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  • Kanye West, Bill Plympton Create Book of Illustrated Lyrics

    Superstar singer, rapper and producer Kanye West has reunited with animator/cartoonist Bill Plympton to create Through the Wire: The Words and Lyrics of Kanye West, a hardcover book collection of West’s hit lyrics, illustrated by Plympton, that will be released in November by Atria Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster.

  • Comics Briefly

    Wimpy Kid: Dog Days Tops Bestseller Lists; Logicomix Creator Christos Appears in New York; 2010 MoCCA Festival Open for Business; Spiegelman and Mouly's Toon Treasury on NPR; Domo Creator Comes to USA; This Week @ The Beat; and This Week @ Good Comics For Kids

  • Comics Reviews: 10/26/2009

  • Panel Mania: Graylight

    Graylight is by Naomi Nowak, the creator of Unholy Kinship and House of Clay. In this preview, a young woman divulges to her friends a surreal occurance from her childhood. Graylight is due out from NBM in December.

  • Com.x is Back with a Bang

    Com.x, an independent comic publisher operating out of London, England and Venice, California, launched in England in 2002 with the beautifully designed and drawn comics Cla$$War and Razorjack. But then a long operational hiatus set in. Now armed with new investors and new projects, they’ve had an extremely busy 2009.

  • A Talk with Guy Delisle: Looking for the Details

    Cartoonist and animator Guy Delisle has lived and worked in both Shenzhen, China and Pyongyang, North Korea. He recorded his experiences living in these cities (and in their respective national cultures) in two well-received book-length comics works, Shenzhen (Drawn &Quarterly 2006) and Pyongyang (D&Q 2005), utilizing his unique dry humor, conversational tone, and focus on the everyday to capture the contradictions of the place and the experience of a foreigner encountering them for the first time.

  • Orca Book Publishers' Graphic Adventure Line

    Much like other publishers focused on the kids' and teen educational market, Canadian house Orca Book Publishing added a line of graphic novels to its list in hopes attracting teen readers as well as their teachers and librarians. In 2007 Orca launched the Graphic Guide Adventure Series, a line of fictional adventure graphic novels aimed at middle graders, focusing on the environment, skateboarding, soccer and, now, media literacy.

  • Comics Briefly

    Marvel Fest and Motion Comic Live; Archie Exhibit Opening at MoCCA; Marvel Comic Unveils New Digital Comics Reader 3.0; Digital Comics Subscription Service Comes To India; Stephen King Plans New Marvel Dark Tower Comic; Seth Video Interview; Launch Party for Best American Comics 2009; This Week @ The Beat; and This Week @ Good Comics For Kids

  • Panel Mania: Like A Dog

    Like a Dog by Zak Sally collects the first two issues of his series Recidivist, along with other of if his stories from the last 15 years. In this preview there are excerpts from three stories: "Two Idiot Brothers," "At the Scaffold," and "The Man Who Killed Wally Wood." Like a Dog will be released by Fantagraphics in the last week of October.

  • Comics Reviews: 10/19/2009

  • Upbeat Diamond Summit Draws New Retailers

    Although it's been a tumultuous month in the comics industry, retailers and publishers got down to business at the Diamond Retailer Summit, held October 11—12 in Baltimore. Organized and run by Diamond Distribution, the exclusive distributor for the top four comics and graphic novel publishers, the yearly meeting drew nearly 600 retailers from around North America.

  • Retailers and Fans Converge on Baltimore

    Despite intense industry speculation of changes at Marvel and DC after recent ownership and management shake-ups, the doubleheader of the Baltimore Comic-con and the Diamond Retailer Summit managed to stick to an agenda of celebrating comics and finding ways to sell more of them

  • Comics Scholarship—Mississippi Style

    If the last century saw the state of Mississippi as the cradle of the blues, this century may see the region’s University Press of Mississippi set the course for modern comics scholarship.

  • October Comics Bestsellers

    Jeff Kinney’s Wimpy Kid: Last Straw is king; Robert Kirkman’s Walking Dead: What We Become just won’t die; and Bill Willingham follows with Fables: The Dark Ages. Bleach vol 28 and Naruto vol. 45 are next while Patricia Briggs's Mercy Thompson: Homecoming, Kazu Kibuishi’s Amulet Book 2 and Brian Azzarello’s Filthy Rich round out the list.

  • Comics Briefly

    MoCCA Art Fest Moved to Spring; New Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Fest ; Boom Studios Signs With Haven; Viz Accepting Submissions; Powers Returns with New Series; Marvel.Com Exclusive Animation Extras; Archie Comics Creator at Big Apple Comic Con; Bendis Interview on Fresh Ink; Media Meltdown Free Digital Comic from Orca; This Week @ The Beat; and This Week @ Good Comics For Kids

  • Panel Mania: Luke Cage Noir

    Luke Cage Noir, set in Prohibition-era Harlem, follows Luke Cage as he attempts to put his life back together after 10 years in Riker's Island, even while he is hindered by powerful forces. The pages in this excerpt are from Luke Cage Noir Issue #3, written by Mike Benson and Adam Glass, with art by Shawn Martinbrough; the cover is by Tim Bradstreet. The hardcover graphic novel is due out from Marvel in March 2010, and the fourth issue will be released on November 11.

  • Kodansha Sets Up Shop To Publish Manga in U.S.

    Kodansha, the largest publisher in Japan and an important licensor of manga to U.S. publishers, is setting up an office in New York City and plans to begin publishing and selling manga direct to the U.S. market beginning in October.

  • Golden Apple Comics Turns 30

    There have been substantial changes at Golden Apple Comics, the legendary Hollywood comics store. Under the direction of Ryan Liebowitz, son of the store’s well-known founder, the flagship store has been moved and the 25-year old satellite store in Northridge has been sold.

  • Politics, Art and Activism in Oaxaca

    Peter Kuper left the United States in 2006 for Oazaca, Mexico in search of peace and quiet. Instead, the award-winning cartoonist found a strike, a government crackdown and a political storm. His two-year residence produced Diario de Oaxaca, A Sketchbook of Two Years in Mexico.

  • Comics Briefly -- 10/6/09

    Diamond to Distribute Tokyopop in U.K.: Harvey Awards Tickets On Sale; ALA Great Graphic Novels for Teens List Nominations; Viper Talent Contest Winner; Wizard Exec Starts GeekChicDaily Site; The Yes Men and Migdal Comic Book Release Party; This Week @ The Beat; and This Week @ Good Comics For Kids

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