Pilot Studios Announces Two Adult Coloring Books By Jeff Johnson

Coloring books are not just for kids anymore! Adult coloring books have become a wonderful way for fans to interact with art from amazing artists and fandom such as The Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, DC, and Marvel comics. Jeff Johnson has been a professional artist since the 1990’s.  In that time he has drawn such classic comic characters as Superman, Wonder Woman, Spider- Man, Batman, Wolverine and many more.

He has also worked on popular cartoons such as Spectacular Spider-Man, Brave and the Bold, Young Justice, Transformers: Prime, and Boondocks.

The Art of Jeff Johnson: A Pilot Studios Coloring Book Vol. 1 & 2 are perfect for fans of comic art that love to color and more advanced artists who want to work on their craft as a comic colorist.             Each volume has over 30 Jeff Johnson illustrations on separate pages to avoid bleeding through. Volume 1 & 2 are both available on Amazon.com.

Pilot Studios and Jeff Johnson encourage everyone who purchases The Art of Jeff Johnson: A Pilot Studios Coloring Book Vol. 1 or Vol.2 to scan in your finished art and post it to the Jeff Johnson Archive on Facebook.

Check out Pilot Studios on Facebook for more information on this and all of our comic and coloring books.

Pilot Studios is a company dedicated to putting out and promoting quality comics and other works from a variety of creators.

[su_custom_gallery source="media: 136097,136096,136095,136094,136093" link="lightbox" width="230" height="340"]

Cry Havoc Vol. 1: Mything in Action -- Coming in August

From writer Simon Spurrier (X-Men: Legacy) and superstar artist Ryan Kelly comes the darkly folkloric CRY HAVOC, VOLUME 1: MYTHING IN ACTION, which collects issues #1-6 in trade paperback this August. Meet Lou: a street musician savaged by a supernatural terror. Meet Lou: a civilian crossing war-torn Afghanistan with a unit of shapeshifting soldiers. Meet Lou: a monstress held captive by the rogue beast she was sent to kill.

CRY HAVOC interweaves three stages of a remarkable life into a critically-exalted saga of military, myth, and mania, including an unprecedented use of multiple colorists (Matt Wilson, Lee Loughridge, & Nick Filardi) to define the story's threads.

CRY HAVOC, VOLUME 1: MYTHING IN ACTION (ISBN 978-1-63215-833-8) hits comic book stores Wednesday, August 17th and bookstores Tuesday, August 23rdand will be available for $14.99. It can be ordered by retailers through Diamond Book Distributors with the Diamond Code MAY160675. It can be preordered now via Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Indiebound, and Indigo.

Cry-Havoc-Vol-1

CBMFP 240: The Full Worm On Skeletor's Face

Today on the show we not only have our three regulars, but we add Carl our semi-regular guest back on the show. To begin with we actually talk about Carl's first kickstarter project, a documentary film about gamecasting called: I Heart Streaming: The Life of a Gamecaster. From there we open up with a thinking topic: What genre's of stories do you avoid? After that we discuss some possible casting news for McG's Masters of the Universe reboot at Sony. There's no comic book news so we end the news with Justice League movie updates.

Comics reviewed on this episode:

Previously on the CBMFP...

Valiant Reveals Faith #1 Coloring Book Edition

Valiant is proud to announce the FAITH #1 COLORING BOOK EDITION – a specially produced black-and-white edition of Faith's stratospheric first issue printed on deluxe matte paper stock for the color-it-yourself comics sensation of the summer! Colored pencils! Crayons! Markers! Pastels! Re-imagine the debut issue of the much-anticipated ongoing series from breakout writer Jody Houser (Orphan Black), Harvey Award-nominated artist Pere Perez (ARCHER & ARMSTRONG), and 2016 Russ Manning Award Nominee Marguerite Sauvage (DC Comics Bombshells) as you see fit with a kaleidoscopic range of coloring opportunities at your fingertips! In stores on July 20th alongside the all-new FAITH #1 – the lead title from "THE FUTURE OF VALIANT" initiative continuing throughout 2016 – the FAITH #1 COLORING BOOK EDITION comes complete with the issue's finished lettering and an exclusive bonus cover gallery, so you can enjoy the full storytelling experience of Valiant's spotlight-stealing hero…even as you unleash your inner artist! Perfect for fans young and old, this first-of-its-kind Valiant collectible is your chance to take a front row seat in creating the adventures of the year's number-one new hero!

FAITH_001_COLORING-BOOK-EDITION_COVER_LUPACCHINOIn a city under siege by robots, aliens, monsters and even worse...celebrities, there is only one woman the people of Los Angeles can count on: the stratospheric superhero called Faith! Aspiring reporter by day and dedicated crime-fighter by night, Faith has tackled every obstacle in her path with confidence - like those crushing deadlines at work, the long-distance boyfriend half a world away, and the missing back issues that plague her comics collection! But, unbeknownst to her, Faith is about to collide with the one force she never saw coming: an up-and-coming super-villain bent on snuffing her out once and for all! But who is lurking behind the mask of her new foe...and could they just be the one person capable of rendering Faith powerless?

On July 20th, let your imagination take flight with the FAITH #1 COLORING BOOK EDITION – available at all qualifying comic book retailers! Contact your local comic shop to reserve your copies of FAITH #1 and the FAITH #1 COLORING BOOK EDITION today!

Then, “THE FUTURE OF VALIANT” continues with an all-new wave of ongoing series, prestige format projects and standalone events from a star-studded roster of some of comics’ most visionary talents! Beginning in July with FAITH #1, “THE FUTURE OF VALIANT” will extend throughout 2016 with a total of seven epic series – each introducing an innovative array of new concepts and characters…and firmly establishing Valiant’s place as the premier publisher of creative storytelling in comics today:

  • FAITH #1 by Jody Houser, Pere Perez & Marguerite Sauvage in July
  • GENERATION ZERO #1 by Fred Van Lente & Francis Portela in August
  • BRITANNIA #1 (of 4) by Peter Milligan & Juan Jose Ryp in September
  • BLOODSHOT U.S.A. #1 (of 4) by Jeff Lemire & Doug Braithwaite in October
  • HARBINGER RENEGADES #1 by Rafer Roberts & Darick Roberston in November
  • SAVAGE #1 (of 4) by B. Clay Moore, Clayton Henry & Lewis LaRosa in November
  • DIVINITY III: STALINVERSE #1 (of 4) by Matt Kindt & Trevor Hairsine in December

FAITH_001_COLORING-BOOK-EDITION_002FAITH #1 (ONGOING) Written by JODY HOUSER Art by PERE PEREZ & MARGUERITE SAUVAGE Cover A by KEVIN WADA (MAY161849) Cover B by JELENA KEVIC-DJURDJEVIC (MAY161850) Cover C by CARY NORD (MAY161851) Cover D by EMANUELA LUPACCHINO (MAY161852) Valiant Emoji Variant by SWYFT MEDIA (MAY161853) Valiant x CGC Replica Variant by PERE PEREZ (MAY161854) Interlocking Variant Cover by PERE PEREZ (MAY161856) Variant Cover by KANO (MAY161857) Variant Cover by COLLEEN COOVER (MAY161858) Blank Cover also available (MAY161855) $3.99 | 32 pgs. | T+ | On sale JULY 20 (FOC – 6/27/16)

FAITH #1 COLORING BOOK EDITION* Written by JODY HOUSER Art by PERE PEREZ, MARGUERITE SAUVAGE & MORE Cover by EMANUELA LUPACCHINO (MAY161859) $3.99 | 32 Pages | T+ | On Sale JULY 20 (FOC – 6/27/16)

More Women of Dynamite Statues Coming

I wonder if any women will buy these statues though. I hope there's like one woman that just puts it on her coffee table. If so she's my hero. From Dynamite:

Building upon the excitement for the all-new Women of Dynamite statue line, as well as the recent debut of the line's first statue (based on horror icon Vampirella), Dynamite is proud to announce the expansion of the series with Limited Edition variant statues, based on the popular comic book characters Purgatori and Jungle Girl. Extremely limited in number, the Purgatori "Black & White" Statue and Jungle Girl "Diamond Eye" Statue will provide fans with rare and visually unique collectibles for purchase beginning in September 2016.

The Women of Dynamite: Purgatori Limited Edition "Black & White" Statue:

WoDPurgatori_B&W_temp

Only 49 of these beautiful black-and-white statues exist in the whole world! The extremely Limited Edition Purgatori statue, based on the work of comics sensation Michael Turner and sculpted by the ever-talented Jason Smith, features the stark contrast of light and darkness, with just a touch of deep red to highlight our villainess's classic look. Hand-painted on cold-cast porcelain, the Purgatori statue stands approximately 12" in height (14" to the tip of her wings) with a 6" base. This rare variant edition of the Women of Dynamite: Purgatori statue comes packaged in a four-color box with a hand-numbered Certificate of Authenticity. This lady's killer contours make an alluring addition to every hardcore fiend's collection!

The Women of Dynamite: Jungle Girl Limited Edition "Diamond Eye" Statue:

WoDJungleGirlDiamondEye

Only 99 of these gorgeous "Diamond Eye" edition statues exist in the whole world! The extremely Limited Edition Jungle Girl statue, based on the work of comics sensation Frank Cho and sculpted by the ever-talented Jason Smith, features comic book sensation Jana in all her primal glory... with a twinkle in her eye, courtesy of jewel placement on her perfectly sculpted face. Hand-painted on cold-cast porcelain, the Jungle Girl statue stands approximately 12" in height with a 6" base. This rare variant edition of the Women of Dynamite: Jungle Girl statue comes packaged in a four-color box with a hand-numbered Certificate of Authenticity. The jungle has never been hotter, thanks to this captivating statue!

"When we were planning our Women of Dynamite line of statues, we knew we had to do something really special with Purgatori and Jungle Girl," says Dynamite CEO and Publisher, Nick Barrucci. "Horror lovers and collectible enthusiasts have expressed such anticipation for the new line in light of our debut, Vampirella. Dynamite and the skillful team at The Brewing Factory want to reward their excitement with special variations, giving them several options for how to best display their favorite femme fatales."

Dynamite's Limited Edition statues retail for $249.99 apiece. The Women of Dynamite: Purgatori Limited Edition "Black & White" Statue and Women of Dynamite: Jungle Girl Limited Edition "Diamond Eye" Statue can be found solicited in the July-dated edition of Diamond's Previews catalog, corresponding to a release date in September 2016. Fans and collectors are encouraged to preorder with their local comic book shops to ensure that these rare items can be reserved for them, while supplies last.

WoDVampiOfferedAgain

Archie Releases A Sonic Humble Bundle

In celebration of Sonic the Hedgehog’s 25th Anniversary, Humble Bundle and Archie Comics are offering up a big digital collection of Sonic the Hedgehog comics! The Humble Comics Bundle: Sonic the Hedgehog features hundreds of pages of action-packed excitement from the longest-running video game comic book in history.

Customers can pay $1 or more for SONIC UNIVERSE VOL. 6: TREASURE TEAM TANGO, SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #264-272 & #276-279, SONIC UNIVERSE #45 & #55-58, and SONIC BOOM #1-4.

Those who pay more than the average price also receive SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #260-263, SONIC UNIVERSE #59-74 & #83-86, SONIC BOOM #5-7, and a bonus title to be revealed on Wednesday, June 29!

Sonic BundleCustomers can pay $15 or more to receive all of the above, plus SONIC THE HEDGEHOG #226-229, #252-259, #280-283, SONIC UNIVERSE #18-20, #75, #79-82, and SONIC SUPER DIGEST #13-16.

A free sampler of Sonic comics is also available, and includes SONIC THE HEDGEHOG VOL. 1: COUNTDOWN TO CHAOS, SONIC SELECT VOL. 9: THE GAMES, and SONIC THE HEDGEHOG VOL. 2: THE CHASE.

These comics usually cost as much as $291. At Humble Bundle, though, customers choose their price!

To see the full bundle, head to bit.ly/HBSoniccomics

As with all Humble Bundles, customers can choose how their purchase dollars are allocated, between the publisher and charity. The Humble Comics Bundle: Sonic the Hedgehog supports The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, and customers can also choose a favorite charity from our database of over 30,000 charities.

The Humble Comics Bundle: Sonic the Hedgehog runs from Wednesday, June 22, 2016 at 11 a.m. Pacific time until Wednesday, July 6, 2016 at 11 a.m.Pacific time.

Dynamite Set To Release 'The Great Divide' From Fisher and Markiewicz

Dynamite Entertainment's line of creator-driven titles featuring today's top talent continues to grow with Grumpy Cat and Smuggling Spirits writer Ben Fisher's The Great Divide! Created with his Smuggling Spirits collaborator, artist Adam Markiewicz, The Great Divide paints a terrifying picture of life without human contact, for fear of a bloody demise! In The Great Divide, humanity awakens in the near future to the horrifying reality that the faintest touch from another's skin results in agonizing death. The survivors isolate themselves, many driven mad by fragments of memories absorbed from the dead. But when a pair of thieves stumbles upon the means to save their species, they learn not everyone is eager to see the old world order restored…

"The Great Divide is set in a desperate, dangerous world. But at the heart of the book are two people struggling with the same basic question we all have: how do we find real connection with each other?" says author Ben Fisher. "That blend of high concept action and deeply personal motivation is fertile ground for storytelling, and Dynamite is the perfect platform for this series."

[su_slider source="media: 134435,134429,134430,134431,134432,134433" limit="35" link="image" width="440" height="640" responsive="no" pages="no" autoplay="3000"]

"After working with Ben on our lighthearted Grumpy Cat comic series, we wanted to offer him a chance to do something of his own creation," says Dynamite CEO/Publisher, Nick Barrucci. "When he turned in the pitch for The Great Divide, it was exactly the kind of thrilling horror-fueled science fiction we love here at Dynamite. It's destined to be one of our standout original series of the year!"

Each issue of The Great Divide will also contain unique bonus digital content. The first issue will include a download code for "Teowawki," a song about a doomsday prepper on a first date, written and performed by Ben Fisher.

A faux "Public Service Announcement" promotional poster warning of the health risks caused by the "Divide" will be included in Diamond shipments as advanced advertising for the series and additionally released in digital format.

The Great Divide #1 will be solicited in Diamond Comic Distributors' July 2016 Previews catalog, the premiere source of merchandise for the comic book specialty market, and slated for release in September. Comic book fans are encouraged to reserve copies of The Great Divide with their local comic book retailers. The Great Divide will also be available for individual customer purchase through digital platforms courtesy of Comixology, Dynamite Digital, iVerse, and Dark Horse Digital.

Titan Announces More Vikings Comics

Titan Comics are excited to announce that following the fantastic sell-out response to the Vikings: Godhead mini-series, Vikings is returning for an all-new story! Superstar writer Cavan Scott (VikingsDoctor Who) re-joins series artist Staz Johnson (BatmanSpider-Man) to further expand the Vikings lore with Vikings: Uprising #1! This new story follows after the explosive events of the MGM TV show’s Season 4 mid-season finale.

Released September 14thVikings: Uprising expands on Titan Comics’ hugely popular Vikings: Godhead, which sold out of its debut issue and went to a second printing!

This thrilling new #1 comes with five variant covers to collect with art by artists Mark HammermeisterClaudia CaranfaVerity Glass (Doctor Who, Assassin’s Creed), Joe Glass (The Pride) and a regular cover by Chris Wahl (Bob Fingerman’s Minimum Wage).

Retailers can order issue #1 of Vikings: Uprising from the July edition of Diamond PREVIEWS. This all-new storyline in the world of the hit TV show will delight hardcore fans and new fans alike.

[su_slider source="media: 134418,134420,134421,134422,134423" limit="35" link="image" width="440" height="640" responsive="no" pages="no" autoplay="3000"]

Boo The Dog Gets A Comic Book... Because Why Not

People bought Grumpy Cat's comic right? Right? I just hope there's an all black bag cover for Boo when one day he dies. I know that's morbid, but this is a business damn it. From Dynamite:

Dynamite Entertainment announces that BOO - The World's Cutest Dog™, the canine social media sensation with more than 17.5 million Facebook fans and an Instagram following of over 600,000, will soon be the star of a new comic book series!

The World's Cutest Dog comes to comics! He's Boo, the Pomeranian pup that's become an internet sensation, and he's ready for four-color adventures in his first-ever comic book! In the debut issue, Boo and his canine companions Buddy and Bluebeary Pie create kitchen chaos when they can't control their tummy rumblings; our favorite doggie becomes a "Boo-vie star" when he lucks into a Hollywood audition; and finally, Boo celebrates the birthday of adorable eight-year-old Audrey… but the party gets out of hand! Comic readers of all ages will love the whimsical, fun-filled escapades of Boo, the World's Cutest Dog!

"When Dynamite published our first Grumpy Cat series, it was proven beyond a doubt that internet sensations can bring their fandom offline and into comic shops and bookstores," says Dynamite CEO/Publisher, Nick Barrucci. "When our own hearts were captured by Boo's adorable photos and memes, we knew he was the next face fit for print. We are thrilled to bring this cute little canine to comics in his very own series!"

"The Boo fandom is going strong and we are very excited to be creating new, fun content featuring the adorable Boo and his friends, with fantastic partners in both the print and digital space," says Knockout Licensing President, Tamra Knepfer.

To celebrate the launch of this new series, Dynamite will release four different orderable covers: Covers A, B, and C are illustrated by My Little Pony artists Katie Cook, Agnes Garbowska, and Tony Fleecs respectively; Cover D is illustrated by Grumpy Cat artist Steve Uy; and a special Subscription-Only Cover E features a photo of the World's Cutest Dog himself! Also, a Blank Authentix Edition will be available, featuring the same great story and a blank cover that professional and aspiring artists can illustrate.

Boo, The World's Cutest Dog #1 will be solicited in Diamond Comic Distributors' July 2016 Previews catalog, the premiere source of merchandise for the comic book specialty market, and slated for release in September.  Comic book fans are encouraged to reserve copies of Boo, The World's Cutest Dog with their local comic book retailers. Boo, The World's Cutest Dog will also be available for individual customer purchase through digital platforms courtesy of Comixology, Dynamite Digital, iVerse, and Dark Horse Digital.

[su_slider source="media: 134413,134406,134407,134408,134409,134410,134411,134412,134414,134415,134416" limit="35" link="image" width="440" height="640" responsive="no" pages="no" autoplay="3000"]

Preview Black Mask Studios First All Ages Book: Jade Street Protection Services

While I don't know exactly what broke Black Mask Studios' momentum (other than it being something to do with courts and shit), I do know that I'm excited to see them pumping out the books again. Which is why I'm posting a preview. Something I hate doing, but hopefully it'll get some eyes on their books. [su_quote]JADE STREET PROTECTION SERVICES is our first All Ages book, but it's All Ages done the Black Mask way. In this new series that mashes The Breakfast Club with Sailor Moon, Kai, Saba, Noemi, Divya, and Emma are (bad) students at Matsdotter Academy, an elite private school for magical girls. When they all meet for the first time in a totally unfair detention, these punk rock witch delinquents cut class and discover the fates Matsdotter has in store for them are even more sinister than they suspected. With JSPS, the creative team of writer Katy Rex, penciler/inker Fabian Lelay, colorist Mara Jayne Carpenter, and series cover artists Annie Wu and Kiki Jenkins channel Black Mask's edgy, subversive sensibility into a whipsmart adventure for delinquents young and old.[/su_quote]

[su_slider source="media: 134862,134854,134855,134856,134857,134858,134859,134860" limit="35" link="image" width="440" height="640" responsive="no" pages="no" autoplay="3000"]

JADE STREET PROTECTION SERVICES #1 Written by: Katy Rex Art by: Fabian Lelay Lettered by: Taylor Esposito Colored by: Mara Jayne Carpenter Covers by: Annie Wu In Stores: June 29th, 2016

Review: Cry Havoc #6

"There's more honest magic." Much to my editor's chagrin, I'm sure, I had to take some extra time to write about the finale of Cry Havoc.  For one, Spurrier put together yet another story-about-stories densely packed with personal touches and large, sweeping meta-narrative soapboxing, this time through the mouthpiece of a big black ethereal werewolf instead of a six-shootin' gorilla or the son Xavier never had but sort of had but--well, it's complicated.  For another, Spurrier issued a challenge to the comic book press that hit very close to home for me.  You see, I think a lot--too much, probably, because it often causes me enough anxiety-via-introspection that I cannot even write--about the best way that I, or any critic, can engage with comic books as a medium.  I obsess about it, I really do, and I have a confession:

I have no fucking idea what I'm doing.

CryHavoc_06-1Awhile ago, I wrote an essay about how I thought we ought to approach #1 issues.  Time and time again I see these reviews that latch on to two or three things that they like or did not like, and then extrapolate those feelings awkwardly into chunks of an essay that serve as nothing more than an attempt at fortune telling.  I quickly realized that my favorite essays about #1 issues treated the launch issues as complete works.  Surely on an emotional level you will be giving creators the benefit of the doubt and hoping for the best for the next issue, but as far as works of criticism go, a #1 issue is, in a very real sense, the totality of a given work at that time.  It is a work that creators and editors and publishers chose to be the gateway into the series and, as such, you should spend your time talking about this grand entrance and not the objects you might be able to discern on the horizon beyond it.  Now, of course, I understand why so many people use #1 reviews to ask perfectly valid questions about what might lie ahead; however, that doesn't make those questions terribly interesting.  Still, this is all about the entry issue, the heralding issue, the ebay issue, the big fat 10 incentive variants and a fucking Pop! vinyl issue; what the shit do I do with a #3 or a #4?

Do I talk about them with no reference to what's come before?  Surely that's absurd: in the narrative syntax, they only have the very specific meaning they do because of what has come before.  Still, this puts things in a precarious position for me as a reviewer. What if I'm not terrifically moved by the specific plot advancements of a given issue?  What if all of the things that I enjoyed about the artwork were features that I had already pointed out in my review of the previous single issue?  Still, when the writing is original enough (as it is in this book) and the art is varied (and, frankly, awesome, as it is in this book), there will be enough instances wherein a confluence of cool shit occurs and I can jump up and down and point and say "OMG did you see what happened here?"

And this is the point at which we're all on a different page on the reviewing side.  I mean--sorry, I hate to throw people under the bus--but even if you go look at reviews of the #6 issue of this series, you still can find at least one reviewer framing his review of this comic in terms of the as-yet-to-exist future of this series.  And this is where Spurrier's analogy about paper airplanes goes exactly right.  Not only do we not care about the landing, many reviewers take it upon themselves to ignore the flight path of the metaphorical vessel altogether in favor of discussing how it might land and which trajectory it ought to have taken.  I am guilty of all of these things.  And that's why I often don't write about comics midstream.  Because I think the best way for us to do our jobs is to stay aware, holistically, of the work, but mainly to freeze it at that point in time and take the opportunity to poke it and prod it and share the results.  That can be, and often is, daunting when you aren't yet at the end.

A review of a #3 issue should be a review of a #3 issue: it should be answering questions that were raised through your experience of those 24 or 32 or however-many pages.  Fuck what you think about what might happen next issue: if it remains to be seen then it remains to be seen.  For all you know the whole thing will go up in smoke the next issue.  Consider Satoshi Kon's unfinished manga, OPUS.  Reviewing OPUS as it was published, before his tragic death, versus reviewing it now, in retrospect, considering it as a never-to-be-finished work are distinctly different from a critical perspective.

CryHavoc06_Context matters.  If you want to review a single issue of a comic as if it is a chapter in an already-published TPB that you simply haven't read yet, then wait for the TPB to come out.  If you want to review the fourth issue of a six-part mini the week it comes out, you better goddamn well roll up your sleeves and tell me all about that work.  Your criticism has a timestamp on it just like the work itself.  Even reviewing a final issue, as I'm about to do (or should already be doing, shout out to Dustin for letting me write all this) is distinctly different than reviewing a collected trade upon its release: one of them should spend a little more time talking about the last issue in particular, even though both will inevitably have to look back on what came before.  Hopefully you can guess which is which.

*Deep breath*.  Are we all still on board?

When I started Cry Havoc, I had a lot of ideas about where the series might go.  One of my thoughts was that Louise was not, in fact, a werewolf at all, and that we would later discover that all of these people were just severely mentally jacked up and this was all just a very visually interesting way of telling that story.  I was, obviously, extremely wrong (whether you think there's still some space for a metaphor there is up to you): Spurrier uses Kelly's surreal, brutal monster designs to double-down in this final chapter.  And that, ultimately, is a really great way to understand what this story was about.   Cry Havoc is a book which decisively says, if I may summarize, "Stow your fucking allegories for a minute."  Our mythologies and religions and stories are not things to be explained away by our mental conditions, by evolution, or by historical circumstance: these things are very real features of our world.  Whether or not you are comfortable stretching your definition of real to include unicorns or werewolves or the Penanggalan, these things clearly do exist in some way that is robust enough to scare us, to thrill us, or to inspire us.  The human impulse to justify, to explain away, and to synthesize is one that is not effectively aimed towards these fictional features of our world.  Rather, Spurrier thinks we are in the very hard position of Louise: we must accept that as humans we are in this weird position of having to constantly enter our collective thoughtspace and mediate between the practical and the mythological.  We cannot shove it off, we cannot ignore it, we cannot put it all in a pot and try to boil it down into easily digestible metaphors.

You can tell your friend all you like about how much you think the Bible is great if you don't take it literally, but he will still believe in angels and saints as being very real features of the world.  You will not convince him or billions upon billions of others otherwise.  You cannot ignore them as real, complete individuals.  Even if you consider yourself this hyper-rational modern humanist, you must co-exist with monotheists, with people who are afraid of clowns and ghosts, and even with people who simply hold sacred the rich traditions of their ancestors.  The Zeitgeist is not one-size-fits-all.  It never will be.  If you want to be a human among humans, you must face both ways without getting lost in either.  You must face the public as a citizen and you must face your fellow citizens as believers in all sorts of weird fictions.  Even in the case that you don't fancy yourself a pluralist, the people and the stories are all still out there.

CryHavoc06_2All of that brings me around to just how in sync this whole creative team was throughout this book, and it's on complete showcase in the final chapter.  If Spurrier finds something particularly cool, you can tell so in the appendix.  The Penanggalan was teased awhile ago, and he made sure to take some extra time in the back of the final issue to unpack this Malaysian vampire's historical baggage.  Kelly's spread for the Penanggalan stands out even among the other monster spreads he's gotten to do in the series.  It's one thing to draw all of the "cords of viscera" springing out from the Penanggalan: it's another thing to have it all composed so thoughtfully.  The spread is shocking and brutal, but it also reads well.  Kelly's pencils have in them this trend towards controlled chaos.  Even when he unleashes the beast (literally), there's a sense that his hand is still guiding the reader in a measured way.

And that all just sits on top of the fact that Kelly was built to drawn this story.  When he draws a monster, compared to how he is so carefully presenting the rest of the real world, there is a palpable tension as a reader as to what's real and what's not.  The tension between the fictional and the real that comprises the very soul of this story is one that Kelly was visually presenting on the page from the very start.  Further, it's a feeling that is amplified to the nth degree by choice further govern the tone with the alternating colorists.

Letterer Simon Bowland puts in his best work yet, having to guide the reader's eye through critical monologues, sometimes on pages with nothing but a handful of implied panel borders.  Even though Spurrier really kept a lot of his wording as tight as possible, some sequences couldn't help but border on verbose given the amount of information that needed conveying, and Bowland kept things moving.  This was especially critical in this final issue where more than ever the alternating rhythms of London and The Red Place and Afghanistan demanded an attention to layout and timing moreso than where the eye needed to be at any given time.  Bowland never distracts the reader, even at critical junctures where a switch in the lettering style is the main feature of a given narrative beat.

Never more than this issue has the colorist trio of Filardi, Loughridge, and Wilson had to juxtapose their work, alternating within the spans of single pages.  This issue leveraged their differences to differentiate not only time, but space (as time only arbitrarily correlated to those spaces earlier in the story), as well as even metaphorical space in some cases.  The result is a triumph of Price's design work on top of the stellar color work.  My only worry with the first few issues was the rigidity of the page layouts and accompanying panel border colors.  It's the breaking of that convention that makes this final issue feel so fluid and satisfying.  Naturally, some of Kelly's simplest pages (if you can call any of these pages that) become some of his best with these guys wielding the colors.

CryHavoc06_3Despite Cry Havoc being a work that stands, in many ways, as firmly anti-allegory, it is, of course, allegorical in all sorts of ways.  There's so much more to say about this work in terms of sexuality, in terms of mental illness, in terms of how we think about war, especially in terms of how we've gotten involved in modern conflicts; this is a dense work, full of concepts, many of which are fully-formed and all of which have beating hearts.  The art is part-and-parcel with unpacking these concepts, and just as there are things I didn't get to say about war, there are things I didn't get to say about how particularly excellent the color work is in several instances.

But I'm not here to write about it all, I'm just not.  There's a more honest magic for us reviewers, and it's built on a necessity to bring to the table the things about a work that grabbed us, individually, and that we feel best equipped to explain while exploring our limits as both readers and writers.  This requires a pretty hardcore willingness to set aside practical realities like the issue number whenever we can, and to dig right into the work, being (annoyingly) measured in how we sort through our thoughts and reactions.  It all requires the oldest magic there is: fucking work.

I'd like for creators to take something away from Cry Havoc too: stop "trojan-ing" your goddamn readers.  Don't give us a story in order to then step in and fill your own mythical space with saran gas by treating it all like a game: you are putting your stories into the real world.  You are adding wonderful, and sometimes not-so-wonderful, branches to our collective consciousness.  But then, at the first sign of trouble, you disavow your stories of any significance, attempting to pass your contributions off like cysts you can just pop with passive aggressive tweets aimed at people who are, unlike you, working their asses off trying to navigate the tricky DMZ between reality and fiction.

Through all of this philosophizing and self-reflection and advice-columning and Spurrier's own incitement of this both in his challenge to the press and in his appendices throughout these issues, Cry Havoc can feel a little academic (goodness knows the length of this review alone would make it admissable in to several reputable academic journals).  But I think that's probably off-base: Cry Havoc is a work that makes you ask what you want from the stories in your life.  It is a story that prepares you and then places you in a situation to face how you and the people around you treat the untouchable or unverifiable features of the world.  Either you take up the challenge in earnest, or wake up one morning to find out you're an insufferable shit who knows a dozen movie casting factoids but can't remember the last time he got lost between the panels of a comic book.

[su_box title="Score: 5/5" style="glass" box_color="#8955ab" radius="6"]

Cry Havoc #6 Writer: Si Spurrier Artist: Ryan Kelly Colorists: Nick Filardi, Lee Loughridge, Matt Wilson Publisher: Image Comics Price: $3.99 Release Date: 6/22/16 Format: Mini-Series; Print/Digital

[/su_box]

VIZ Media Partners With Overdrive To Provide Manga To Libraries In U.S. & Canada

More manga and comics for everyone is a good thing! From Viz:

VIZ Media, LLC (VIZ Media), the largest publisher, distributor and licensor of manga and anime in North America, has announced an agreement with OverDrive to provide a wide variety of its most popular digital manga (graphic novel) titles at  participating libraries in the U.S. and Canada.  

OverDrive is a leading digital distribution platform, supplying the industry’s largest catalog of eBooks, audiobooks, streaming video and periodicals to 34,000 libraries, schools and retailers worldwide, including 90 percent of all public libraries in the U.S.

STK628329For the initial manga offerings, OverDrive will feature several popular and award-winning VIZ Media titles such as NARUTO, DEADMAN WONDERLAND, VAMPIRE KNIGHT, and NEON GENESIS EVANGELION that will be carried by participating libraries on a digital lending basis. The catalog of available manga titles will continue to expand with new series to be added throughout the year; the full list of titles now available may be viewed at www.overdrive.com/publishers/vizmedia.

“OverDrive’s digital platform offers an innovative, cloud-based and fully scalable channel to offer a diverse selection of age-appropriate digital manga content to library patrons and our partnership with the company will ensure that users have access to some of the most popular titles from the VIZ Media catalog,” says Kevin Hamric, Senior Director, Publishing Sales & Marketing, VIZ Media.

“VIZ Media is a proven leader in manga publishing and we are very excited to add some of their most popular series to our service,” says Karen Estrovich, Director, Collection Development at OverDrive. “OverDrive delivers a large catalog  combined with intuitive, easy to use eReading apps. Manga continues to be one of the most popular categories at libraries and we invite readers to discover all of the exciting new VIZ Media titles with our service.”

For more information on VIZ Media manga titles, please visit www.VIZ.com.

Gaze Upon 'Angel Catbird' From Dark Horse Comics

This fall, Dark Horse Books will publish one of the most eagerly anticipated and unusual books of the year: ANGEL CATBIRD, the first graphic novel by Margaret Atwood, the Man Booker Award-winning author of The Blind Assassin, The Handmaid’s Tale, and The Heart Goes Last. For her first graphic novel, Atwood is collaborating with artist Johnnie Christmas (Sheltered) and colorist Tamra Bonvillain (Doom Patrol) for a weird and wonderful tale about a part-cat, part-bird superhero. Timed to Atwood’s appearance at the American Library Association Conference in Orlando, FL this week and ahead of her appearance at San Diego Comic Con next month, Dark Horse Books has revealed the first look inside ANGEL CATBIRD.

"I grew up in the 1940s drawing comics, and I've continued: I even drew a strip in the 1970s. So what better way to explore cat/bird interactions and the welfare of both than through a flying catbird superhero? I'm thrilled to be working with Johnnie Christmas, who can draw way better than I can!" said Margaret Atwood

ANGEL CATBIRD is the latest politically charged book by Atwood, who was recently named the recipient of the 2016 PEN Pinter Prize for her political and environmental activism. ANGEL CATBIRD is being published by Dark Horse Books in tandem with Keep Cats Safe and Save Bird Lives, www.catsandbirds.ca, an initiative led by Nature Canada, the oldest conservation charity in the country.

“This project has been a fun mix of advocacy, humor, and adventure,” said Johnnie Christmas. “Margaret Atwood is a fountain of ideas, it’s been an absolute blast working with her. And our tale of ‘half-cats’ gets a fine boost from the wonderful Tamra Bonvillain. Her vibrant colors help bring the world of ANGEL CATBIRD to life.”

ANGEL CATBIRD will be a 3 volume series of 6 x 9 full color hardcovers, priced at $14.99 each. More information about the ANGEL CATBIRD graphic novels and Nature Canada’s campaign will be released throughout 2016.

[su_slider source="media: 134540,134536,134537,134538,134539" limit="35" link="image" width="440" height="640" responsive="no" pages="no" autoplay="3000"]

Review: Mighty Jack

You’re probably no stranger to Ben Hatke’s work. He grows in popularity with each new book he releases and the truly great thing is that he dabbles with different stories all the time. His other book this year (that’s right, multiple books) Everyone Hates Goblins, is completely different from Might Jack. He’s a versatile storyteller. It wasn’t until the opening page that I suddenly realized that this was Hatke’s version of the classic story Jack and the Beanstalk. I facepalmed at that realization. The great part is that now you think you know the story and you don’t. Because I said it’s Hatke’s version, but that doesn’t mean he follows the same outline.

Rather the opposite. That’s the charm of the book. It has characteristics of the original story, but everything else is fresh. Jack has a sister that doesn’t talk, he’s being asked to help more and grow up because their livelihood is in danger if mom can’t pay the bills. Instead of a beanstalk, there’s a magical garden. But the garden is dangerous. Jack knows this and something in his gut tells him to get rid of it, but it makes his sister happy and occasionally talk. That means something to Jack and so he continues their adventure in the dangerous garden where everything is alive and not everything is friendly.

Mighty Jack vol 1In the short time I’ve been reading Hatke’s books I’ve seen him grow from a great storyteller to now a master storyteller. He’s on another level compared to anyone making young adult graphic novels. Hell, I would even say that he’s surpassed most of the comic industry. The character work he does with Jack is amazing. There’s physical and emotional changes that Jack goes through that you simply can’t ignore, but there’s more. The work that Hatke does with the rest of the characters is on the same level. Particularly with the mom. That’s the crazy part, we have a story that’s found a way to remove the mom from the story, but rather than doing that Hatke keeps her in. He makes her an important part of the story and realistic in that she’s not just absent from the kid’s lives.

A lot of Hatke’s talent and master storytelling comes from his artwork. I would kill to have his hands, they’re that talented. It’s like getting the Robot Devil’s hands. Hatke experiments design and visual metaphors within Mighty Jack and it works. I haven’t read all of his books, but what I have has never been like this.

The line work is detailed, but not too much. It’s as if he’s holding back intentionally because at its core this book is for kids and so heavy line work isn’t needed. The creature design is iconic and extremely cool looking. Moreover, Hatke makes the living garden feel like it’s alive. I know that seems like, “well yeah it should,” but it really feels like it’s alive. You get the same sense of danger from the garden that Jack does and that’s all coming from the way Hatke illustrates it.

There’s a lot I’m not telling you and it sucks because I don’t want it to seem like it was lost on me. There’s a cameo that was great. There’s an entire scene which I think might be a glimpse at the future of the series. There’s a lot to digest and talk about, but that’s better served in the comments. I’m just glad that they’re will be more to this series, but even happier that it was rewarding to read on its own.

Here’s the catch. This book is for kids, but I think adults will get as much if not more out of it. Because while reading it, I felt like a kid again. I felt like I was on an adventure with friends. Maybe it was elements of the family dynamic that I related to or maybe it was just that Hatke is a master storyteller.

[su_box title="Score: 5/5" style="glass" box_color="#8955ab" radius="6"]

Mighty Jack Vol. 1
Creator: Ben Hatke
Publisher: First Second Books
Price: $14.99
Release Date: 9/6/16
Format: TPB; Print

[/su_box]

 

Review: Neil Gaiman's How to Talk to Girls at Parties

Two teenage boys go to a party with exchange students. One of them is confident and smooth, the other is awkward. The awkward one narrates and manages to talk to a few girls who are all unique and interesting. Being awkward around those one fancies, especially as a teenager, is a universal thing, and when those people (girls in this case) aren’t local it can lead to interesting topics of conversation. This story encapsulates it perfectly, while also getting a fantastical spin to it. It is a wonderfully written story by Neil Gaiman, and if you have never read the short story, going in knowing less will be better. If you have liked any of his other work, you will enjoy this. Somehow in the same story he has people talking in the most realistic, awkward teenage ways when there are other characters who speak in beautiful poetic, song like fashion.

HowToTalkToGirlsAtPartiesThe artwork is simply gorgeous. Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba are amazing artists and the story could be horrible and it would be worth reading just for their work. The colors are vibrant, the world is rich and real. Every character is unique and authentic, even those in the crowd scenes who never talk. You can ignore every single word on the pages and still feel the story perfectly. I actually keep losing myself to the pages of art as I write this, I have read this story three times since I first got it and have just taken in the art a half dozen more at least.

Typically when you adapt a prose piece there ends up being some clunkiness. In pursuit of keeping the integrity of the original work there can be a bit too much narration, sometimes describing what is pictured on the panel. At only one point did I feel the narration intruded on the comic; oddly enough, that intrusion is on the very first panel of the very first page, where in between two word balloons there is a narration of “Said Vic.” Otherwise there is none of what usually turns me off in an adaptation. I have even read the original short story, and reading this comic was more akin to reading the story with a fresh perspective instead of feeling like an old retread.

Let’s talk quick economics here, which is literally the only downside of this book. The comic is 64 pages, they are 64 gorgeous pages (excluding the two bio pages) but those 64 pages cost nearly twenty dollars. I know comics are expensive, they are a luxury item, it just feels a little too expensive. I assume there will be an edition later that is cheaper, buy that. Unless you are a huge Gaiman, Moon, or Ba fan, which I wouldn’t blame you for being any of those. In that case you probably already bought it.

[su_box title="Score: 5/5" style="glass" box_color="#8955ab" radius="6"]

Neil Gaiman's How to Talk to Girls at Parties Writer: Neil Gaiman
Artists/Colorists and Adapters: Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba
Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
Price: $17.99
Release Date: 6/22/16
Format: Hardcover; Print/Digital

[/su_box]

 

Review: Blue Exorcist Vol. 15

Comics and manga are weird. People get intimidated by the number on the book, like there’s no possible way for them to figure out what’s happening in the story because they haven’t read everything before it. What people fail to realize is that good writers will bring you into the fold rather than tell you to start at the beginning. That said, most people still want to start at the beginning, but won’t. Which is crazy because the books are always available if you have the interest. With all that said, I’m not the type to shy away from starting in the middle. I figure if I like a book enough I can always go back and check it out later and so this was my first reading experience with Blue Exorcist and it was not a good place to start. Remember… I said a good writer will bring you into the fold. Not that I felt left out, but there are a couple of things that need to be said about this volume.

The first is that this is a payoff volume. If you’ve been reading the series for a long while it’s going to have a bunch of key moments that are payoff moments to the series. Not that this was lost on me, but without that extra context, I wasn’t moved by it. The second is that it becomes painfully clear that this story is finding ways to stretch itself out. This being my first volume I could no wrap my head around why the good guys and the bad guys were taking it slow and waiting to fight. The one and only purpose is to continue the story and that’s not something I want to read. In a lot of ways, it reminded me of American comics when they start as a mini-series and get extended for an ongoing due to sales and then suddenly they’re just watering down the story to make more issues.

Blue Exorcist 15Due to the nature of the story, there’s a lot of characters. It also means that there’s a lot of character development and while that’s usually a good thing, there’s too much of it here. I don’t know anything about the main character other than what was in the recap. I know way too much about the supporting cast and that’s just too much. The main character should still always be our main focus and that’s not the case here.

Then there’s the fact that the story, for some reason, has given the main character a smarter twin brother, but no one thought to see if he had human/demon blood as well. I mean… twin brother. Why the fuck would one of them be Satan’s son and the other just be human? This was a breaking point for me which will ultimately keep me from reading more because it’s just so utterly ridiculous. It’s an afterthought of an idea to make a storyline in the future. Really, it just shows how shortsighted this story idea originally was and the weakness of the storyteller.

The art actually has some uniqueness to it. A lot of manga has a similar look and even bad stories can have great art. The art is what kept me reading this volume because I did genuinely enjoy the look of it. There’s too many damn characters so the pages are cluttered with people, but when they’re given a solo panel, its quite good. The demon designs are uninspired, but hey, it’s a story that is trying to make demons seem like they’re not that bad. I do hate the fact that color of “flames” are even mentioned because the book is in all black and white. It’s just really pointless to mention it over and over when clearly it’s just pining for an anime adaptation.

Really, the twin blood thing and the fact that there’s a demon working with the good guys and is an obvious deus ex machina waiting to happen to the story to continue it further; this book is okay. I won’t be reading more, but I can completely understand why a lot of people like it. Just from reading one volume, though, I can tell it has a lot of filler and that’s not something I care to read more of.

[su_box title="Score: 3/5" style="glass" box_color="#8955ab" radius="6"]

Blue Exorcist Vol. 15
Creator: Kazue Kato
Publisher: Viz Media
Price: $9.99
Release Date: 5/3/16
Format: TPB; Print/Digital

[/su_box]

Bolland, McMahon, Gibbons & O'Neill Return to 2000 AD for 2,000th issue

Comic book superstars Brian Bolland, Mick McMahon,  Dave Gibbons, and Kevin O’Neill are set to return to the pages of the legendary 2000 AD for its 2,000th issue! Europe’s longest running sci-fi action comic reaches its landmark 2,000th issue on 28 September and some of the most prominent creators ever to grace its pages have returned for a 48-page celebration bonanza.

Bolland (Batman: The Killing Joke), McMahon (The Last American),  Gibbons (Watchmen), and O’Neill (League of Extraordinary Gentlemen) are just some of the incredible talent to return – this issue will feature the first sequential comics work by Bolland for 2000 AD since 1987, as well as a brand new series by Peter Milligan (X-Statix, Hellblazer) and a poster featuring specially commissioned artwork.

First hitting the racks in 1977, the cult UK sci-fi anthology title quickly became a globally influential bestseller, launching the careers of some of the industry’s most famous talents and proving instrumental in shaping contemporary comics.

Prog 2000 will be available with three variant covers – newsstand customers will be able to choose between covers by Cliff Robinson and Chris Burnham, while a special Glenn Fabry wraparound cover will be exclusively available through comic book stores via Diamond Distribution.

Comic book stores using Diamond will also be able to take advantage of a buy-one-get-one-free offer to double their offering for what will be a highly sought after issue.

The incredible line-up for Prog 2000 includes:

  • A special one-off Judge Dredd story from creators John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra
  • Pat Mills and Kevin O’Neill reunite for a special Nemesis the Warlock story
  • Psi-Judge Anderson has another psychic case from Alan Grant and David Roach
  • Sinister Dexter hit the road, courtesy of Dan Abnett and Mark Sexton
  • A mysterious prisoner has a tale to tell in Rogue Trooper: Ghosts of Nu Earth by Gordon Rennie and Richard Elson
  • Brand-new identity-theft thriller Counterfeit Girl by Peter Milligan and Rufus Dayglo debuts.
  • Plus, interlude pages from Brian Bolland, Mick McMahon, Dave Gibbons, Robin Smith, and more.

2000 AD Prog 2000 will be available from UK comic book stores and newsagents on 28 September, as well as from North American comic book stores via Diamond Distribution, and in print and digital from the 2000 AD online shop and apps.

AfterShock Comics Announces First Superhero Book With Transgender Protagonist

Hey look at that, comics can include everyone. I haven't been big on Paul Jenkins writing, but I would check this out if it came my way for review. From AfterShock Comics:

From a diverse team of creators composed of differing genders, gender identities, ethnic backgrounds and sexual orientations comes a groundbreaking new series featuring the world’s first transgender superhero! 

ALTERS_01_72dpi[1]As the world struggles to accept the emergence of a new kind of mutant species known as alterations, or “Alters,” a young woman begins her transition from male to female only to find herself also transitioning into a powerful Alter. Faced with persecution by the multi-powered fascist known only as Matter Man, she will face the world as Chalice--a  hero for a new age. But as Chalice navigates the path to becoming her true self, she must juggle the complications of her civilian life and the responsibilities of her newfound power.

This groundbreaking series--years in the making--begins the saga of a young woman who can only really be herself…whenever she is not herself.

ALTERS #1/ $3.99 / 32 pages / Color / on sale 9.7.16 writer: Paul Jenkins artist: Leyla Leiz color: Tamra Bonvillain cover: Brian Stelfreeze

Diamond Order Code: JUL161167

1/10 incentive cover: Brian Stelfreeze

Review: Black Hammer #1

When Jeff Lemire made the jump to superhero books I was excited. Like a lot of people, I had read his work and was very interested to see what he could do with the genre. That said, I have never read anything of Lemire’s corporate hero books and enjoyed them. To the point that I don’t even try them anymore, which is what makes Black Hammer so interesting because it’s basically his take on golden age superheroes but with a modern country twist. To put it frankly, it’s everything I wanted from his corporate superhero work. By now you probably know what Black Hammer is all about, a group of golden age heroes have been trapped in a town they can’t leave and are approaching their ten-year anniversary. They don’t know why they’re trapped; they don’t know why they can’t leave.

The issue follows most of the characters as we learn about their situation. For Abe, he’s adjusted and likes the life they have. His companions, including his granddaughter, not so much. His granddaughter is trapped in the body of a nine-year-old, which sucks for her since she’s nineteen. Others in the group seem to have lost their mind a bit, but what’s clear is that they function as a family unit. Even if they are one of the strangest families.

Black Hammer #1I’ll admit that I don’t know enough comic history to know everything that Lemire is giving homage here. The most obvious one is Barbalien who is an homage to Martian Manhunter, the others seem to be combination of Justice League of America and Justice Society of America. I could be off though. I recognize their tropes, though, because Lemire crafts them wonderfully. That’s the charming thing about his writing here because he tells you how they were and shows you how they are in the same instance. It gives you an idea of their character journey without showing you the past ten years or more.

The dialogue is smooth and natural. There’s some exposition, but it’s very intentional and while not explained, it seems like something that will be explained with future issues. Otherwise, each character has their own unique voice. This is the dialogue I wish more of Lemire’s work had.

The artwork is interesting. Originally when I saw Dean Ormston’s work I really liked it. I still like it, but it has its rough elements. There’s a part with a character turning their head that looks smushed and awkward. There’s varying success throughout the issue. The character designs are strong. They’re iconic, classic, and familiar all in the same blink. Dave Stewart’s coloring is gorgeous and gives the book a unique look. Particularly at the end in which we see more of the world. It’s rustic like a lot of his work but still different enough from his approach on the Mignolaverse.

This first issue was refreshing. It gave me hope that I might enjoy more of Lemire’s superhero work and it’s a step in the right direction for Dark Horse. Frankly, both the creator and publisher needed this book and after some unfortunate delays, it’s here and it delivers on all fronts.

[su_box title="Score: 4/5" style="glass" box_color="#8955ab" radius="6"]

Black Hammer #1
Writer: Jeff Lemire
Artist: Dean Ormston
Colorist: Dave Stewart
Publisher: Dark Horse Comics
Price: $3.99
Release Date: 7/20/16
Format: Mini-Series; Print/Digital

[/su_box]

 

Denver/Boulder In The "Indie Comics Capital of North America"

This just seems weird. In fact, I thought someone was fucking with me at first. If you don't know, I'm from Colorado. And when I lived there for the first 20 odd years of my life, it was definitely not the indie comic capital. Sure there's a lot of comic shops, but I would have to visit three locations to find fucking books. I guess things change when you move away, but hey... congrats. This is a weird press release to post, but I'm strangely smiling while posting it so... yeah. From Tinto Press:

Denver has snuck past long-time trend setters Portland and Seattle as the “Indie Comics Capital of North America,” according to the latest independent study conducted by Tinto Press, a small press publisher of award-winning indie comics, in cooperation with comics industry consultants and analysts in the US and Canada. The result of in-person and online polls of comics readers from 15 to 60 years of age in multiple targeted venues indicates that there are more independent comic fans per capita in the Denver/Boulder area than in anywhere else in North America.

“Indie” comics, sometimes called alternative comics, refers to comic books and graphic novels that are either self-published by creators or published by specialty small press houses. These types of comics typically revolve around autobiographical, literary and fantasy themes, as opposed to “mainstream” comics which are dominated by superheroes whose publishers, most famously Marvel and DC, are owned by conglomerates. While both genres are steadily growing, indies are growing at a faster pace and are increasingly the preference of younger and better educated comics readers.

Wayne Winsett, owner of Time Warp Comics in Boulder embraced the bragging rights as the continent’s new independent comics center. “I’m not at all surprised at the results of this study. I’ve always known that Denver / Boulder is full of eager minds for comics of substance. I’m proud of my customers’ diverse reading tastes, so this only confirms what I’ve suspected for some time.”

An underground “comix” pioneer, Denis Kitchen, who received the “Comics Legend” award at the recent Denver Independent Comics  & Art Festival (DINK), concurs. “I attend comic conventions all over the country, from the ridiculously huge ones in San Diego and New York to many smaller shows in between. I’ve seen more enthusiasm for indie comics in Denver than any other place in recent memory. Something’s definitely going on there.”

Kitchen, whose participation in a “Cannabis and Comics” bus tour held during the DINK Festival received national press attention, added that he thought Colorado’s changing pot laws were a factor in the area’s new distinction. “Good weed increases visual focus and introspective thought for most smokers, and so indie comics are tailor made for readers in such an altered state. That’s not to say that sober readers can’t enjoy good comics, but partakers often find the combination irresistible.”

Prior holders of the indie comics capital crown are Portland, Oregon (2012-2015), Seattle, Washington (2008, 2010-2011), San Francisco/Berkeley (2006-2007, 2009), and Toronto, Ontario (2004-2005). No formal polling was conducted prior to 2004, but industry observers almost uniformly agree that San Francisco/Berkeley, the original epicenter of the underground comix movement (the forerunner of the indie comics scene), held the informal crown from the late 1960s till around the turn of the century. New York City, host of the important annual indie MoCCA Fest, can lay claim to numerically more indie comics fans than other metropolitan areas, but on a per capita basis the Big Apple cannot compare to concentrated fan bases in communities like Denver.

Shannon Wheeler, a popular cartoonist and spokesperson for the newly dethroned Portland’s alternative comics scene, did not dispute the results of the new national reader survey, but laid down a challenge: “Denver’s cool, and maybe Portland’s slipping a little, but we’ll be back on top.”

When notified of Portland’s response, Charlie LaGreca, the organizer of DINK, was defiant. “We earned this Indie Comics Capital status. Our recent festival at the Sherman Events Center downtown was overflowing with exhibitors, artists, and fans, and we will not relinquish the crown. I will be a very old man,” he declared, “before another city will wrest this title away from Denver!…And I say that as a former New Yorker; a place also very dear to my heart.”

Comments from participants in the study credit Colorado’s healthy education community, a supportive network of comics retailers, Indie-focused festivals like DINK, the proliferation of comic drawing social clubs like Denver Drink & Draw and, more recently, the legalization of marijuana as bolstering the large and ever-increasing Indie Comics population.