mike S. Miller, Darick Robertson, Peter Nguyen and others
Collects: Batman: Arkham Unhinged #6-10
$14.99 US, 168 pg

Batman: Arkham Unhinged Vol. 3 HC
Writer: Derek Fridolfs
Artists: Mico Suayan, Jheremy Raapack, Eric Nguyen, Federico Dallocchio and Davide Fabbri
Collects: Batman: Arkham Unhinged #11-15
$22.99 US, 168 pg

Batwing Volume 3: Enemy of the State TP
Writers: Judd Winick, Fabian Nicieza, Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti
Artists: Marcus To, Ryan Winn, Richard Zajac, Beau Underwood, Fabrizio Fiorentino, Allan Jefferson, Phyllis Novin, Juan Castro, Eduardo Pansica and Julio Ferreira
Collects: Batwing #13-18
$16.99 US, 144 pg

The Demon: From the Darkness TP
Writer: Matt Wagner
Artists: Matt Wagner and Art Nichols
Collects: The Demon #1-4 (miniseries) and The Demon #22
$14.99 US, 128 pg

Demon Knights Vol. 3 TP
Writers: Paul Cornell and Robert Venditti
Artist: Bernard Chang
Collects: Demon Knights #13-18
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Earth 2 Vol. 1: The Gathering TP
Writer: James Robinson
Artists: Nicola Scott, Trevor Scott, Eduardo Pansica and Tomas Giorello
Collects: Earth 2 #1-6
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Earth 2 Vol. 2: The Tower of Fate HC
Writer: James Robinson
Artists: Nicola Scott, Trevor Scott, Yildiray Cinar, Ryan Winn, Tom Derenick and Ruy Jose
Collects: Earth 2 #0 and 7-12 and a story from DC Universe Presents #0
$24.99 US, 176 pg

Green Lantern: The Animated Series Vol. 2 TP
Writers: Art Baltzar, Franco, Ivan Cohen and Cecil Castellucci
Artists: Dario Brizuela and Luciano Vecchio
Collects: Green Lantern: The Animated Series #6-11
$12.99 US, 128 pg

Green Lantern: New Guardians Vol. 2: Beyond Hope TP
Writer: Tony Bedard
Artists: Tyler Kirkham, Batt, Tomas Giorello and Marcio Takara
Collects: Green Lantern – New Guardians #8-12 and Blue Beetle #9
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Green Lantern: New Guardians Vol. 3: Rise of the Third Army HC
Writer: Tony Bedard
Artists: Aaron Kuder, Andrei Bressan, Andres Guinaldo, Greg Adams and Amilcar Pinna.
Collects: Green Lantern: New Guardians #0 and 13-20
$24.99 US, 224 pg

Green Lantern: Sector 2814 Vol. 3 TP
Writer: Steve Englehart
Artists: Joe Staton, Bruce Patterson, Mark Farmer and Bob Smith
Collects: Green Lantern #194-200
$16.99 US, 200 pg

Katana Vol. 1 TP
Writer: Ann Nocenti
Artists: Alex Sanchez, Cristina Coronas and Bill Sienkiewicz
Collects: Katana #1-6
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Legion of Super-Heroes Vol. 3: The Fatal Five TP
Writer: Paul Levitz
Artists: Francis Portela, Scott Kolins, Keith Giffen and Scott Koblish
Collects: Legion of Super-Heroes #15-21
$14.99 US, 160 pg

The Planetary Omnibus HC
Writer: Warren Ellis
Artists: John Cassaday, Jerry Ordway, Phil Jimenez and Andy Lanning
Collects: Planetary #1-27, Planetary/Batman #1, Planetary/JLA #1 and Planetary/Authority #1
$75.00 US, 832 pg

Superboy Vol. 3 TP
Writer: Tom DeFalco,
Artists: R.B. Silva, Rob Lean, Ron Frenz, Roger Robinson, Iban Coello and Amilcar Pinna
Collects: Superboy #13-19
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Superman Family Adventures Vol. 2 TP
Writers: Art Baltazar and Franco
Artist: Art Baltazar
Collects: Superman Family Adventures #7-12
$12.99 US, 128 pg

Superman: Man of Steel Vol. 8 TP
Writers: Paul Kupperberg, John Byrne and Jerry Ordway
Artists: John Byrne, Ty Templeton, Ross Andru, Keith Williams, George Pérez, Karl Kesel, Mike Mignola, Jerry Ordway, John Beatty and Dennis Janke
Collects: Action Comics #598-600, Superman #16-18 and Adventures of Superman #439-440
$16.99 US, 232 pg

Terra Obscura: S.M.A.S.H. of Two Worlds TP
Writers: Alan Moore and Peter Hogan
Artists: Yanick Paquette and Karl Story
Collects: Terra Obscura Vol. 1 #1-6 and Terra Obscura Vol. 2 #1-6
$24.99 US, 320 pg

DC Comics titles scheduled for February 2014:

Batman: Li’l Gotham Vol. 1
Writers: Derek Fridolfs and Dustin Nguyen
Artist: Dustin Nguyen
Collects: Batman: Li’l Gotham #1-3 and stories from Detective Comics Annual #11 and Batman Annual #27
$14.99 US, 128 pg

Constantine Vol. 1 TP
Writers: Jeff Lemire and Ray Fawkes
Artists: Renato Guedes
Collects: Constantine #1-7
$14.99 US, 160 pg

DC Universe Presents Vol. 3: Black Lightning and Blue Devil TP
Writers: Marc Andreyko, Joe Keatinge and Tony Bedard
Artists: Robson Rocha, Oclair Albert, Eduardo Pansica, Julio Ferreira, J.P. Mayer, Ricken, Federico Dallocchio and Jesus Saiz
Collects: DC Universe Presents #13-19
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Deathstroke Vol. 2: Lobo Hunt TP
Writer: Justin Jordan
Artists: Edgar Salazar and Scott Hanna
Collects: Deathstroke #0 and 9-20
$19.99 US, 296 pg

Dial H Vol. 2 TP
Writer: China Mieville
Artists: David Lapham, Alberto Ponticelli and Dan Green
Collects: Dial H #7-16
$16.99 US, 224 pg

Green Lantern: Wrath of the First Lantern Vol. 1 HC
Writers: Geoff Johns, Peter J. Tomasi, Tony Bedard and Peter Milligan
Artists: Doug Mahnke, Christian Alamy, Dan Jurgens, Phil Jimenez, Mark Irwin, Tom Nguyen, Szymon Kudranski, Ardian Syaf, Fernando Pasarin, Scott Hanna, Chriscross, Marlo Alquiza, Aaron Kuder, Andres Guinaldo, Miguel Sepulveda and Will Conrad
Collects: Green Lantern #17-18, Green Lantern Corps #17-20, Red Lanterns #17-20 and Green Lantern New Guardians #17-20
$24.99 US, 192 pg

JLA Vol. 4 TP
Writer: Grant Morrison
Artists: Howard Porter, Frank Quitely, Ed McGuinness, John Dell and others
Collects: JLA #32-46
$24.99 US, 384 pg

Justice League of America’s Vibe Vol. 1 TP
Writers: Geoff Johns, Andrew Kreisberg and Sterling Gates
Artists: Pete Woods and Sean Parsons
Collects: Justice League of America’s Vibe #1-6
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Justice League Dark Vol. 3: The Death of Magic TP
Writers: Jeff Lemire and Ray Fawkes
Artists: Graham Nolan, Victor Drujiniu and Mikel Janin
Collects: Justice League Dark #14-19
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Martian Manhunter: Son of Mars TP
Writers: John Ostrander and John Arcudi
Artists: Tom Mandrake and Jan Duursema
Collects: Martian Manhunter #0-9
$19.99 US, 240 pg

The Ravagers Vol. 2 TP
Writer: Michael Alan Nelson
Artists: Ian Churchill, Ig Guara and Norm Rapmund
Collects: The Ravagers #8-12 and 0
$14.99 US, 144 pg

Power Girl: Power Trip TP
Writers: Geoff Johns, Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti
Artists: Amanda Conner and Jimmy Palmiotti
Collects: JSA Classified #1-4 and Power Girl #1-12
$29.99 US, 392 pg

Supergirl Vol. 3 TP
Writer: Mike Johnson
Artists: Mahmud Asrar and Sami Basri
Collects: Supergirl #13-19
$14.99 US, 160 pg

Via

2 Comments on DCU and Vertigo collection schedule: Deluxe Invisibles, DMZ, DC One MIllion and Planetary Omnibuses, etc., last added: 4/3/2013
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23. 2013 Hugo Award nominees announced

201304020356 2013 Hugo Award nominees announced
Awards season rolls on, unstoppable. The Hugos—given to the best in SF—have announced the 2013 nominees and here’s the comics category:

Best Graphic Story (427 nominating ballots cast)

Grandville Bête Noire, written and illustrated by Bryan Talbot (Dark Horse Comics, Jonathan Cape)
Locke & Key Volume 5: Clockworks, written by Joe Hill, illustrated by Gabriel Rodriguez (IDW)
Saga, Volume One, written by Brian K. Vaughn, illustrated by Fiona Staples (Image Comics)
Schlock Mercenary: Random Access Memorabilia, written and illustrated by Howard Tayler, colors by Travis Walton (Hypernode Media)
Saucer Country, Volume 1: Run, written by Paul Cornell, illustrated by Ryan Kelly, Jimmy Broxton and Goran Sudžuka (Vertigo)

A nice eclectic mix for the year. Winners will be announced September 1, 2013 at LoneStarCon 3 in San Antonio, Texas.

2 Comments on 2013 Hugo Award nominees announced, last added: 4/2/2013
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24. Kibbles ‘n’ Bits 4/2/13: Foodtown

§ Steve Bissette has begun writing a a history of WaP!, a pros-only newsletter from the 80s—spearheaded by Steven Grant and Frank Miller—that created quite a stir at the time. The history is tied up with much of the creator unrest of the era. The first chapter is much concerned with Dave Sim, Diamond and what would become Tundra Publishing, Kevin Eastman’s ambitious but disastrous publishing venture. Also mentioned, The Frying Pan, a pro APA that I was a member of during its run. Much of the history is convoluted and interconnected, but its definitely behind a lot of the thinking that went on among creators and self-publishers in an era when indie comics sold 30,000 copies with no sweat at all. It all reflects frustration with the comics industry’s inability to reach a wider audience and backsliding on creators rights that pretty much went into the hopper with the great crash of the 90s. Ancient history for many, but fascinating stuff.

hey look schwartz walsh full Kibbles n Bits 4/2/13: Foodtown

§ New Yorker cartoonists Benjamin Schwartz and Liam Francis Walsh went to see the Harvey Kurtzman exhibit and made a comic about it.

§ Sean Kleefeld looks back on 2008, the year we “lost” Comic-Con.

§ Variety had a lengthy profile of new WB ceo Kevin Tsujihara which reveals he’s a nice guy who likes his family. Also what to do with the DC characters is a priority.

Among the priorities for the studio, which enjoys enviable market share in film and television, is finding fresh tentpole franchises now that the “Harry Potter” series has run its course; mining more content from the wealth of material in the DC Entertainment vault; and expanding WB’s activity in consumer products and international markets, in tandem with other Time Warner units, notably Turner Broadcasting.

§ You may have seen Peter Sanderson’s report on the Asbury Park Comicon’s panels, but here’s another excellent piece which surveys the cartoonists in attendance on the future of comics:

Artist Jay Lynch, an East Orange native, was part of the underground comics movement of the late 1960s. The irreverent, barrier-busting comics drawn by Lynch, Robert Crumb and others introduced sex, drugs and self-expression to the medium. Was it truly a movement? Or a bunch of unconnected artists who had the same idea at the same time? “Well,” Lynch said wryly, “I think it had to do with LSD.”

§ Don MacPhersonjumps into the digitla comics grey market:

I discovered a few months ago some folks sell these codes on eBay. The same is done by some people when it comes to digital copies of DVDs/Blu-Rays, so a similar development in the world of comics was a foreseeable development. The eBay practice isn’t something that seems to be curbed in any way, so I don’t know if it qualifies as a “grey market” for comics or not. There’s nothing overtly listed in the details outlined by Marvel that precludes the resale of the codes. The only real conditions mentioned on the page featuring the code are the following: “Digital copy requires purchase of a physical comic. Download code valid for one use only.” There’s no mention that the person who bought the comic is the only one who can use it, nor does Marvel state the code isn’t for resale.

51e6xDS7WvL. SY300  Kibbles n Bits 4/2/13: Foodtown
§ Coming this summer, a debut novel called The Night Gwen Stacy Died by Sarah Bruni It’s described as “A debut novel and quirky love story about the adventures and mutual rescue of an Iowan girl and a mysterious stranger who begins to cast her in the image of Spider-Man’s first love.”

§ In case you missed David Brothers’ take on Alex Summers and “The M Word” here it is.

§ The Longbox Project aims to collect reminiscences of specific comics readers purchased as specific times in the past. I was going to say, whoo, I’ve had enugh of that, but the one I happened to click on mentioned Foodtown, and I was immediately swept back to the Foodtown in White House Station on Route 22 where I eagerly riffled through the shopworn racks in search of the new Master of Kung Fu. So yeah….Foodtown. Buying your comics in supermarkets. That was a time.

§ Scenes from a con:

A female fan asked why the DC 101 panel hadn’t highlighted any female-centric books and media. “Sometimes it feels like there’s a conspiracy like we don’t want any girls, but we actually love girls and would love girls to read the books, even the ‘Teen Wolf’ fans here,” Lobdell began, but was drowned out by shouts from an agitated group of “Teen Wolf” fans who had just enough of being mentioned by the writer. “If the point of this panel is to get new fans, why have you spent the entire panel alienating every single person waiting for the panel coming up?” a “Teen Wolf” fan in front yelled back at the two as the audience divided into boos and a smattering of applause. Cunningham and Lobdell both apologized for any hurt feelings for their “Teen Wolf” comments, telling the large “Teen Wolf” contingent it was not their intention to alienate them, though Lobdell was unable to resist jokingly ask the audience to show by raising their hands who felt alienated.

4 Comments on Kibbles ‘n’ Bits 4/2/13: Foodtown, last added: 4/2/2013
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25. Good news: Four new comics shops and a reopening

201304020321 Good news: Four new comics shops and a reopening
Diamond reports that for the last two years, their number of accounts has gone up by 1% each year—a tiny amount, to be sure, but at least it isn’t falling. Here’s some recent stories about NEW stores opening up, and one old one reopening—proof that indie bookstores and comics are not domed quite yet.

¶ Rocket Comics: In Menifee, CA, Life-long residents to open comic shop pictured above.

Cousins Jesse Heinrichs, 22, and Zach Heinrichs, 25, plan to open the first comic book shop in Menifee’s known history.

The grand opening for their shop, Rocket Comics, is planned for 10 a.m. April 6 at 27140 Shadel Road and includes food, drinks, a raffle and a free package of buttons for the first 20 customers.

The shop, which specializes in comic books but also sells games, toys and other collectibles, is the realization of a dream for the two cousins — who proudly embrace the label “comic nerds.”


The two hope the store will be an after school destination for kids, which seems to be a growing trend for shops located near schools.

¶ Vintage Villains: In Danville, IL another pair has opened a shop:

Partners Chris Perrault, a laid-off FreightCar employee, and Troy Walton have opened the shop, which opened today in the former Bruce Huff Photography business next to Hoarder’s Paradise, at 103 N. Vermilion St. [snip]

Perrault said the downtown pedestrian traffic also played a part in their decision to locate downtown.

During the last few months, they have been painting, removing a wall and renovating the space to fit their needs.

The shop has sections of T-shirts, reproduction movie posters, buttons, records and music CDs, horror/sci-fi/anime, VHS movies and DVDs, video games and video game systems — such as Atari and Nintendo, non-sports cards, action figures from movies and television shows and toys from the 1980s and 1990s.


The store sounds fine but we’re curious about the spot called Hoarder’s Paradise!

¶ Heroes For Sale: Liverpool, UK Yet another pair of determined fans opening a shop:

It hosts a vast collection of items such as classic comic books, action figures from Star Wars, Iron Man, Transformers, Ghostbusters and other memorabilia that is a journey of nostalgia through the sub-culture of TV, cinema and cartoon series heroes across the second half of the 20th Century.

The shop is run by Pierce King and David Ross, who are themselves collectors and enthusiasts and have collected most of the shop’s content over the past two decades.

¶ Hypno-Tronic Comics, St. George, Staten Island, NY this one is run by a couple

From tiny robots, laser beams, space invaders and bad monster costumes, a new comic shop in St. George is stocking up on vintage science-fiction and horror movie merchandise. Aside from the usual stock of superhero comics, Hypno-Tronic Comics will sell everything from Elvira dolls to Star Trek laser-disks.

“We’re different,” said co-owner Joy Ghigliotti. “We try to cater to sci-fi, horror movies, television, pop culture stuff, as well as the comics.” The store already has a large collection of memorabilia culled from garage sales, conventions and the personal collections of owners Ghigliotti and Edmund Varuolo.

¶ Finally, in Lynchburg, VA, Collector’s Lair has reopened in a new space following a fire:

The blaze, which burned for days, remains under investigation, Lynchburg Fire Marshal Thomas Mack said. About a month after the fire, Lair reopened his shop less than a mile away, next door to Chestnut Hill Hardware and near Fort Avenue’s intersection with Wards Road. He has operated a hobby shop for more than 20 years and knew he had to reopen. “That was almost immediate,” Lair said. “We were successful at what we were doing.” For 10 years, Lair sold collectibles from his former location on Fort Avenue, previously the Continental Hobby Shop. Lair opened his store in the 1980s after his childhood hangout, The Treasure Chest, closed. The faded sign from Lair’s first store is displayed in the front window of his new location.


Glad to hear this store was able to reopen following what sounds like a pretty bad fire.

How much these openings have been helped by Diamond’s incentives to help new stores open is unknown, but it’s definitely a welcome trend.

Has a comics shop opened near you? Tell the Beat!

15 Comments on Good news: Four new comics shops and a reopening, last added: 4/15/2013
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