Jason reveals a bit more about his current graphic novel in progress, including this panel. [Follow our Tumblr blog for lots more Things to See every day.]
Things to Read: Tim Kreider on Occupy Wall Street and Iraq
Tim Kreider, who plies his trade as an essayist a bit more than as a cartoonist these days, has four recent unpublished pieces available to read and disseminate on his website: three on the Occupy movement and one on the end of the Iraq War. Access all three and read Tim's brief introduction here. Here's a good money quote: "It’s past time that the Right and the Left both noticed that our traditional nemeses — Big Government and Big Business, respectively — are literally the same people."
Rocket Van!
(click image to enlarge) Every so often I'm asked whatever became of Fantagraphics old delivery van, which was vandalized — I mean decorated — by masters of alternative comix during a 1991 signing at Fallout. (Crumb, Clowes, Bagge, Bros., Mavrides, Woodring, etc.) We spoke to the Georgetown owner last summer and he assured us restoration was underway. On Friday, Georgetown Records unearthed a cache of vintage Rocket magazines. The April '91 issue contained a sidebar on this rolling masterpiece.
Daily OCD: 12/16/11
Today's Online Commentary & Diversions: • List: FEARnet's Joseph McCabe names Richard Sala's The Hidden to their Best of 2011: Books and Comics: "Sala's unique brand of creepy quirk combines Edward Gorey, Chester Gould, and Charles Adams with his own unclassifiable magic. The Hidden, from Fantagraphics Books, is his most ambitious work — an intimate apocalypse." • List: The SF Site's Rick Klaw ranks 21: The Story of Roberto Clemente at #4 on his top graphic novels of 2011: "In this emotionally moving biography, the Puerto Rican Wilfred Santiago magnificently chronicles the often tragic life of this icon…. Santiago expertly…
Hitch on Gorazde
We were sorry to hear yesterday of the death of Christopher Hitchens, who wrote an excellent introduction to Joe Sacco's Safe Area Gorazde. Tom Spurgeon pointed out at The Comics Reporter this morning that the introduction (which also appeared as an essay in the Los Angeles Times) is posted online in its entirety at the Gorazde Info website. (I don't think we granted permission, but we'll let it slide.) I'm hoping to get Gary to write a little something on his encounter with Hitchens.
Weekend Webcomics for 12/16/11: Kupperman, Mahler, Weissman & more
Our weekly strips from Kupperman, Mahler & Weissman, plus links to other strips from around the web: — Up All Night by Michael Kupperman (view at original size): Angelman by Nicolas Mahler (view at original size): Barack Hussein Obama by Steven Weissman (view at original size): And elsewhere: Belligerent Piano by Tim Lane: Forming by Jesse Moynihan: Humblug by Arnold Roth (4 updates this week, continuing serialization of his unpublished 1979 strip Downtown, including a Sunday strip): Maakies by Tony Millionaire: Les Petits Riens by Lewis Trondheim: Truth Serum by Jon Adams (see also last week's late update): What's in…
Angelman by Nicolas Mahler – page 3
We are proud and pleased to be publishing our first Nicolas Mahler book (a full-color hardcover, no less) in April 2012: Angelman. We are serializing the first quarter of the book with the rest of our weekly digital comics… at the end of which, you will be so absorbed in Angelman’s travails that you will have no choice but to pick up the book. Enjoy!
Caligulon rising
We love this Prison Pit tribute by “shotgunsean” on Instagram.
Jim Flora Presentation Tomorrow Night in NYC!
As we reported last month, a retrospective of Jim Flora's curiously sinister art is currently on display at the Dorian Grey Gallery in New York City. And this Saturday, December 17th, you can satisfy your sinister curiosity with a slideshow presentation and talk with Flora archivist Irwin Chusid! Irwin will present a talk about the artist's life, accompanied by a digital projection of over 100 spectacular works from the Flora collection. The wine begins pouring at 4:00 pm, with the presentation starting at 5:00 pm sharp. Admission is free, but seating is limited, so arrive early! untitled tempera, early 1940s…
Action! Mystery! Thrills! Comic Book Covers of the Golden Age 1933-45 – Previews, Pre-Order
Action! Mystery! Thrills! Comic Book Covers of the Golden Age 1933-45 by various artists; edited by Greg Sadowski 208-page full-color 8" x 10.5" softcover • $29.99ISBN: 978-1-60699-494-8 Ships in: December 2011 (subject to change) — Pre-Order Now When we contemplate a memorable old comic book, the first thing that comes to mind is its cover, and that was no accident. Publishers realized fairly quickly that if they spent a little extra to hire a good cover artist, they could fill the insides with mediocrity and still make a sizable profit — that all it took was a striking cover to…
