Talk To Me
ibrill [at] gmail [dot] com

New Blog Feed
Feed this blog!

More of My Writings
Publisher's Weekly Comics Week
Maximum Fun (Home of The Sound of Young America)


The Essential Brill Building

Grant Morrison Speaks Pt. 1

Grant Morrison Speaks Pt. 2

Young, Snotty and Blogging

Kevin Huizenga's Or Else #2

Frank Miller and Jim Lee's All-Star Batman

What the is this?
Comic books, rock 'n' roll and movies. I like to think that I've matured past 14-years-old but I suppose you will have to be the judge of that.

Support a Good Store
eBay Auctions

Love Is All Around
ADD Too Flat
Neilalien
Comics Worth Reading
The Hurting
Mike Sterling's Progressive Ruin
I Am NOT The Beastmaster
Tom The Dog's Y'know What I Like?
The Beat
Big Mouth Types Again
Highway 62
Jog The Blog
BeaucoupKevin
Comics.212.net
Fred Hembeck
The Comics Reporter
(postmodernbarney.com)
Fabio Moon and Gabriel Ba
Dave's Long Box
The House Next Door
The Sound of Young America

Look It Up
Grand Comics Database

Some of My Favorites
Johnny Ryan
Peter Bagge
Grant Morrison
Steve Englehart
Paul Pope
Taiyo Matsumoto
Dean Haspiel
Evan Dorkin
Alan Moore
Jack Kirby
Steve Gerber

Previous Posts *Site Feed*
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
Recommended Reading

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

The latest issue of Comic Art features extensive articles on three different artists, Richard McGuire, Drew Freidman and Jim Starlin, but the coverage retains the same quality for all three: enriching. Chris Ware praises McGuire, who is later interviewed, but the real draw is that his comic "Here," which first ran in one of the digest-sized issues of RAW, gets a nice big presentation. It's one of the best strips I have ever read, telling a story you can only tell in comics. McGuire's work is scarce so I'm thankful Comic Art provides so much information and insight into a rare talent.

The Freidman article is basically a mini-biography on the greatest carciturist alive. It goes over everything from the artist's obsession with obscure film stars like Rondo Hatton, being a student of Harvey Kurtzman and Will Eisner, what New York City was like in the late-'70s/early-'80s and how to raise the ire of Woody Allen. Freidman's sense of pop culture permeates today in way it never did when he was starting out but that just makes books like Warts and All more of a revelation.

Finally, I really enjoyed my Publishers Weekly Comics Week colleague Douglas Wolk's article on Jim Starlin's Warlock run. These are some the strangest and greatest comic a mainstream company released in the 1970s and deserved the examination Wolk gives them. Anyone who is fan of the weird world of 70s Marvel (which seems to be no small group when you consider the latest "Essential" volumes) would do themselves a favor checking out this article.

All that and a little book of Seth's work. It's great stuff, buy this damn magazine.

Permanent Link: 12:19 PM | 1 comments

Comments: Just got mine a couple weeks ago. Probably my favorite peridical on the market. And this one is really nice--the McGuire interview is good, too.
# posted by Blogger Shannon : 2:57 PM  
Post a Comment

-- Home
Site Design by Kate McMillan