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Smith's Rasl Explores Science and Formats
Bone creator Jeff Smith's eagerly awaited new story Rasl hasn't just been an entertaining yarn, it's an experiment in exploring publishing formats for specific book markets. Smith is best known for Bone, his bestselling kid-oriented fantasy-work. But Rasl, about a scientist turned art thief who builds a device to travel to parallel universes, deals with more adult themes and topics, fusing noir, scientific ideas such as string theory, and Native American symbolism.
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Starstruck Shines Brightly Once Again
The cult classic comic Starstruck—well ahead of its time when initially released in 1985—has found a new life at IDW. An SF series that spanned galaxies and influences, Starstruck began as a stage play before its initial publication in Heavy Metal Magazine, later finding homes at Marvel’s Epic imprint and Dark Horse.
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December Comics Bestsellers
Books 3 and 4 of Jeff Kinney’s hyrid comics and prose Diary of a Wimpy Kid series take the top two spots followed by R. Crumb’s Book of Genesis. Next is comics Viz’s Vampire Knight and Harper and Tokyopop’s comics adaptation of the Warriors series. Naruto is #6, followed by Bloomsbury’s Logicomix and Yen Press’s manga adaptation of Maximum Ride volume 2.
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Joe Sacco Returns to Palestine
In his new book, Footnotes in Gaza (Metropolitan Books), Joe Sacco returns to the Gaza Strip to look into the shrouded history surrounding two little known and brutally violent events—massacres of unarmed Palestinian refugees by Israeli troops in November 1956—that took place in the towns of Khan Younis and Rafah.
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A New Brooklyn Comics (And Graphics) Show
Organized by Dan Nadel, publisher of indie comics publishing house PictureBox, and Gabe Fowler of comics shop, Desert Island, the Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Festival was a whirlwind of intense comics activity and relentless crowds of fans that jammed the exhibition space at Our Lady of Consolation Church in Williamsburg despite the miserable weather.
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Lobo Rocks Out with Ian and Kieth
Though Scott Ian has enjoyed a career in the entertainment industry that’s spanned over 25 years, the longtime Anthrax guitarist, TV personality and poker pro had never managed to meld his lifelong obsession with comic books into his work. So when DC Comics approached him about writing a mini-series, he knew he had to jump at the opportunity.
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Sex, Lies and Religion: A New Edition of 'Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary'
Long considered a classic of the 1960s underground comics era, as well as a progenitor of a wave of imaginative autobiographical comics works to come in the 1980s, Justin Green’s Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary, is being reprinted in an oversized hardcover edition by McSweeney’s Books this month.
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The Image-Makers Reunite
The founders of Image—Erik Larsen, Jim Lee, Rob Liefeld, Todd McFarlane, Whilce Portacio, Marc Silvestri and Jim Valentino—have reunited and teamed with writer Robert Kirkman for an all-star mini-series that brings the larger than life characters of Image's early days back to the page.
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Ted Rall’s The Year of Loving Dangerously
Remember the 80’s? The legwarmers and the feathered hair and the cheesy guys named Chad? Remember Ronald Reagan and Bernie Goetz and the very first hints of the AIDS epidemic? Well, Ted Rall does and, along with artist Pablo Callejo, he’s wrapped it all up into a gorgeous whirlwind of a memoir.
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Comics Briefly
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Comics Reviews: 11/30/09
Jim Rugg's nostalgis satire, Afrodisiac, a new graphic novel by the artist of Air and comics adpatations of the works of Louisa May Alcoot are in this week's reviews.
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Panel Mania: Shutter Island
Shutter Island, an adaptation of the novel by Dennis Lehane, follows two U.S. Marshals who are sent to the island in search of a mass murderer who has escaped from a hospital. First published in France, and illustrated by Christian De Metter, the book will be released by Tokyopop on January 5th, timed to tie-in with the upcoming movie adaptation directed by Martin Scorsese and staring Leonardo DiCaprio.
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Yen Press Cites Adaptations; Plans Kids Comics and More
Back in 2007, when Yen Press, Hachette’s manga, manhwa and conventional graphic novel imprint, was first starting out, publishing director Kurt Hassler predicted that graphic novel adaptations were going to be the next big trend for manga publishing in the U.S. So far he's been right.
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Davis’s ‘Secret Science Alliance’ Appeals to All Ages
Eleanor Davis’s The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook, a delightful mystery in which three science-loving kids band together to solve a crime, is attracting attention from readers of all ages.
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Tezuka: Discovering a God of Manga
Few if any creators in the history of the comics medium have wielded the wide-ranging influence of Japan’s Osamu Tezuka, and to prove it Abrams Comicarts recently released a stunning coffee table book comprehensively covering his life and career for the Tezuka aficionado and the curious newcomer alike.
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Comics Briefly
Joe Kubert Collected Work Up for Auction: Live Chat with Eisner Winner Nina Matsumoto ; Harlequin Romance Manga Now On Kindle; Dash Shaw, Josh Neufeld & David Heatly with Chip Kidd's Band; This Week @ Good Comics for Kids; and This Week @ The Beat
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Panel Mania: Sublife Vol. 2
Sublife Vol. 2 is the continued collection of short stories and strips by John Pham. This nine page preview is taken from the short story "Deep Space," which was started in the first volume. Sublife Vol. 2 will be released by Fantagraphics in December.
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Comics Reviews: 11/23/09
Taiyo Matsumoto's follow-up to Tekkonkinkreet, Al Columbia's long awaited Pim and Francie and the latest from Vertigo Crime are reviewed this week, along with a new Kin Kull volume.
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Dynamite: Five Years and Counting
While many have proclaimed the "death of the pamphlet" where periodical comic books are concerned, a few companies have been able to prove that it still has a lot of life left in it. Five-year-old Dynamite Entertainment is one of the success stories in recent years with a mix of licensed and creator-owned titles.
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‘Wimpy Kid’ Becomes Hit Zombie Parody for Papercutz
Papercutz, a tween-focused graphic novel publisher, seems to have caught lightning in a bottle as demand for its zombie parody of Jeff Kinney's bestselling children's book, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, is sending the publisher back for a second and third printing. The title has sold about 30,000 copies since early November. Papercutz publisher Terry Nantier, who published the graphic novel anthology...



