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Comics Have Never Been So Much Fun

Monthly April 22, 2008:
CWN and the Grand Finale!
-

Flipped

Weekly February 4, 2008:
In Conclusion
- David ends his CWN run with Tezuka's MW from Vertical

Heaven Knows I'm Miserable Now

Monthly February 2, 2008:
Acting Like You Have Nothing to Prove
-

The Draft

Weekly February 2, 2008:
The Shoegazer Returns
- A New Year Begins, And Our Narrator Makes A Pledge

Judgment Day

Weekly January 30, 2008:
Tim's Reviews
-

Pull List

Weekly September 13, 2007:
Wizard World Chicago Loot, Part One
- Stykman, Empty Chamber, the Ztarian Saga, and yes, Little Bunny Foo Foo

Guttermouth

Weekly February 15, 2007:
I Come Not to Bury Nick Cage...
- But to mourn the death of my punchline

Chicks and Romance

Bi-weekly November 20, 2006:
The End
- Rich's last Chicks & Romance

Past the Front Racks

Weekly November 8, 2006:
Joann Sfar's Klezmer
- And a Front Racks Hiatus

Fathers' Day

Monthly October 4, 2006:
This Month's Guest: Dave Gibbons
- From the pages of Elephantmen!

Avoiding Extinction

Monthly September 18, 2006:
Back in Berlin
- or How I spent my summer

Comics and Crumpets

Monthly July 29, 2006:
KICKING UP A STORM
- An interview with David Lloyd

Grim Tidings

Bi-weekly June 19, 2006:
You Ain't Never Had A Friend Like Me.
- Graeme looks at Spidey's "genies"

That's News to Me

Weekly December 18, 2005:
Disappointed
- Sad news for fans of Busiek's CONAN, Stephen King, and others

From the Other Side

Monthly December 13, 2004:
JUSTICE UNPLUGGED 2 at last !!!
- By Fabrice Sapolsky & Xavier Fournier

12 Step Program

Monthly December 2, 2004:
THE TWELFTH AND FINAL STEP
- Say it ain't so, Dan.

Time of the Month

Weekly November 23, 2004:
The importance of editing
-

Mysteries and Conundrums

Monthly September 29, 2004:
Mystery and Conundrum indeed!
- Where in the world is Jason Pomerantz?

Border Patrol

Weekly September 13, 2004:
Hello and Goodbye and Hello Again
- Change is in the air at CWN and it smells sweet.

Quoth the Raiven

Weekly August 12, 2004:
The Rise of the Web Toon
- New Business Model or Dumb Luck?

Spin Doctors

Weekly July 30, 2004:
The Name Says it All...
- Spin Doctors revamp Boomerang.

Making It Up As I Go

Weekly July 27, 2004:
Bigger Isn't Always Better
-

Subsurface Communications

Weekly June 8, 2004:
Pre-emptive Strike: MoCCA Arts Festival
- Looking forward to the con, rather than looking back at it


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Monthly The Layer Method
Our top Secret time-saving technique for creating and merging balloons and tails in Illustrator.

Flipped

Friday, September 3, 2010

Read These

David gets a little help from his friends

In the spirit of Shaenon K. Garrity’s wonderful Overlooked Manga Festival, I wanted to devote a column to some books that might not be getting the attention they deserve. In the interest of variety, I pestered others for their picks.

Here’s part one:

Katherine Dacey-Tsuei is manga editor for PopCultureShock, overseeing the invaluable Manga Recon weblog and exploring less manga-centric topics in Kate no Komento:

Duck Prince (Ai Morinaga, Central Park Media): Ai Morinaga excels at a certain kind of bawdy comedy in which her male and female characters swap traditional gender roles (and sometimes bodies, too), learning more about the opposite sex in the process. In Duck Prince, she takes a standard shojo premise -- geeky girl gets a makeover to impress the guy of her dreams -- and turns it on its head: its hero, Reichii Swan, is a short, helmet-haired nerd who, through a combination of magic and cosmetic surgery, becomes a smokin’ hottie.

Duck Prince isn’t as polished as Your and My Secret, but it scores big points for its brisk pace, winning cast of characters, and tartly funny message of self-acceptance.


















Forest of Gray City (Jung-Hyun Uhm, ICE Kunion/Yen Press): If you’ve exhausted Tokyopop’s josei line, you can stave off withdrawal by reading this quirky Korean romance. The story explores similar terrain as b>Suppli and Tramps Like Us, documenting an ambitious young woman’s attempt to find a place for herself in a marriage-minded culture. The twist: the heroine’s love interest is a self-sufficient seventeen-year-old with a killer sense of style. (Hey listen, it wouldn’t be josei without a fantasy element, right?) Funny, honest, and sharply illustrated, Forest of Gray City deserves a bigger audience when it returns from hiatus in 2008.”

MangaCast’s
manly-man-manga-loving Master of Ceremonies Ed Chavez to go full-on seinen with his recommendations, but the Otaku USAcolumnist and Publishers Weekly Comics Week contributor has a softer side:


















High School Girls Oshima Towa (DrMaster/Futabasha) - Easily the funniest manga in English, Oshima's HSG started off as a biographical manga of sorts detailing the mangaka's humorous (often raunchy) experiences in an all-girls school. While the gags are often visual and play off moe/bishojo schisms, Oshima's writing is deeply rooted in josei - filled with
jokes about the menstral cycle, nipple creme and body hair. How this manga isn't 18+ I am not sure, but I am grateful that everything DrMaster is firmly under the radar.



















Gunslinger Girl by: Aida Yu (ADV Manga/Media Works) - In a similar way to how the word otaku has a negative connotation in Japan, but is almost embraced in America. Moe has been frowned upon by American otaku while it is clearly the foundation of everything otaku in Japan. Gunslinger Girl fulfills three different unique passions/fetishes:

1- A passion for anything Italian. After the Korean wave came a huge Italy boom, partially supported by Bambino (an Italian cooking
manga), the handful of wine manga that are all over the international press, and Salto Finito - the original Italian suit manga.

2- A Sonoda Kenichi-style obsession with guns. Where building and firing guns take on an almost sexual feel.

3- And the need to raise soulless emotionally damaged bishojo that so many otaku have.

Gunslinger Girl... Well drawn primer to pop-culture perversion. $9.99 and 16+...”

Brigid Alverson’s MangaBlog is one of the must-stop manga resources on the web, and like Chavez, she’s been burning up the PWCW pages with manga news and interviews. Here are her homonymous picks:

There are two manga that I don’t hear enough people talking about, and they have almost the same name.

The first is Del Rey’s ES: Eternal Sabbath, by Fuyimi Soriyo, which has a pretty good story and amazingly expressive art. In the story, the hero goes inside of people’s heads and sees their thoughts, and I love the way the artist makes emotions visual.
















The other book that I wish got more love is Broccoli’s , by Satol Yuiga. It’s one of those psychic-teenagers-save-the-world books, but it breaks out of the genre ghetto with memorable characters and stylish art.”

Kevin Melrose is a veteran comics commentator and a mainstay at Newsarama’s house weblog, Blog@Newsarama. He looked to two of the quirkier American independent publishers for his picks:


















The Last Call Vasilis Lolos (Oni Press): I fell for Vasilis Lolos' art in the oh-so-late Image miniseries The Pirates of Coney Island, but with The Last Call he impresses me with his writing by merging the mundane with the fantastic: Two teens on a late-night joyride end up on the Miyazaki-esque transdimensional Ghost Train. Yes, "Miyazaki-esque."

Zombies Calling, by Faith Erin Hicks (SLG Publishing): To be honest, I'm not a big fan of the zombie stories, with all the running and the lumbering and the brainsss. However, Faith Erin Hicks' wry, metafictional Zombies Calling has me re-evaluating my opinion of the subgenre. If more heroines battled the walking dead with a spork and a quip, I could become a genuine devotee.”

Matthew (not that one) Brady has been bringing the comics love for about a year now at his delightful weblog, Warren Peace Sings the Blues



















Super Spy, by Matt Kindt (Top Shelf) - I don't know if this is underrated, per se, since I've seen it on a few "best of 2007" lists, but while I was reading it I was certain that it was definitely one of the best books of the year, and I just haven't seen too many reviews of the book at all, whether they agree with me on that or not. It's an expansive, multifaceted look at World War II espionage, with emphasis on the human, emotional cost of the spy trade.
















PX! A Girl and Her Panda,
by Eric A. Anderson and Manny Trembley (Image Comics) - I think I've seen one review (other than my own) of this web-to-print comic from the creators of Sam Noir: Samurai Detective; it really deserves more attention, with it's fun plot, goofy characters, and beautiful artwork.”

Next week: More of the same, from different people!


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Friday, February 8, 2008

• The End.
So long. Farewell. Auf Wiedersehen. Good night.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

• Closing time
You don't have to go home...

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

• Oni resurrects letters columns
Resurrection series features letter-writing contest

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

• And... we're back
With Red 5 info

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

• Happy Thanksgiving!
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Lettering powerhouse and CWN sponsor turns 15

Monday, November 19, 2007

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