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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: best of 2014, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Comics writing on the internet: what is it good for?

B2HF7caIgAEYYKR Comics writing on the internet: what is it good for?

Former retailer and current CBLDF director Alex Cox pens a piece called How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Ignore the Internet with a quick look back at the last ten years of online comics discourse…and how it doesn’t really affect actual consumers that much:

But mostly the REALITY of making, selling, and working with comics took precedence over the bizarre parallel universe of the comics internet. When I owned my shop, and previous to that, when I worked in another high-traffic NYC store, I straw-polled customers from time to time, and found that an astonishingly low number of them spent any time reading about comics online. And even fewer still actively participated in any sorts of discussions. The percent that did read the comics internet was divided further by the percent that used it as anything past a casual scroll. I realized that the numbers of comics sold were not reflected in the amount of online chatter about any given comic, and vice versa. In other words, if two worlds existed of comic fans, the people shopping every Wednesday and the people on twitter all night, the twain were not necessarily meeting. There is a great value in sites like CBR, and the myriad of other news outlets, but too often people convince themselves that comics begin and end on tumblr, and the world is a much bigger place than that.


While I don’t doubt that Cox is correct with the vast majority of readers being immune to the passionate arguments on ComicsSpecialSauce.com, it’s also true that social media enables creators who are good at it to capture and hold a fanbase. I’d point to Matt Fraction and KellySue DeConnick as two of the best, and certainly Chip Zdarsky, Fraction Sex Criminal co-conspirator, as models of this. It’s not entirely clear how much of their audience came for the social media inetraction, but it’s a good bet that some STAY for the brimping and Carol Corps.

BUT MEANWHILE, there is still good writing about comics on the internet, against all odds. Steve Morris, no stranger to good writing himself, has rounded up some examples in The Best Comics Commentary of 2014 with nods to David Harper, Zainab Akhtar, Paul O’Brien, Robiun McConell, Claire Napier and many more. Just head over and click the links and do exactly what they say.

10 Comments on Comics writing on the internet: what is it good for?, last added: 12/12/2014
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2. Master List: The Best Comics of 2014

chast Master List: The Best Comics of 2014

Trying to keep up with all the end of year Best of lists for comics? Graphic Policy has you covered. . They’re not only keeping a tab of the lists, but adding up the mentions. It will not surprise you to know that Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant is leading the list, with How to be Happy at #2, but we’re just getting started. While Graphic POlicy’s Brett Schenker seems to have it all under control, if you have a best of list he hasn’t seen, can’t hurt to drop him a line.

0 Comments on Master List: The Best Comics of 2014 as of 12/5/2014 3:05:00 PM
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3. Tell us your favourite book of 2014 and WIN!

2014 is drawing to a close and what another fantastic year of books and reading it has been. To celebrate we are giving away 8 copies of one of our favourite books of 2014; The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North (you can read our review here). All you have to do is […]

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4. My Top 5 Reads of 2014

What another outstanding year of great books. My book of the year was a real stand-out but there was a very close second. Sorting out the rest was nearly impossible. My biggest discovery was David Mitchell. I devoured all his books and loved them all and could have include all them in my top 10 […]

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