Monthly Archives: June 2009

Update for 6/30/09

New review for Traffic & Weather by Rob Ullman, blah blah blah…

Update for 6/29/09

New review for The Monkey-Head Complaint by Sean Mac Roibin/John Robbins.

Update for 6/28/09

New review for Yearbooks by Nicholas Breutzman, Shaun Feltz & Raighne Hogan, otherwise known as a good chunk of the Various Good Minnesotan crew.

Update for 6/27/09

New review for The Red Stiletto by Marc Sobel, and does anybody have any ideas for a Optical Sloth birthday event?  I’m batting around a couple of ideas (this site turns 8 in a couple of months, you know), but will probably end up just casually mentioning it and moving on.  If anybody out there is enough of a dork to know the exact date when the site started, let me know, I’ll send you a free comic or something.  Bonus points if you also remember the original name of the site…

Update for 6/26/09

New review for Folk #3 by Tyler Stafford, one of my favorite new artists of the year, and I don’t care if he’s only considered “new” because I’d never seen his stuff before.

Update for 6/25/09

New review for Redskin Rashy: Rashy Rabbit #5 by Josh Lotta, and I do believe that there’ll be new graphic novels up here over the weekend, for those of you who wonder about those sorts of things…

Update for 6/24/09

New review for Old Man Winter & Other Sordid Tales by J.T. Yost, and yes, it is a bit of a boring week (personally, not in terms of comics) around here, how could you tell?

Update for 6/23/09

New review for Lost Kisses #8 by Brian John Mitchell.

Update for 6/22/09

New review for Gulatta! #1 by Joseph Morris.

Update for 6/21/09

New review for Sam n’ Dan by Jeff Lok, as my unintentional I Know Joe Kimpel week comes to an end.

Update for 6/20/09

New review for Woman King by Colleen Frakes, and I should point out for anybody who wants to check out both of her graphic novels that I Know Joe Kimpel is selling them as a pack for $12.  Wotta deal!

Update for 6/19/09

New review for Froghead Hangover by William Cardini, happy weekend everybody!

Update for 6/18/09

New review for Woman Woman #1 by Gareth Brookes, and expect to be seeing that name a lot more in the coming weeks as the man sent me a hefty pile of comics.

Update for 6/17/09

New review for Trivial, the latest anthology from the I Know Joe Kimpel crew.

Various: I Know Joe Kimpel Anthologies

Website

trivial1

Trivial

Huzzah for another anthology from the I Know Joe Kimpel crew!  Crap, did I give away my reaction already?  Oh well.  This is, as the title suggests, the depiction of 4 trivial events, often wrapped in far more dramatic events.  Well, five, as Sean Ford has two short pieces.  First up is a piece by Alexis Frederick-Frost about the second expedition to the South Pole (and no, I have no idea if this is fictional or not).  He narrows in on an ongoing discussion among the group members about various dishes they’re inventing, continuing their arguments even while facing death.  Next up is a creepy piece by Alex Kim which deals with the lead character relating his dream of his hands becoming giant sized and essentially going on a rampage.  The piece by A.L. Arnold is my runaway favorite of the anthology, as it depicts a wordless struggle (unless you count grunts as words) between the last remaining protector of the earth and a particularly stubborn meteorite.  The utterly thankless nature of the job, the grim resignation of the protector and that tremendous ending all make this a wonderful thing, and makes me wonder why I haven’t seen more from this guy.  Or girl, as A.L. could be anything.  Finally there’s the two pieces by Sean Ford, who everybody around here already knows as the man behind the series that is taking the small press world by storm, Only Skin.  These pieces don’t reveal any of the mysteries of that series, as they’re just conversations between the ghost and Clay, as the ghost tries to get Clay to poison a girl (due to his own hatred of the world) and reminisces about times he’s never had drinking in a cemetery.  This is another solid anthology, and I’m still mildly surprised when anthologies don’t have at least one weak piece in the collection.  So it’s great and they managed to keep it at an affordable (for the impressive packaging anyway) $5.  Hard to ask for much more than that.

trivial2

Sorry

The kids are building a comics army. Don’t panic though, that’s a good thing. I have to admit, I haven’t thought a whole lot about what happens to all these people taking classes at places like the Center for Cartoon Studies after they graduate, but luckily for the rest of us it looks like they have it all figured out. That website listed above has about a dozen whippersnappers, freshly graduated and ready to make some comics, with plenty available from just about everybody listed. This is the first of 4 anthologies, done mostly to defray the cost of going to conventions, and it’s great to confirm that yes, it sure looks like this medium does have a promising future. First up is probably the highlight of the anthology, Mermaid Monster Blues by Caitlin Plovnick, a disturbing yet highly plausible retelling of the mermaid fable by Hans Christian Anderson. Next is Bluejay the Imitator by Colleen Frakes, based on a native story of the bluejay trying to find his place in the world. Next, well, I take it back: Monkey Bars by Mario Van Buren has to be the highlight, as it goes into detail about why it’s a bad idea to distract kids climbing on the monkey bars. Finally there’s Burn by Emily Wieja, the silent tale of a pyromaniac. While there will probably always be people just randomly putting out mini comics, it looks like in the future there will also be a substantial pile of people who are professionally trained putting out mini comics. Over the long run this should have the effect of raising the bar for everybody else, and three cheers for that. $6

Update for 6/16/09

New review for The Fifty Flip Experiment #9 by Dan Hill, and if I haven’t answered your e-mail lately it’s because I’m just now getting around to looking at a bunch of stuff.  Sorry…

Hill, Dan – The Fifty Flip Experiment #7

Website

fiftyflip71

The Fifty Flip Experiment #7

Dan passes a crucial test with this issue: is it better than the last one?  In every way, and it’s not like the last issue was awful.  Of course, it is possible to pass that test too often and become like Dan Clowes.  Dan kept making every issue of Eightball better and better for years until eventually he lost the ability to make comics, as he eventually reached a critical mass of awesomeness.  As long as this Dan can avoid that, he should be fine.  Stories in this issue include the tale of Albrecht Durer (and Dan gets bonus points both for using the umlaut and for saying that Albrecht can use them every time they’re printed in his name “like a periscope from hell”), a studious and curious boy who’s also mildly homicidal, a young man who tunes out the cartoon villain who’s come to kill him, Neat Pete looking for cash, an unfortunate usage of a blender, a bad babysitter, the sternum and the awful, awful pun.  It made me chuckle more than a few times, what more can you ask for?  $2 (or $1 if you get it from Dan’s hands).

fiftyflip72

Update for 6/15/09

New review for Prologue by Kenan Rubenstein, another in his series of tiny minis that somehow manage to have some giant panels.  You’ll have to read it to learn his secret!

Update for 6/14/09

New review for Archcomix #1 by Dan Archer, and I hate to shill, but I keep reading that it’s “summer reading season”, as if you need a season to read, and thought I’d direct your attention to that little “comics store” tab at the top of the screen.  Plenty of comics in there for a dollar (some even less), a pretty impressive pile of graphic novels (if I do say so myself), and a good chunk of the profits go to getting me more comics/keeping me alive.  Oh, and paying the actual comics creators, which theoretically inspires them to make more comics, which is why you’re supposed to support your favorite artists and not just read all their stuff for free on their websites.  So poke around, see what you can see and all that.  Sales pitch over…

Update for 6/13/09

New review for Cash & Carry, the latest (as far as I can tell) graphic novel from Tim Broderick.