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  • Panel Mania: Popgun Vol. 4

    "Hamburgers for One," by Frank Stockton is a 24-page story taken from the latest volume in Image Comics’s ongoing Popgun series, an anthology of full-color comics. Popgun Vol. 4 also features work by Jock, Jeffrey Brown, Erik Larsen, and the cover is by Ben Templesmith. The anthology will go on sale on February 24.

  • A Shelf of One's Own: Shelving Graphic Novels in Bookstores

    As graphic novels of all kinds make their way into the general bookstore market, issues of shelving and categorization have become more important. And with more literary works like Stitches, Fun Home and Asterios Polyp in the general bookstore marketplace—serious works of nonfiction/memoir and literary fiction—the question of just where a graphic book should be shelved has become a trickier proposition.

  • Out of Body Experience: Dash Shaw’s ‘Body World’

    For those who followed BodyWorld as it appeared on Dash Shaw’s website from 2007 to 2009, it will come as no surprise that the book version, to be released by Pantheon in April, is out of this world. To those who haven’t read Shaw’s work since Bottomless Bellybutton, it just might blow your mind.

  • Disney Mum on Marvel Integration

    New Year’s Eve 2009 saw the House of Ideas become the House of Mouse as Marvel’s stockholders approved the $4.3 billion purchase of Marvel Entertainment by Disney. Under terms of the agreement, Marvel shareholders received a total of $30 a share in cash plus approximately 0.7452 Disney shares for each Marvel share they owned.

  • Actar Acquires Birkhäuser Architecture Titles

    Actar, the publisher of books on architecture, graphic design, and contemporary art with offices in Barcelona and New York, has signed an agreement with Springer Science + Business Media to acquire the sales and distribution of titles from Birkhäuser Verlag in Basel, Switzerland. Birkhäuser will become an imprint of Actar but will remain in Basel.

  • Asterios Polyp Wins Fourth Annual PWCW Critic's Poll

    Once again, a graphic novel exemplifying comics' ability to uniquely treat the themes of literary fiction has topped PW Comics Week's annual critics poll. David Mazzucchelli's long-awaited Asterios Polyp got the most votes, with six.

  • 2009: The year in Manga

    2009 was not a good year. In fact, many people are calling it the worst year ever. But in 2009, manga finished out one of its best years yet. More sophisticated content founds its way to American readers—and by way of the Internet, no less.

  • Abrams Collects Woody Allen Comic Strip

    Woody Allen may be most famous as an actor and director, but he also had an eight-year run as the star of his own syndicated newspaper comic strip, Inside Woody Allen, that ran from 1976 to 1984.

  • Children's Comics Reviews: 1/4/2010

    Hope Larson's Mercury, Jake Parker's new Missile Mouse and a new offering from Toon Books highlight this month's graphic novels for younger readers.

  • Short Order: January 4

    When the New York Times asked novelists Chang-rae Lee and Jane Smiley which books they'd weed out of their collections, both writers mentioned cookbooks. That makes more Alice Waters (who just signed another deal with Clarkson Potter) for us. Also: a food writing panel in NYC, more "best of '09" cookbook lists, and an Escoffier-themed novel.

  • 2010's Most Exciting Food Books

    There’s a lot to look forward to in 2010. I’ll be watching Chronicle to see what food and drink titles it decides to publish with compatible mobile applications and enhanced e-books; and can’t wait to see the results of crowd-sourced cookbook projects. As for specific titles, here’s what I’m anticipating.

  • Cooking the Books with Rozanne Gold

    When James Beard Award-winning cookbook author Rozanne Gold heard that Condé Nast was selling Gourmet’s collection of 3,500 cookbooks and that NYU’s Fales Library wanted to buy them, she couldn’t stop herself from getting involved—and giving the library $14,000 to acquire the archive.

  • Eat Your Books Indexes Cookbooks

    As cookbooks come up against increasing competition from online recipe repositories, sites have sprung up attempting to reinvigorate the medium. There’s Cookstr, Cookbooker, and now, Eat Your Books, which makes cookbooks you already own more useful to you.

  • Short Order: December 21

    In our final round-up of cookbook news for 2009, Fleisher's (the butcher shop where Julie Powell trained) signs with Clarkson Potter; YouTube sensation Clara Cannucciari celebrates the release of her book at Carmine's in NYC; cooking site Food52 launches a shop selling cookbooks; NYU's Fales Library buys Gourmet's cookbook collection; John Besh signs cookbooks in New Orleans; and Real Housewives of New Jersey star Teresa Giudice lands a cookbook deal.

  • Gotham/Avery/Dutton Holds 8th Annual Bake-Off

    Out-for-blood corporate softball teams may have given the idea of inter-company competitions a bad name, but a skinned knee has nothing on 10 stitches in your finger after testing recipes for the company bake-off. That’s right: Dutton assistant editor Jessica Horvath was trying out desserts for the 8th Annual Gotham/Avery/Dutton Bake-Off when she sliced her hand on the blade of an immersion blender, wound up in the emergency room and walked out with 10 stitches.

  • Cooking the Books with Clotilde Dusoulier

    Clotilde Dusoulier talks about her translation and adaption of the French classic I Know How to Cook, first published in 1932, with more than six million copies in print in France. As holiday shoppers snap up the just-out DVD of Julie & Julia, Dusoulier discusses I Know How to Cook versus Mastering the Art of French Cooking.

  • Cookbooker, A 'LibraryThing' for Cookbooks, Launches

    As anyone who frequents recipe sites like AllRecipes, Epicurious or FoodNetwork.com knows, user reviews are some of the most valuable content on the sites. They’ll tell you if a recipe is a flop, a star, or better with more garlic. And while Amazon can tell you the new Thomas Keller cookbook is beautiful, how's the book's recipe for Brined Pork Tenderloin? Enter Cookbooker, a sort of social networking site for cookbook users.

  • Comics Reviews: 12/21/2009

    Starred reveiws of books from Justin Green, Gahan Wilson and Larry Marder plus a new manga by
    Jun Mochizuk and a new Hellblazer original graphic novel.


  • 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.

  • 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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