#graphic novels

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SPECIAL PREVIEW (continued)From now until the launch of 5 Worlds: The Sand Warrior on May 2nd, we’llSPECIAL PREVIEW (continued)From now until the launch of 5 Worlds: The Sand Warrior on May 2nd, we’ll

SPECIAL PREVIEW (continued)

From now until the launch of 5 Worlds: The Sand Warrior on May 2nd, we’ll be sharing the opening pages of the book in biweekly updates! Check back here on Sundays and Thursdays for the next couple pages of our sneak peak.

Preorder now from your favorite bookseller!


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Update Five Stars Predictions (pt. 2) ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐


Ages ago, nine months to be exact, I made a post of five star book predictions. And the problem with those types of things are that you not only want to read them all, but have time to write reviews, because most of them actually were great.

The Hidden Girl & Other Stories by Ken Liu (my review)

In short I really appreciated and liked this collection of short stories. I had my expectation set…


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Alvin Buenaventura (ed.): The Art of Daniel Clowes: Modern Cartoonist (2012)

Fan of DC Comics? Test your knowledge on our quiz with some of the less well known characters at htt

Fan of DC Comics? Test your knowledge on our quiz with some of the less well known characters at http://weej.co.uk/can-you-name-these-dc-comics-characters/


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Written by Neil Gaiman. Art and Adaptation by Colleen Doran. Letters by Todd Klein (with Colleen Doran on Chivalry).Published by Dark Horse Comics in the USA and Headline Books in the UK. Distributed by Penguin/Random House.

Available at all major comic book shops and all major bookstores.

Target, Walmart, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, BooksAMillion, Hudson, IndieBound.

Snow, Glass, Apples, and Troll Bridge: intended for adult readers.

Chivalry: for all ages.

Find a store at the Penguin/Random House website.

Hiya! You can now get Glitch on my online store! It comes signed, personalised and doodled in, and yHiya! You can now get Glitch on my online store! It comes signed, personalised and doodled in, and yHiya! You can now get Glitch on my online store! It comes signed, personalised and doodled in, and y

Hiya! You can now get Glitch on my online store! It comes signed, personalised and doodled in, and you also get a free bookplate and an Izzy enamel pin while stocks last! We ship worldwide!

Link:https://sarahgraley.mybigcommerce.com/glitch/

Glitch is my brand new graphic novel all about Izzy, a girl who can enter the world of her new video game! You can also get it from all good book and comic shops, both online and in the real world!


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zircon-rose: Zircon Rose || Chapter 7 - The Hunt Pt. 1 Previous Chapter | Back | Next > Recent &gzircon-rose: Zircon Rose || Chapter 7 - The Hunt Pt. 1 Previous Chapter | Back | Next > Recent &gzircon-rose: Zircon Rose || Chapter 7 - The Hunt Pt. 1 Previous Chapter | Back | Next > Recent &gzircon-rose: Zircon Rose || Chapter 7 - The Hunt Pt. 1 Previous Chapter | Back | Next > Recent &gzircon-rose: Zircon Rose || Chapter 7 - The Hunt Pt. 1 Previous Chapter | Back | Next > Recent &g

zircon-rose:

Zircon Rose || Chapter 7 - The Hunt Pt. 1

Previous Chapter |Back|Next>Recent>>


*bursts forth from inside a huge 3 layer cake* HWUAH.

Thanks so much for your patience you guys! I needed that break so badly. ;v; And I am. So stoked. About what we’re getting into now.

On a separate note, it is nowwww convention season! Those in the Southeastern US, I’ll be at Outlantacon in Atlanta May 10-12, and Megacon Orlando May 16-19. Come say hi!!


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Next up is Displacement by Kiku Hughes. The concept for this one is very interesting and I’m excited to finally dive into this story. I think this is the first graphic novel I’ve read about the Japanese American internment camps during WWII. George Takei’s They Called Us Enemy is another graphic novel about the subject and it as been on on tbr list for a while so I’ll have to check my library’s website to see if they’ve got it. Fingers crossed.


Some panels from Sean Seamus McWhinny’scomicAnd This is How I Leave You, his contribution to Covid Chronicles.

Next up, Covid Chronicles. There are dozens of authors and artists who contributed to this anthology so I decided to just snap photos of the Contents page. (If anyone is willing to do an image description for this I would be eternal grateful.) I hope to be able to read all of them but I suspect at least a few will prove to be too much for me to process at the moment.

Working late tonight on some drafts and thumbnails ✨

Cover Art || Wash Day Diaries by Jamila Rowser & Robyn SmithFrom writer Jamila Rowser and artist

Cover Art || Wash Day Diaries by Jamila Rowser & Robyn Smith

From writer Jamila Rowser and artist Robyn Smith comes a captivating graphic novel love letter to the beauty and endurance of Black women, their friendships, and their hair.

Wash Day Diaries tells the story of four best friends—Kim, Tanisha, Davene, and Cookie—through five connected short story comics that follow these young women through the ups and downs of their daily lives in the Bronx.

The book takes its title from the wash day experience shared by Black women everywhere of setting aside all plans and responsibilities for a full day of washing, conditioning, and nourishing their hair. Each short story uses hair routines as a window into these four characters’ everyday lives and how they care for each other.

Jamila Rowser and Robyn Smith originally kickstarted their critically acclaimed, award-winning slice of life mini comic, Wash Day, inspired by Rowser’s own wash day ritual and their shared desire to see more comics featuring the daily lived experiences of young Black women. Wash Day Diaries includes an updated, full color version of this original comic—which follows Kim, a 26-year-old woman living in the Bronx—as the book’s first chapter and expands into a graphic novel with short stories about these vibrant and relatable new characters.

In expanding the story of Kim and her friends, the authors pay tribute to Black sisterhood through portraits of shared, yet deeply personal experiences of Black hair care. From self-care to spilling the tea at an hours-long salon appointment to healing family rifts, the stories are brought to life through beautifully drawn characters and different color palettes reflecting the mood in each story.

Artwork by Robyn Smith

Release date | Jun 14, 2022
Goodreads


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Lovely sketch of Dream and his big sister Death from Neil Gaiman’s Sandman series, artwork by the br

Lovely sketch of Dream and his big sister Death from Neil Gaiman’s Sandman series, artwork by the brilliant Colleen Doran.


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Short version: After he is given an accidental overdose of monster mutagen, Aurelian finds his life changed forever in two ways: first, he is now a permanent employee of Zombillenium, a “monster” theme park that functions as a cover for actual monsters; second, he transforms into a giant winged demon whenever he’s angry.  Trouble begins when his wife’s lover enters the park.

What I thought:  I love it when things are goofy and cute on the outside and incredibly dark when you scratch the surface.  Zombilleniumis no different, and my only complaint was that it was too short.  Fortunately, volume two exists, with prospects open for a third.
There’s really something for everyone here.  One of my favorite tropes is the suddenly-transformed person trying to make sense of their new body, their fear, their confusion, the opportunity for sight gags when they employ trial/error procedures.  It’s wonderfully endearing, and poor Aurelian works it.  Next we have the sullen and mysterious witch, Gretchen, his grudging friend and parole officer, who has enormous power and scant control over it.  I liked that she’s given a blobby nose; it makes her distinctive, normal.
The zombies were just adorable.  Their act in the park is to put on a replica of the Thrillermusic video dance, but the fact that they’re unionized and completely incompetent at the game of revenge (Aurelian stole their thunder with his arrival) made for some great comic relief.
I mentioned darkness?  It’s there.  While the park may seem like a less-sexualized version of Monster High (thank god) or a more French version of Hotel Transylvania, it comes out that every member of the park staff is there because the Devil owns their soul.  Apparently monsters aren’t born, they’re made, and one cannot become a monster if the soul is anything other than hell-bound already.  We even get to see what happens when a member of the staff is “fired”–suffice to say, the word is more literal than we use it normally.
The art was wonderful, no lines at all, just color blocks and shading for a tablet-drawn look that really brought home the modern perspective of the story.  Color and mood mesh pretty well, and the expressions are so perfect it broke my heart to see Aurelian struggle, it was that relatable.

Read if you liked: Fablesby Bill Willingham, The Unwritten by Mike Carey, Teen Titans by Bob Haney, Chewby John Layman

Short version: Two college kids drive around in the snow.  He’s about to join the army.  They fail to see the national landmark, Thunderhead Underground falls.

What I thought:  That’s all.  That’s it.  There is nothing that happens in this story.  At first I thought the nowhere conversations and the little stops they make in their snowy drive were Tarantinoing, that is to say, small conversations and focuses that make the action all the more jarring by contrast.  Turns out, no, this is what looks like a word-for-word account of real life, which if you’ve ever listened to how real life is, you understand how bored I was.
Also annoying is that the cover art is so much more interesting than the art inside.  I picked it up because it reminded me of Edward Gorey or Richard Sala, all full of sinister foreboding and close detail.  When it turned out to be quite the opposite, sloppy line drawing and all-white backgrounds (snow, remember), by then I had to finish the damn thing just to get some validation.  It never came.
The pacing jumped around a lot as well, sometimes flashing forward to the boy lying on his bunk in boot camp, but it might also have been a cancer ward because the only details we get are that he and his bunkmate are bald and weepy.
For a mediocre time and dull art, go to a public restroom.  If that doesn’t last long enough, read Thunderhead Underground Falls.

Ugh, what a waste of time.  You want something that actually looks like it belongs inside of that cover?  I’ll save you, baby birds.

Read instead: Delphineby Richard Sala, The Motherless Oven by Rob Davis, House of Leaves by Mark Danielewski, Dodgerby Terry Pratchett.

Short version: Anda is invited to join an all-girls guild in an MMORPG very like World of Warcraft.  While there she and another member of the guild take it upon themselves to “clean out” the gold farmers– players who do nothing but sell game resources for real world cash.  Anda accidentally befriends one of the gold farmers she had meant to kill, only to discover that the player behind the avatar is a teen like herself, working the gold farm in China under harsh conditions.  She is left with the ethical decision to help him and the others in his “office,” which risks alienating herself and losing him his job.

What I thought:  I have quite a positive opinion here, but a few details nipped at me.  In the very beginning of the story, the guild recruiter calls herself “one of the first girl gamers”–I strongly doubt that.  The stereotype of the male gamer who has nothing but contempt for female gamers is there for a reason, but women and girls have been defying that stigma ever since there have been games, of any sort, not just online.  Now that’s out of the way, I can gush.
What a great story!  I loved that the plot really addresses the global aspect of online gaming, how it puts players in touch who would otherwise never have met, makes friends across continental borders, and opens eyes to other ways of living.  Anda has sympathy for her Chinese friend’s predicament, and unthinkingly gives him the advice that she would give to an American in the same position, unaware that things are very different in China, with very different consequences for failure.  In addition to that, she slowly comes to grasp the notion that bullying is not always obvious, and that it’s possible to take part in it without knowing.
What I liked most had to do with Doctrow taking the absolute best part of online game philosophy and running with it, namely the fact that the person you play in the game is a perfect version of yourself.  On the surface that means Anda’s avatar has a beautiful body and dresses well, she’s agile and skilled, she is good at her job and is under nobody’s control.  In the real world, she lives by her mother’s rules, she wears the same frumpy sweater every day, she’s shy and doesn’t have the courage to stand up for others.
But then something wonderful happens: her avatar starts doing the right thing, she helps the Chinese players and accepts the blame when it goes badly, then fixes what she messed up even though it means going to a lot of trouble.  Slowly, her avatar becomes a better version of Anda herself, and the two start to blend, first with Anda dying her hair to match her avatar’s, then with an attitude adjustment that makes her a better person in real life.
So this is a great story for girls, especially the ones who spend a lot of time online or could be classified as “millennials” by people who use the word distastefully.  It’s a good one for anyone who games online, male or female, as a how-to guide on the right way to behave towards your fellow humans, even if you never see their face.

Read if you liked: Lumberjanesby Noelle Stevenson, Fangirlby Rainbow Rowell, Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card, .hack (Dot Hack) by Koichi Mashimo

The short version: Semi-historical account of the events leading up to the revolution of Fiume, a city lost from Italy just after WWI. Four stories intertwine: rival gang members fighting over stolen goods, the poet-politician D’Annunzio’s rise to power, a cabaret singer finding love in a war-torn world, and an ex-soldier reeling from the trauma of his experience in the trenches.

What I thought: A bit of research has told me that the revolution in the story really did happen, more or less in the way this graphic portrayed it.  Some pretty ridiculous measures and philosophies were put in place by people who should have known better, rioting was a common occurrence, and it all happened to take place during the rise of the Dadaist movement, which used elements of art and symbolism to protest against political ideals.  Ok.
I didn’t feel any real attachment to any of the characters, though I came close to it with the soldier.  I still feel like his story was forced and rushed, painting him as this mysterious neutral force in his own world, but then doing a hard 180 and declaring that he is constantly hallucinating horrifying visions from the war.  Maybe it’s part of the absurdist tone the graphic takes, but the soldier doesn’t seem all that bothered by seeing his dead friends and having flashbacks.  He just sort of accepts it and goes about his business writing for an art newspaper.
The singer didn’t need to be there at all.  Her part in this was pretty much to be a sexy lamp, as she doesn’t do anything and doesn’t affect the plot in any way, and even in the epilogue when she breaks off her relationship with the soldier, both of them are nonplussed and don’t particularly care that she did.
The gang member story didn’t really need to be there either, as they mostly represented a series of faces and names that appeared and were killed off too quickly to keep track of, let alone care too deeply about.
The political story was interesting, but like anything that has to do with WWI, even distantly, it’s incredibly complicated and there’s no good way to tell if the person speaking is telling the truth, or is even loyal to his apparent team.  It’s a mess, just like life, but not in the way that regular life is a mess.  It’s a mess like only an anarchist, sort-of Italian government who is literally taking advice from madmen can be.  (This is true, actually.  They recruited extremely delusional people from local mental institutions for their “original thinking and lack of inhibition.”)
All in all, read it if you like extra-chunky art style and historical fiction.  If you’re turned off by overly-complicated political stories, maybe skip it and read some of the philosophical “if you liked” suggestions instead.

Read it if you liked: Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead by Tom Stoppard, Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett, The Stranger by Albert Camus, Equusby Peter Shaffer.

The short version: Thissal is sent to be ambassador (I think) to an alien planet where the society and one’s place in it is determined by one’s musical skill (everyday conversation accompanied by a variety of etiquette-relevant instruments) and their mask, worn at all times.  Thissal tries to solve a murder, made more difficult by the masks and their interchangeability, all the while making one faux pas after another.

What I thought: Two points of context before we get into my opinion.  First, this was based on a short story.  Second, that story was published in 1961.
With that in mind, it certainly had the feel of a short story.  graphics usually don’t skip through months at a time without some intention of showing a change, but short stories do it all the time, and the pacing was similar.  I don’t know whether I would have liked the text version better or not; the number of musical instruments that every citizen carries with them just for communication is pretty intimidating, but in the graphic version, each speech was also given a beautiful illustration to show which instrument was in use, and a handy guide as to what those meant.  It did mean I had to keep flipping back to the guide, but at the same time, I quite liked the translation of sound into graphic.  Harsh clacks with two bricks for speaking to slaves made a dark red, triangular sound, while the formal lute-like instrument for addressing a superior had intricate, lacy curls and webs.  This all made for a complicated reading, but it was pretty useful as there was no way to get the emotion from looking at any speaker’s face due to the masks.
It was all very high sci-fi and a clever way to communicate sound and intention. 
But.
I have to forgive Vance for creating a story from a 1960′s American viewpoint.  I know this, but I still didn’t like that the aliens looked exactly like humans, the slave class looked like dark-skinned humans, and there were exactly two women in the story, one of whom is molested and the other who screams when she sees a man exposing himself.  Neither women nor slaves have active speaking roles, and that bothers me.  Thissal even mentions that he had a long conversation with a few slaves, offscreen, and it did not have to be that way.  It’s the same classist, racist, sexist bullshit that silver age sci-fi is just lousy with, and there’s no way to pretend it’s otherwise.
But it made me think.  That’s high enough praise to warrant a good look.
This is good for fans of old school science fiction and those who have either experimented with politics or suffered from synesthesia.

Read if you liked: I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream by Harlan Ellison, The Lady or the Tiger? by Frank Stockton, I, Robot by Isaac Asimov, anything by Ray Bradbury

The short version: Alexandra discovers a bookmobile in her town that contains everything she has ever read, from childhood books to her own diary to cereal boxes.  She forms a connection with the librarian and becomes a librarian herself, as the bookmobile disappears and randomly appears throughout her life.  She wishes to join the organization that arranged it, but they decline her offer.

What I thought:  I like the concept, and the back assured me that this was the first iteration of a much larger work, but until then, it just seemed kind of pointless.  I got really interested just before the end, and then it was done and there was nothing left for me to do except wonder where the last few minutes went and why.
Alexandra, I think, would be much more interesting of a character if she did anything.  While I’m right there with her in insisting that reading is something, and a worthy activity and an incredible experience, it is not something that’s all that interesting to watch someone else do.  Right as I was about to wonder if she would ever do anything outside of the written word, she slits her wrists and magically joins the bookmobilers, who apparently require that in order to join them the end go home we’re done.
What?  No, that’s–I refuse to believe that the only interesting thing that a human ever did was die.  No.  Decline.  That is the wrong fucking message, and Niffenegger should have known better.
Also, maybe she ought to have considered that she isn’t all that good of an artist.  It was pretty well done for an amateur, and did at least look like the work of someone who had taken an art class and understood perspective and expression.  The quality slipped a lot whenever the focus was on a character that didn’t already look like Niffenegger herself, and even then, slipped further when given a front-face view.  I’ve reviewed plenty of things that had sloppy style or unusual dialogue choices, but this is not like those things.  It’s pretty much a boring picture book that should have been interesting, with not that great art.  Sorry.
I can give you stories of voracious readers that were interesting, though.  Worry not.

Read instead: Matildaby Roald Dahl, Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon, Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury, The Know-It-All by AJ Jacobs.

Short version: Graphic retelling of Franz Kafka’s novella, wherein Gregor Samsa randomly awakens one morning as a giant cockroach.  His family is horrified and repulsed, and as his humanity wanes further and further, the family must decide between accommodating him and balancing their finances, as he had been the primary breadwinner.  It goes poorly for everyone.

What I thought: Because this is an abridged version of an otherwise jaw-dropping tale, the storytelling is perhaps not what it could be.  That is not Kafka’s fault.  You should go and read the original immediately.  The problem is that the original was already trimmed down to its absolute skeleton, and the graphic version cuts away even further until we’re left with just the events, and very little of the commentary.
I loved the original story.  It’s body horror at its best, something to chill even the most hardened of skeptics; sure you could be afraid of the unexplained nature of Gregor’s transformation, because bugs are gross and they do gross things.  But how much more complicated it is!  I always felt it was a metaphor, maybe for the difficulties that surround a sick family member, or one who has suffered some disfiguring injury.  Gregor’s family can barely remember that he is still their Gregor, disgusted as they are with his body, and eventually assume that he can’t even understand them because he cannot speak.
Does anyone here fear getting old?  You should.  I first read this story while my ailing grandmother was spending her last weeks at our house, and it kept me wide awake for days.
Regarding the art, I thought Kuper’s illustrations fit the story perfectly.  The harsh black and white, the thick outlines that are a lot like a 1960′s political cartoon (actually, they are exactly that–Kuper is the artist behind Spy Vs. Spy), the sharp crosshatching, all of it is exactly as nasty and grotesque as the story itself.  It’s hard to look at in all the best ways, taking the style right into the surreal tone of the thing.  I may not love the paring down of the text, but the art makes up for it.

Read if you liked: Johnny the Homicidal Maniac by Jhonen Vasquez, Salem Brownstone by John Dunning, Black Hole by Charles Burns, The Crow by J. O’Barr

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Short version: Zora, princess of her mountain tribe, seeks to make peace with the neighboring tribe.  Upon her arrival, she discovers no tribe, but the only survivor: a twelve-year-old boy named Broxo.  Alone but for his pet beast and the witch of the mountain, he battles for his survival against the undead hordes of his slaughtered tribe.  Together with Zora, Broxo must solve the mystery as to why the dead will not stay down, and what all this has to do with the witch.

What I thought: This had a lot of elements from other stories that were incredible.  You had the slight vulgarity of Elfquest, the multi-generational magic of Bone, the one-boy-against-incredible-powers stacked odds of Legend of Zelda, and the dark worldbuilding of Dragon Age.  All of those things were there, in exactly the way you’re picturing them.
By that I mean, exactlythe way.  So much of this story seems stitched together from more famous stories that I felt almost cheated when it turned out to be so short, complete in one volume what it took the other stories years to tell.  Broxo is Giallongo’s first work, and it shows; not in any real bad points, mind, just has a lot of components in it that I think would have gone away with more experience in storytelling.  I did like that he wasn’t afraid to let his characters die occasionally, when the story called for it.  I did not like that he brought them all back in a happy ending where (almost) nobody dies except the bad guys.  I think leaving them dead would have made for a much more powerful story, given some idea of gravitas to the whole thing that it otherwise lacked.
And because a feminist perspective is how I roll, let’s talk about Zora for a minute.  She’s all set up to be this badass barbarian when we first meet her, capable of using both sword and bow, can make her own fires and hunt her own food.  So why, given those factors, does she spend the majority of her screen time falling into “damsel in distress” tropes?  She gets rescued multiple times by Broxo, secretly enjoys getting caught bathing, and her sole contribution to a battle with a hyena-creature is nipping its tail off while Broxo does all the work.  She picks up again later in the final battle, but it comes at the expense of using a cliched phrase I really can’t stand (”With my brains and your muscle, we can do this!”) (seriously) (what brains we have seen no brains there are no brains here there’s barely sense let alone brains).
In conclusion, this is a good fantasy for those who are afraid of commitment or possibly who just liked all those other works I mentioned above and would like to see them reflected in something that is not quite as good as any of them but still pretty decent.  Or if you’re still a kid and want fantasy to be less dark than I personally like it.

Read if you liked: Elfquestby Wendy and Richard Pini, Boneby Jeff Smith, Amuletby Kazu Kibuishi, Dragons of Autumn Twilight by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman.

Short version: Scott reels from a bad breakup and moves to Japan to become a sumo wrestler.  At the dojo, they change everything about him from his hair color to his name, and in the process he changes himself.

What I thought: This was a sweet story, one of those “find your inner strength” sort of inspirational tales, but the fact that Scott is such a gentle giant really makes it genuine.  Sumo is an ancient sport, full of masculinity and raw power, neither of which is really part of Scott’s personality.  He’s the sort of person who gently lets fish go when he hooks them, and accepts punishments without even considering complaining.  Still, he finds a way to balance everything in a wonderfully Zen way, and finds real peace through taking control of his life.
I can’t say much after that, because this thing was really short, practically a pamphlet.  I loved the art, very simple stuff that only used color as a means of showing which setting Scott was in, blue for America, orange for the dojo, green for the fishing spot.  Still, the artist manages to show the reader exactly what the appeal of sumo is, which to an American eye can be hard to grasp.  It’s not just fat guys being near-naked, people.  These guys are athletes, and they command your respect.  So does all the pageantry of the rest of the sport.
I’d call this a good one for anyone considering a change in cultures.

Read if you liked: 47 Ronin by Sean Michael Wilson, The Lady or the Tiger? by Frank Stockton, Slothby Gilbert Hernandez, The Arrival Shaun Tan

theartofstephen: Still hard at work on these panels. Visit itanproject.com to pre-order your copy of

theartofstephen:

Still hard at work on these panels. Visit itanproject.com to pre-order your copy of Itan: Part 1 Today.


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Hey All!Check out some of the concept art for chapter two of Itan: Part 1 a comic based on Yoruba orHey All!Check out some of the concept art for chapter two of Itan: Part 1 a comic based on Yoruba orHey All!Check out some of the concept art for chapter two of Itan: Part 1 a comic based on Yoruba orHey All!Check out some of the concept art for chapter two of Itan: Part 1 a comic based on Yoruba orHey All!Check out some of the concept art for chapter two of Itan: Part 1 a comic based on Yoruba or

Hey All!

Check out some of the concept art for chapter two of Itan: Part 1 a comic based on Yoruba oral literature.  Be sure to support the comic by visiting www.itanproject.com. Support Black Comics!


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Although I havent posted updates in a while i am still hard at work finishing Itan: part one a graph

Although I havent posted updates in a while i am still hard at work finishing Itan: part one a graphic novel based yoruba oral literature. Please visit https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/itan-part-one-africa-art/x/15991312#/. We still have long way to go to reach our goal. Please support Itan: Part one today!


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VanCAF is this weekend!The Vancouver Comic Arts Festival is a free event, open to everyone. If you’r

VanCAF is this weekend!

The Vancouver Comic Arts Festival is a free event, open to everyone. If you’re a fan of comic books, graphic novels, zines, or just interested in learning more about the people who create them, you should come!

With over 300 comic creators, panels and workshops, plus lessons on comic creation for kids, there’s something for everyone at VanCAF this weekend.

For more info and details, visit VanCAF.com


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For everyone interested in exhibiting at VanCAF, the deadline to do so has been extended an additional month. Rather than December 31, applications are now due Wednesday, January 31, 2018. The decision was made to help alleviate some holiday stress from our potential exhibitors, and to encourage new folks to apply as well!

Here’s a link to the exhibitor application. Thank you for reading!

Graphic Novels ARE BooksI have heard many times adults and others put down Graphic novels as if they

Graphic Novels ARE Books

I have heard many times adults and others put down Graphic novels as if they are not a valid form of literature and I refute that claim. I believe graphic novels to be not just a gateway into reading for some people but I huge force to be reckoned with. This print came about because I wanted to remind adults, teachers, librarians, parents, and kids themselves to read more Graphic Novels! I want to advocate for these stories as books. I want them used in elementary, jr and high schools, college, and more to read for fun and to learn. Don’t let anyone tell you that graphic novels are not real books. They are and they are a powerful way to tell a story.

PrintHERE


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I’ll be at MCBA’s annual FallCon, the One Day Wonder, tomorrow! That’s Saturday, O

I’ll be at MCBA’s annual FallCon, the One Day Wonder, tomorrow! That’s Saturday, October 4, from 10am-5pm. Please come by and visit, maybe even buy a comicortwo. Or bring one to get signed—I’ll sign whatever you want.


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Luke Reviews does a review of The Beast of Wolfe’s Bay:
http://lukereviews.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-beast-of-wolfes-bay-by-erik-evensen.html

Luke says, “Fans of monster horror fiction, monster movies, or cryptids will have a blast with this.  The Beast of Wolfe’s Bay is fun graphic fiction at its very finest.” It is available on Amazonand comiXology.

teamhellions:The Beast of Wolfe’s Bay Review.From Erik Evensen. [youtube=http://www.youtube.com/

teamhellions:

The Beast of Wolfe’s Bay Review.

From Erik Evensen.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8reK5u_aUY&w=593&h=364]

http://www.wolf…

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A pretty cool review of The Beast of Wolfe’s Bay from last summer.


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