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  • The Stand Graphic Novel Finally Comes to Bookstores

    Marvel Comics and Random House’s Doubleday Broadway Publishing Group have reached an agreement to allow The Stand: Captain Trips, the hardcover graphic novel adaptation of Stephen King’s The Stand, to be distributed in the general bookstore market beginning in January 2010.

  • Asterios Polyp: A Tour De Force of Imagination and Drawing

    One of the most talented comics artists of this generation, David Mazzucchelli first came to prominence as a superhero artist before moving on to make his reputation as a cartoonist of rare literary nuance and significance. This month Pantheon is publishing Asterios Polyp, Mazzucchelli’s first original graphic novel and a book about which not much has been revealed over the ten years or so that he’s been working on it.

  • The First Asian American Comicon Is a Cool Success

    The first Asian American Comicon opened its doors at the newly built Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA) in downtown New York City to a long line of attendees. The space, designed by Maya Lin, architect of the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington D.C., quickly filled up well beyond its capacity. More than 500 people visited the museum for the show. Many came specifically to meet guest of honor Larry Hama, who has penned Marvel's G.I. Joe series for the past 20 years.

  • Funnies Business: Quantifying Library Penetration for Graphic Novels

    Did you ever wonder how many copies a graphic novel could sell in the library system? Figuring out what a graphic novel could do is a bit of a puzzle. Libraries are an up and coming market for graphic novels (or “graphic fiction” or reprint collections; go ahead and pick your terms of choice).

  • Comics Briefly

    Mazzucchelli, Nadel Public Conversation; Viz Adds Shonen Manga Line; San Diego Comic-Con Events; IDW Debuts Yoe! Books Imprint; Jeff Smith at C2E2 and ALA; S&S To Distribute Boom! Studios; Rusty Haller Benefit Auction; John Ostrander Fundraiser; Vietnam Journal Returns to Print; Nana Anime on iTunes; and This Week @ Good Comics for Kids

  • S&S Takes Over BOOM! Studios Distribution

    Graphic novel publisher BOOM! Studios has a new distributor. Starting today, Simon & Schuster will handle sales, distribution and fulfillment for all new and backlist titles to trade and specialty accounts in the U.S. BOOM! was previously distributed by Perseus.

  • Panel Mania: Soul Eater

    Set in a school for Shinigami, Soul Eater by Atsushi Ohkubo follows Maka, a scythemeister in training who must perfect her living weapon and partner, Soul Eater, by consuming 99 human souls and one witch soul. Soul Eater Vol. 1 will be released by Yen Press in October 2009.

  • Another Juicy Murder Story from Rick Geary

    Looking to build on his success in researching the details of sensational period-era murders, NBM will release Famous Players: The Mysterious Death of William Desmond Taylor, Rick Geary’s latest investigation into a historical murder mystery, in September. The eighty-page hardcover volume will have an initial print run of 10,000 and is Geary’s second contribution to the Treasury of XXth Century Murder.

  • The Man Behind Wednesday Comics

    Mark Chiarello, the DC Comics editor behind the art series Solo, is launching one of the most ambitious and unconventional forays into superhero comics with Wednesday Comics, which debuts this week. The 12-issue weekly series features one-page stories by some of the top creators in comics on 20-by-14-inch newsprint pages.

  • Naval Academy Hopes Comic Will Attract Minorities

    The Naval Academy has published a free comic book aimed at attracting minority kids to the service academy. Entitled, Bravo Zulu, the Navy’s codeword for “good job,” the comic follows the lives of five unnamed ‘plebes,’ or Academy freshmen, as they deal with life at the Naval Academy.

  • Asian American Comicon Debuts in New York

    The first annual Asian American Comicon will be held on Saturday July 11 at the Museum of Chinese in America in New York City. Organized by Jeff Yang, editor of the New Press’s anthology of Asian-American superhero stories, Secret Identities, the AACC is intended to “recognize and celebrate what Asians are doing in comics. ”

  • Comics Briefly

    One Piece Accelerated; Anime Expo 2009 Coverage; Iranian Protests Marked in Persepolis 2.0; Robot Chicken Tour; Female Force Graphic Novel; Straczynski’s Thor Gets Giant Sendoff; Yui Makino is GOH at NYAF; Frazetta Rights Letter Retracted; and This Week @ Good Comics for Kids

  • July Comics Bestsellers

    Jeff Kinney’s runaway bestseller Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Last Straw remains top dog of the list, followed by Alan Moore’s League of Extraordinary Gentlemen; Joss Whedon’s Buffy: Time of Your Life; Akihisa Ikeda’s Rosario + Vampire and lots of Naruto.

  • Life in Comics: Tips for Aspiring Comics Pros at Comic-Con

    Comic-Con International in San Diego is less than a month away, and I as I mentioned in my last column, publishers are busy preparing for the big show. But comic book creators seeking to break into the industry should be preparing as well. If you're planning on going to Comic-Con to meet publishers, I have a single piece of advice for you: Do your research first.

  • Panel Mania: The Summit of the Gods

    The Summit of the Gods by Yumemakura and Jiro Taniguchi, author of The Walking Man, is the story of a Japanese expedition photographer, Makoto Fukamachi. This is the first volume in a series of five volumes about conquering Mount Everest. The Summit of the Gods Vol. 1 will be released in July 2009 by Fanfare/ Ponent Mon.

  • Comic-Con '09: Sold Out in San Diego

    The San Diego Comic-Con International is full up. With every inch of the San Diego Convention Center booked for the show years ago, and every ticket gone and hotels sold out months in advance this year, the annual comics-themed pop culture extravaganza has gotten as big as it can physically get.

  • Vertical Inc. Is Still Here

    Although Vertical Inc., a New York City publisher specializing in translations of contemporary Japanese prose literature and manga, has struggled during the economic downturn, the house has secured a new investor, hired a new marketing manager and plans to make adjustments to its list beginning in 2010.

  • Diamond’s New Minimums Shape a Tough Comics Market

    Earlier this year, Diamond Comics Distributors, the dominant distributor to the roughly 3,000 store comics shop market, raised its minimum sales order and if a comic doesn’t reach the new advance minimum sales order, Diamond will not distribute it. The change sparked an immediate outcry from small comics presses, self-publishers and some retailers, who complained that the new minimum forces them out of the marketplace.

  • New ICv2 Confab on Comics and Media Crossovers

    Milton Griepp, longtime comics and pop culture business analyst and CEO of ICv2, a pop culture trade news website, decided to take a closer look at the powerful connections between comics, the Hollywood film industry, TV and the videogame industry and has organized the Comics and Media Conference to be held on July 22, just before preview night at the San Diego Comic-con International. The new conference will focus on the lucrative business of turning comics into other kinds of media.

  • Scars and Stripes Forever: Peter Bagge’s Everybody Is Stupid Except For Me.

    This July, Fantagraphics Books once more unleashes the works of best-selling Hate comics creator Peter Bagge in Everybody Is Stupid Except For Me (And Other Astute Observations), a decade’s worth of cartoon reporting for Reason magazine. Armed with a Libertarian-leaning viewpoint and his signature bemused approach to his exploration of human foibles, Bagge skewers the early-twenty-first century American zeitgeist.

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