Showing posts with label thickness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label thickness. Show all posts

Monday, January 28, 2013

diary of a guttersnipe 01/28/2013: books published in 2012 that i enjoyed, part one

by Shawn Starr

I float between hating and respecting the idea of "best of" lists.

They can, on the individual level, evoke a certain connection to the writer, their reading tendencies, their taste, but then again they can become lengthy posts on the same comics that everyone else has (masturbatory PR material and stuff of that ilk).

And then there's mass survey lists which seem to only succeed at ruining the point of these lists in the first place and only exist to give publishers nifty quotes for their next issue or collected edition (Named as one of CBR’s Top 100 Comics of 2012, etc.).

Anyways, here are some comics that i would define as my favorites of 2012, in no particular order, which i hope will imbue you with some sense of what i find important in comics, and if not, then just ignore me, I'll fuck off eventually.

the list
Thickness #3 (Self-published)
by Lamar Abrams, Jimmy Beaulieu, Edie Fake, Julia Gfrorer, William Cardini, Sean T. Collins, Gengoroh Tagame, Andy Burkholder, HamletMachine
edited by Ryan Sands, Michael DeForge

The final issue of 'Thickness' may not be the greatest in the series (that honor is left for 'Thickness' #2), but in its final iteration the series strips away any semblance of pretense and delivers one of the most beautiful, funny, and disturbing anthologies in many years. In 'Thickness', Ryan Sands and Michael DeForge produced their first definitive work, in what i hope (and expect) to be a continuing series of definitive works by this partnership.

It's the new alt-comics heavy-weights drawing smut.

Step aside America's Best Comics, you anthology of obviousness! I gots me some full penetration to view.

An expanded upon excerpt from my original review of 'Thickness' #3:
"I remember going to see "Hostel" as a sophomore in high school and being scared to death, the TV spots advertised it as one of the goriest films ever made, and then all i remember is just sitting there and feeling nothing besides disgust at how terrible of a movie i was watching. Gengoroh Tagame's 'Standing Ovations' though, a little less than a decade later, is what my fourteen year old self thought he was going to see. And it scared me to death.

Tagame produces a work here that i don't think the word torture porn can even be applied to, because, while it’s exactly what that phrase purports to capture, it’s so beyond everything else in the genre (besides maybe "A Serbian Film" ?), that it does not feel like it applies anymore. It transcended the genre.

'Standing Ovations' is one of the few things that has ever lingered with me months after putting them away, it won’t be forgotten. It’s a Bret Easton Ellis torture scene from 'American Psycho' that just keeps on going and makes you question whether the author is a little to into it. Tagame outfits his story with more BDSM, more fetishism, and...more...torture and...god help me more lingering. It’s fucked up.

And the very real thing about this comics is that there's no point, there is no grand political statement, there is just torture, and depravity, and that's what makes it even more scary. This could just happen, without cause, because that's how life works. You're an out of your prime fighter who's more valuable to someone getting nails driven through your dick and having your urine soaked underwear jammed down your throat so a million people online can pay to cum, than as a simple living human.

I'm genuinely afraid to read his book from PictureBox later this year, but i have to read it. The feeling lingers. Like in all good horror. It needs to be experienced. Again."

Lincoln Washington Free Man #1 (Traditional)
by Benjamin Marra

2012 was a big year for Ben Marra, his adaptation of 'American Psycho' via Raymond Pettibon splash pages finally saw print as an over sized newspaper, which perfectly reflected Patrick Bateman's crumbling reality and fragile ego. 'Ripper and Jack' was a burn the world to the ground satire of Crumb's 'Fritz the Cat', a revision of the film star as a Saturday morning cartoon, and then there was 'Lincoln Washington Free Man'.

Lincoln Washington subverts Kirby's six panel grid of pure action to tell the story of a freed slave who simply wants to have his forty acres and a mule,and live his life. The problem he finds out (as in all classic Westerns) is that the world won’t let him, as a band of Reconstruction Era Southerners attempt to put him back in the shackles he’d broken away from years earlier.

It's a violent and race centered story that has garnered Marra his first major exposure via a lengthy Comics Journal interview, but also produced the first backlash against his work. He ain't Spike Lee so i guess he isn't allowed to make "Do The Right Thing".

An excerpt from a discussion i participated in on this book, this entry pertains to the books inking style:
"He certainly has a lot more spot blacks in Lincoln Washington, a contrast from his last work ('Gangsta Rap Posse' #2) which was all line work. I’m not sure if it’s a reversion, though. His early inking style is quite heavy handed, while Lincoln Washington’s inking seems like more of a continuation from 'Gangsta Rap Posse' than a reversion. His inking here is more restrained than his previous works, and utilized with greater purpose, something that I would not generally identify with Marra. By doing away with all the excess inking, Marra seems to have figured out when and where it’s absolutely necessary to the story and leave it out in any other instance.

In 'Gangsta Rap Posse' #2, Marra choose not to distinguish the black cast from the white with any additional shading or color, that probably stems from  trying to keep the colors (black & white) in balance on the page, along with streamlining the process. It works on that project, and there’s a definite improvement in the art between issues #1 and #2, but here it needed the blacks to distinguish the character from his surroundings.

Lincoln Washington is the only black character in the book (except for his wife, who appears for a total of three pages), and he’s entering an “alien” and hostile place (Post-Civil War South), so his color has to be at the forefront, requiring a heavy shading/color process to separate him from the white residence. What could be ignored in 'Gangsta Rap Posse' really can’t in 'Lincoln Washington Free Man'. Race is a far more prominent detail.

If you look at the first page of Lincoln Washington, the only two objects that are completely black are Lincoln Washington and the title “O’ Sins of Men, What Demon Fathered You” which both distinguishes Lincoln from his surroundings and connects him with the title explicitly, the title both works as a comment on the sins of racism (America’s original sin) and Lincoln Washington, who is a man empowered by the souls of slaves to avenge the wrong doings perpetrated by white slaveholders. The colors are used as a way of separating and defining Lincoln as a character."

Lose #4 (Koyama Press)
by Michael DeForge

(along with every other DeForge comic that came out this year, but mostly 'Lose' #4.)

What's really left to say about DeForge, every comic he puts out is a breath of fresh air in a market of conservatism and stagnation. DeForge drops an issue of 'Eightball' level quality every month it seems, he maintains a level of quality that is daunting. It's almost unfair to everyone else. DeForge will be spoken of in a few years in a reverence that's only reserved for the legends. He's that good. And he's only getting better!

Anyways, 'Lose' #4 was a masterpiece, just like 'Lose' #3 and 'Lose' #2 (I haven't read 'Lose' #1 so i can't comment, although if anyone has an issue of it, i have a wallet the desperately needs to lose some weight). Its the fashion issue, and while the first story on bondage didn't leave me blown away, DeForge's fake documentary (Ala 'Spotting Deer') on the Canadian Family was one of the most engrossing things i'd ever read.

This year also featured a new issue of 'Kid Mafia', which although difficult to track down (i don't know of anyone who has copies of it besides DeForge himself) is well worth the effort. 'Kid Mafia' is an amazing take on teenage wish fulfillment, a what if scenario with you and your friends cast in the role of Tony Soprano, only that your main source of travel is still a skateboard and you don't really know how to talk to girls yet. Additionally, DeForge dropped 'First Year Healthy', which is just...wow. That guy's got talent.

2013 Looks to be an even bigger year for DeForge with an omnibus of sorts collecting his mini-comics, another issue of 'Lose', and a Drawn and Quarterly collection of his serialized webcomic 'Ant Comic'.


Negron (Picturebox)
by Jonny Negron

'Negron' is not the first book to reprint material readily available on the internet, those have floated around for the past ten years in various formats and collections, but what is different about 'Negron' is that it's the first book to successfully reprint the experience of reading the internet, 'Tumblr Comics' if you will. Where every other collection of the 'net' goes wrong is their need to contextualize the material within the confines of print, that's how you get a Kate Beaton collection that looks like every archival strip collection ever put out, and not a book reflecting her immediate interests, and the role of community surrounding the work itself.

'Negron' on the other hand moves past these dated approaches and attempts to recreate that Tumblr approach by showing it's artists obsessions in a continuous line. It may be edited, but its edited and curated to express Jonny Negron's singular impulses at each moment. For example, there is 5 pages of illustrations of woman eating phallic food, because that's what Johnny Negron was into at that moment in time. Narrative is overrated anyway, obsession is where it's at.

The End Of The Fucking World (Oily)
by Charles Forsman

It's difficult to read this book's title and not read it as a critique of the comic publishing landscape at the moment, at least from a small press stance. Small Press Publishing has been on the wain ever since 'Love and Rockets' jumped to the yearly book format (probably even earlier) and everyone else just abandoned ship. That all seemed to turn around in 2012 though where the scene reinvigorated the idea of serialized monthly alt-comics, and 'TEOTFW' lead the way in both its regularity (every month, eight pages, no matter what), a price point that could not be matched, and in quality. Oily and Retrofit and whoever else is out there prove that the world is not actually fucking ending, it just needed to find a new approach.

OK, enough context and bullshit. 'TEOTFW' did not make my list because of that, it’s just icing on the cake of greatness.

'TEOTFW' is the story of two teenage lovers running away from home, and while that is not the most original idea (nor is having them be murderers), what separates 'TEOTFW' from a dozen other instances of this story is the care Forsman takes in crafting the story such as the way each issue reads with the near perfect pacing, the trading off of narrator between James and Alyssa, how their individual perceptions shade the books events, James' cold calculated voice-over making the threat of violence at any moment, all the more real, while Alyssa’s voice always has a sliver of hope and love underlining her every word (she may not be innocent, but she didn't choose to love a sociopath, she just does). With eight pages there's little room to spare, and while Forsman's line-work is sparse, it's not unlike Jaime Hernandez or Charles Schultz' work in how it's whittled down to the essentials. Forsman understands that you can convey just as much, if not more emotional weight and information in one single line than a billion little ones.

(Also that scene where James and Alyssa dance, that scene is perfection)

come back next week for PART TWO...

Monday, December 10, 2012

diary of a guttersnipe 12/10/2012: this is cul-de-sac + plenty cognac + major pain


by Shawn Starr

This week instead of the usual jibber-jabber and repetitive pictorials of renowned actor Nicolas Cage, i talk with one half of the creative force behind my favorite anthology 'Thickness'.

An interview with Ryan Sands, Co-Publisher of 'Thickness'

Shawn Starr: I think the first, and most obvious question, is how did you go from 'Electric Ant' and 'Same Hat' to publishing the decades preeminent porn anthologies?

Ryan Sands: With the first two issues of 'Electric Ant', I had an excuse to get to meet and publish comics by a lot of my favorite cartoonists. One was Michael DeForge, and we quickly became friends over email and then later hanging in person at Toronto Comics & Art Festival. In early 2010 the video for "Telephone" by Lady Gaga debuted, and the two of us were tossing messages back and forth about the visuals and how rad it would be to make a 90's riot grrl-esque fanzine about Gaga. It went from a throw-away idea to a full-fledged book in about 7 weeks, and we debuted 'Prison For Bitches' at TCAF that May. Collaborating with Michael is a blast and his design impulses are always spot-on; We would always email about random YouTube hip-hop or weird manga, and over the course of that year he became one of my closest buddies.

We knew we wanted to collaborate on another project after the Gaga zine, and had been talking a lot about Porn/Erotic/Romance comics as a genre that wasn't being explored at all, while genres like cyberpunk or Swords & Sorcery were being explored and pastiched by indie cartoonists. Michael and I both felt like it would be fun to get some of our favorite cartoonists to do slightly longer "short comics" and see what happened when those works were linked together thematically around "eroticism". We went into the series with a pretty clear idea of what sort of issues we wanted to create, and we couldn't be happier with the comics our awesome contributors came up with for 'Thickness'.

'Thickness' seems like it was designed specifically for the risograph, what is it about the risograph that attracts you?

Yes definitely, self-publishing and self-printing the book on risograph was our plan from the start. We both were really impressed by the feel of comics that Mickey Zacchilli and Saicoink were printing on risograph in 2009 and 2010, and I love how cheaply it can create beautiful but messy, multi-color books. I had seen similar printing when I was a high school exchange student in Japan, and the inky tactile experience of reading a risograph-printed book dovetails nicely with the semi-seedy nature of "erotic comics". In the run-up to publishing the first issue, I was able to put together a rudimentary risograph print shop here in San Francisco, and have been printing books for friends like Hannah K. Lee and David Murray.

The cost-effectiveness of the printing has led to a bit of a boom in risograph within the indie comics scene lately, and there's even a risograph mailing list where printers and cartoonists using them share ideas and tips.

The production of 'Thickness' became more and more elaborate with each issue; the page count grows, you added fold out posters, issue three sports both a dust jacket and companion mini comic. Did you feel the need to outdo yourself with each issue?

The funny thing is that we actually had some even-sillier ideas for issues 2 and 3 that we backed away from. I had wanted to do a lenticular-animated cover and even temporary tattoos at one point, but Michael correctly talked me out of them. That said, I think the issues grew with complexity as our ambition for the books grew. The original plan was to have a pin-up in Issue #1 as well, but was cut because we couldn't get the artists we wanted in time.We didn't plan out each issue being bigger than the last, but we were very specific about how the contributors to each book played off each other tonally. Michael and I knew the third issue would be our last, so it definitely was packed to the gills with everyone we could manage to fit in.

You have a lot of artists I wouldn't associate with pornography, Angie Wang's piece is stunning for example, but I would never have expected that based on her previous work. Was it difficult to get everyone to embrace the genre and were you surprised by any one contribution?

We went after each artist in the book specifically, but we actually didn't have much trouble "convincing" folks to be a part of the book. I guess that means they all secretly wanted to draw erotic comics, or perhaps felt they could, *ahem* "rise to the challenge"? I personally was extremely impressed with all the work we were lucky enough to publish, and still feel that some of the stories (like Michael's "College Girl by Night" or Jonny Negron's "Grandaddy Purple, Erotic Gameshow" or Mickey Zacchilli's "Slime Worm") are some of the most vibrant and interesting short comics by those creators so far.

Aside from labeling them "pornography" or whatever, I thought it was really interesting to see what folks created when given an outlet to create a short story with some weight to it (rather than simply a page or two like many anthologies usually ask for). It feels like 10-20 pages is a good length for an experiment in style, or deviation of sorts. Everyone that we invited to 'Thickness' is one of our favorite contemporary cartoonists, and each brought a really interesting perspective to the loose theme.

The final issue of 'Thickness' had a decidedly harsher tone than the previous two, was that a conscious decision?

That's interesting to hear you say. I agree the book is a bit more direct... or perhaps the most unapologetic? But it also has some of the funniest panels in the entire series, in Lamar Abrams' "30XX". The series in its entirety hopefully is able to push nearly every reader's buttons in some way, and we definitely had strong ideas for what was missing from the first two issues. The lineup in the third issue reflects the creators Michael and I were most interested in hearing from, though we didn't dictate content or themes to any contributor. I love the third issue on its own, and I also think it works well as a final installment in the series as a whole.

The use of color in 'Thickness' is interesting, the Horror/Fetish stories tend to have these really dark tones while the Humor/Real Life use a bright almost neon palette. You also link several thematically similar stories through color, the Johnny Negron and Gengoroh Tagame entries for example are both a deep purple. How much did you work with each contributor to get the colors that way?

We worked with each contributor to decide which colors would work best for their comic, and talked over a few long email threads with the group as a whole to ensure there weren't any unintended overlaps. Some of the colors were last minute decisions or went through some trial and error; we'd initially test-printed Michael's comic in issue two in blue and purple inks, and while it looked pretty nice, I felt like that comic specifically flew in uncharted territory thematically and bullied him into using the gold ink for the first time in the series (laughter). Other cartoonists like Brandon Graham had very clear ideas about which colors they wanted (red and black, in his case, to connect his story to the original 'Dirty Pair' comics), so we incorporated that into the issue.

Without sounding too lame, I think having limitations force you to make these weird and instinctual choices, and the truth is that I only had 8 or 9 different colors available for printing with my risograph. It took forever to print the way we did, but the shifting colors throughout the book hopefully have a weird and fucked-up effect on the reading experience that works for people.

It's difficult to imagine anyone putting down 'Thickness' #3 and not have Gengoroh Tagame's contribution stick with them for a couple days. He's both the most commercial and non-commercial artist featured in the book. What led you to including him, and that story in particular, in 'Thickness' ?

Oh snap, I'm glad you are still haunted by his S&M tale (laughter). Gengoroh Tagame was a creator we dreamed of being able to include from early on in our planning, but never thought we'd be able to get him. Through the good graces of my friend Anne Ishii, we were able to talk and work directly with Tagame and he was more than happy to have his work seen by English-readers. It was an exciting experiment for us to actually license and translate a manga directly from the creator, and Tagame gave us a few stories to choose from for reprinting in 'Thickness'. That story is definitely very intense and steps into some difficult territory, and we felt it brought something challenging and new to the series. It definitely ends that final issue on a pretty singular and pointed note, and that felt really right for 'Thickness'.

Whats the next project you're working on? I remember hearing something about a collected 'Thickness' on your Inkstuds interview, any word on that?

We are very interested in a collected 'Thickness' book, and Michael and I are considering options for making that happen in the future. All of the contributors are excited about our initial plans, and we may have some sequel/additional comics to wrap up into a cool compendium for readers. We don't have any more details than that yet, but we do plan to present the works in a new way.

I'm working on a few new zines for early next spring, including a zine about my day hanging out with Kazuo Umezu, a zine about my grandparents, and another issue of 'Electric Ant'. I'm also hoping to continue printing and/or publishing more small books by artists on my risograph in the coming year. I'm extremely excited about the current trajectory of indie comics and zines for 2013.

Michael is pretty much (in my opinion) the most exciting cartoonist working today, and he's currently in the midst of more issues of his 'Kid Mafia', as well as 'Lose' #5 and his web series 'Ant Comic'.

Monday, November 19, 2012

diary of a guttersnipe 11/19/2012: when columns collide


by Shawn Starr

"Goin' up the scale and I will prevail
Sharper than the point on the tip of a nail..."

Mini-Reviews

Fantastic Four #1 (Marvel)
by Matt Fraction, Mark Bagley, Mark Farmer, Paul Mounts

Wasn't there a new 'Fantastic Four' like a year ago? Are we reaching a 'Fantastic Four' singularity? Will every 'Fantastic Four' issue soon be a #1? Will the artists keep deteriorating ? How much lower can we get than Bagley? Who? Will the next 'Fantastic Four' #1 be drawn by? a blind autistic elephant with a mangled trunk? THE MAYANS PREDICTED THIS! W E ' R E A L L G O I N G T O E V A P O R A T E I N TTTTT OOO S P A Cccccc E A N DDDDD T III M EEEEEEEE ! ! !

Anyways, this comic is terrible.

Thor: God of Thunder (Marvel)
by Jason Aaron, Esad Ribic, Dean White

Disappointment.

Copra #1 (Self-published)
by Michel Fiffe

Besides being a great toss up to the 'Suicide Squad' with psychedelic overtures not seen since Grant Morrison's 'Doom Patrol' and Peter Milligan's  'Shade, The Changing Man', 'Copra' also features production values that outshine everything else in comics, from the art comics with a print run of four to deluxe edition reprints from major publishers, you'll find nothing that matches the sheer quality as a reading object as 'Copra'. Pick up a $4 Marvel comic and then 'Copra' and try and figure out where the extra money went, the answer will inevitably be Ike Perlmutter's pocket.

Pope Hats #3 (Adhouse)
by Ethan Rilly

It's nice to read a book that you know in three years, when its out as a nice collected edition, will be the de-facto "book that everyone will recommend to their non-comic reading friends" and unlike 'Blankets', it will actually be good.

Cody (Self-published)
by Michael DeForge

'Cody' reads like a DeForge diss track only instead of going after one creator he sets his sights on every person in the medium and shouts out "I made this shit up panel to panel. GET AT ME???" and when you put 'Cody' down, and DeForge drops the artistic mic, you know no one can, because if this is DeForge fucking around then what happens when he's not?*

*The answer is 'Lose' #4 (BLAT! BLAT! MOTHERFUCKER!)


and because I couldn't even be bothered to do this half-assed column by myself, here's a guest review from Mr. Rick Vance ...

Multiple Warheads: Alphabet To Infinity #1 (Image)
by Brandon Graham

This comic feels like 'The Airtight Garage', and I know that isn't enough to talk about but it should be.  It is science fiction of the best kind, not about explanation but about natural cohesion of environment. This is a world that feels like it was both planned and created on the fly at the same time. All of what I have said is what I was expecting, however what I wasn't expecting was the second story that intertwined with the travelogue of the main characters. The bounty hunter swashbuckling story felt right out of Miyazaki's "NausicaƤ of the Valley of the Wind", it had weight but felt airy and kinetic, and full of incredible motion.

There was a single panel in 'King City' of Joe using his Cat almost like a sword which almost previewed what a Brandon Graham fight scene would be like but the full color realization of that promise was amazing. The fact that half of the book is a comedic travelogue and half of it is sword fight it almost shouldn't work, but the secret glue of all of Graham's comics is the puns, they are everywhere so the world feels interconnected even when it otherwise shouldn't. On top of everything else said this thing is 48 pages for 3.99 and transitioning from this to other weekly comics you immediately feel the difference of the page count and the ability he has to lay out his world and design every aspect of this comic to where he wants it.

When I finished reading the comic I had this image in my head
...and that is one of the highest compliments I can give any comic.
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"As soon as you're done making sex? "
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A continuing series of reviews/essays/thoughts on the anthology 'Thickness'


Thickness #2 (Self-published)
by Angie Wang, Michael DeForge, Brandon Graham, Mickey Zachilli, Lisa Hanawalt, True Chubbo, Jillian Tamaki
edited by Ryan Sands, Michael DeForge

Every entry in 'Thickness' #2 would in a lesser anthology be an issue defining story, but here it's difficult to think of anything being a stand out when you look at the contributors involved. That said, still Michael DeForge's 'College Girl By Night' does just that, because even in a master's class someone has to set the curve.

In 'College Girl By Night', DeForge takes the principles of EC Comics (or the lingering perception of what they were) and reinvents them for the modern day, stories of space epics or monster tales give way to DeForge's brilliant take on werewolves as a source of discussing gender identity. The transformation into a werewolf has always been explored as an aspect of the beast within man, but DeForge inverts this idea into the woman inside man which in turn allows a whole new dimension of the story to be explored. DeForge goes even further though, adding allusions to internet culture, social media, and commenting on the indecisiveness of college and planning for the future (does he want to date someone in his female form? Start a life with them? What will he/she look like in twenty years?)

'College Girls By Night' is just eight pages, but the ambition of the story puts it alongside any of the great "OGN's" in both emotional weight and thematic resonance, in less pages than many take to say a character's name.

Angie Wang's 'Untitled' is a beautiful entry, in any anthology, but what separates it from the rest of the book is it's use of action comic techniques to represent sexuality. It is impossible to look at Wang's use of the panel grid and not be reminded of a Kirby-esque action sequence, each action and movement becomes larger and more kinetic as the panel grid is stripped away (a sixteen panel grid gives way to a nine, which gives way to a four, etc.), at all times building towards a single page climax.

What Wang does though, to distinguish her story from the overcrowded field of action comics, is instead of using this technique to tell the story of two men clobbering each others brains out, she tells a small and intimate story of two women making love. It is awkward and fumbled at first, restricted by the claustrophobic sixteen panel grid, but as each character becomes more familiar with each other the pages open up and their actions become more free and natural.

In tandem with these sequences, Wang uses her dialogue to further connect with these classic fight scenes, as the action escalates each character's dialogue devolve from articulate sentences into short single word bursts and finally into abstract symbolism.

Brandon Graham's 'Dirty Deeds' may be the height of Graham's punnery, but if there was a time and place for it, 'Thickness' is it. Porn has always been the cornerstone of pun titles (with the exception of the recent crop of (Insert Superhero): A Porn Parody which are really a wasted opportunity).

In 'Dirty Deeds', Graham goes all out with his puns turning every aspect of the page into an elaborate joke, from background gags, like a robots decals reading "Sex Million Dollar Mech" to making the page layout itself sexual innuendo. Graham's previously published works of pornography ('Perverts of the Unknown', 'Multiple Warheads', and 'Pillow Fight') were always constrained because of their explicit need to be pornography first and foremost, but 'Thickness' (while being a collection of pornography) does not have the same editorial goal in mind allowing Graham to condense every pun that you would see in 'Perverts of the Unknown' into a single page of 'Diry Deeds'.

"I lost my wedding band in the pond!"
"I guess that means you're not married anymore..."
"I guess so..."

This is how Mickey Z opens her story of a temptation, a murky narrative that seems to just flow from page to page, always going somewhere, but never being forced or contorted to reach that end. 'Slime Worm' is simply that, it slimes and it worms its way to an end, illustrated in a watery, almost intangible style pushing the boundaries of what actually constitutes a grid.
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A odd moment of shared contempt broke out when i told Alec Berry, Joey (HARD TO SPELL ITALIAN LAST NAME), and Chad Nevett over Skype that i had no clue who or what a Steve Rude was. It's weird what people hold sacred.

'The Drifting Classroom' seems to have no qualms with violently disemboweling or setting aflame small children at every opportunity. No rain? Lets crucify this kid. Might have the Plague? Burn him alive. Being a plain old dick? Nothing a rock to the face wont solve.

I was very pleased when the guy behind me in line for beer informed everyone in shouting distance that he was fine with waiting since he had just done a bunch of pills.

Even though i have no childhood connection to Carl Bark's 'Donald Duck' comics, picking up the second volume of Fantagraphics' reprints just causes this immediate resonance. Maybe his artwork is just so built into the public iconography that everyone is exposed to it during childhood without knowing it.

Fun Fact: The total population of West Virgina is less than the city of Boston.

I guess Marvel is reducing the number of "Premiere" Hardcovers they produce, which is good news. The only thing Marvel's "Premiere" collections are the premiere of is shitty over priced money grabs.

As others have pointed out, the finals chapter of 'Marvel Comics: The Untold Story' just kind of peters out. Howe skims the major events (which is essentially the Marvel Studios films) and calls it a day. I assume the problem is anyone who could provide him with inter-office gossip is still gainfully employed by Marvel and would wish to keep their job (which makes sense), but results in a weak ending to a great book.

Letting all those mediocre nu-52 books have a couple issues to find there footing before dropping the entire line has left me giving every one of those Marvel NOW! launch titles absolutely no leeway.

The Emma Frost in 'All-New X-Men' is a clone right? Because I'm 99% certain that she was still in jail last time i saw her.
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"I'm gonna go across the street and, uh, schling a schlong."