Only one week till the UK Web and Mini Comix Thing!
Only one week till the UK Web and Mini Comix Thing!
Press Release - Bristol International Comic Expo 2007
For the ninth successive year, the Bristol International Comic Expo (www.comicexpo.net) is back in 2007, on May 12 and 13 at the British Empire & Commonwealth Exhibition Hall coupled with talks at the Ramada Plaza Hotel.
The Bristol International Comic Expo is the major comic event in the UK, a must-attend for all British comics fans, featuring not just the best British talents working in comics today, but a generous helping of international guests, many of whom are making their first appearances in the UK. It’s a rare opportunity for British comics fans to meet, chat and socialise with the creative talents behind the books and characters they love, to obtain autographs and sketches, and to spend two days in the company of thousands of like-minded inddividuals. There’s something at the Bristol International Comic Expo for everyone who loves comics, young and old, current fan or lapsed reader. Here’s just a taster of what’s going on in 2007:-
Special Guests:
Brian K Vaughan – Eisner Award winner. Harvey Award winner. Shuster Award winner. Writer of some of the most critically-acclaimed, intelligent comics of the past few years, including Y: The Last Man, The Runaways, Ex Machina and the superlative Pride of Baghdad graphic novel.
Kurt Busiek – Long-time award-winning writer on many past and current popular superhero series: The Avengers, Superman, Thunderbolts, JLA, Marvels, and possibly the series which is the last word in superheroes, Astro City.
Jean-Pierre Dionnet – Completes the triumvirate alongside Moebius and Druillet behind the revolutionary Metal Hurlant, inspiration to many generations of SF authors and filmmakers, including Ridley Scott for Blade Runner.
Jeffrey Brown – One of the most-highly regarded American “Small Press” cartoonists, Ignatz award winner for “I Am Going To Be Small” and the inspiration driving many in the UK comics scene. Famed for many books: “Bighead”, “Clumsy”, “Unlikely” are just a small selection. Jeffrey appears courtesy of Top Shelf Productions (http://www.topshelfcomix.com)
Misako Rocks – Creator of Biker Girl and the upcoming Detective Jermain! and Rock N Roll Love, as well as the “As Know As” web animation (www.asknowas.com) for a Japanese clothing company, currently up to episode six.
More Guests:
Barry Kitson – Supergirl, Legion of Super Heroes, Empire, JLA Year One
John Watson – Civil War Frontline, Hawkman, JSA, Uncanny X-Men, Son of M
Dave Gibbons – Watchmen, The Originals
John M. Burns – Judge Dredd, Nikolai Dante
Mark Buckingham – Fables, Spider-Man, Sandman
Ian Edginton – Leviathan, The Red Seas, Scarlet Traces
Sean Phillips – Criminal, Marvel Zombies, Sleeper, Hellblazer, Wildcats
Ian Gibson – Robo-Hunter, Halo Jones, Judge Dredd
D’Israeli – Leviathan, Scarlet Traces
Trevor Hairsine – X-Men Deadly Genesis, Wisdom, Ultimate Six
Duncan Fegredo – Hellboy Darkness Calls, Zatanna, Jay & Silent Bob
Al Davison – The Spiral Cage, Spiral Dreams
Henry Flint – Judge Dreed, ABC Warriors, Rogue Trooper
Bryan Talbot – Alice In Sunderland, Luther Arkwright, The Tale of One Bad Rat
James A. Hodgkins – JSA, Lucifer, Spider-Man, Batman/Aliens II.
Charlie Adlard – The Walking Dead, Savage, Astronauts in Trouble
Doug Braithwaite – Justice, Universe X, Paradise X
Phil Winslade – Daredevil, Nevada, Goddess, The Sentry
Gilbert Shelton – The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers. Fat Freddy’s Cat
Roger Langridge – Fred The Clown, Doctor Who Magazine
Yishan Li – Spirit Marked, Aluria Chronicles, Dark Mists, the Tizzle Sisters
Paul Grist – Jack Staff, Kane
Jennie Breeden – The Devil’s Panties
Mike Collins – Judge Dredd, Doctor Who Magazine
Hunt Emerson – The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Fortean Times
Lew Stringer – Brickman, Tom Thug, Team Toxic
Christian Beranek – Dracula vs. King Arthur, Silent Devils
David Hine – Son of M, The 198, Mutopia X, District X, Daredevil Redemption
Carl Critchlow – Thrud the Barbarian
Gary Spencer Millidge – Strangehaven
Tony Lee – X-Men Unlimited, Doctor Who Magazine, Starship Troopers, Midnight Kiss
Paul Cornell – Wisdom, XTCNT, Doctor Who
Sean Michael Wilson – The Japanese Drawing Room, Lafcadio Hearn’s Japanese Ghost Stories
Jamie Smart – Bear
Liam Sharp – Event Horizon, Testament, The Possessed
Rob Williams – Low Life, SFX, Star Wars Tales
Andy Diggle – Green Arrow Year One, Batman Confidential, Hellblazer, The Losers
Jock – Green Arrow Year One, The Losers, Faker
Simon Davis – Sinister Dexter
Siku – The Manga Bible
Simon Furman – Transformers, Deaths Head
Chris Weston – Fantastic Four First Family, Event Horizon, Ministry of Space
Steve Roberts – Judge Dredd, Bec & Kawl
Andrew Wildman – Transformers, Spider-Man, X-Men, Power Rangers
Graham Bleathman – Thunderbirds, Cross Section
Kev F Sutherland – Bash Street Kids, Hot Rod Cow
Mike Ploog – Ghost Rider, The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus
Simon Bisley – Full Cirkle, Global Frequency, Slaine
Rufus Dayglo – Judge Dredd, Metal Gear Solid (IDW)
Jimmy Bott – Half Dead (Marvel)
…with more still to be announced.
Events And Signings:
The Eagles. Britain’s longest running and most respected comics awards. The ceremony. The trophies. It’s the British Eisners, it’s back, it’s at the Expo. Saturday night there’s a special awards dinner, tickets are running out but the last few can be snapped up by a speedy email to martin@acecomics.co.uk – the nominations awards are being hosted at the following URL:-
www.eagleawards.co.uk/nominate.asp
The ceremony this year will be hosted by comedian Norman Lovett, aka Holly from Red Dwarf.
Hypotheticals. Hosted by Dave Gibbons and written by Lee “Budgie” Barnett, this is the eighth year of Hypotheticals and it’s still going strong. Last year Geoff Johns, Liam Sharp, Shelly Bond, Jamie Boardman, Tony Lee and Jon Browne were put through the wringer…who’s in the firing line this time around? Sample scripts from previous riots can be read online: http://www.hypotheticals.co.uk/
2030AD! 2007 is the 30th anniversary of Britain’s best loved comic, 2000AD. Special panels – special guests – special charity event….more details to follow, but Bristol is the place to be to join in the celebrations.
EXpo Exclusive Transformers: The Movie Prequel – in association with IDW Publishing, the Bristol International Comic Expo will exclusively have available this comic with the Comic Expo Variant Cover by Andrew Wildman. This is not available to order and will not be in the shops – only at the Bristol International Comic Expo.
Rising Stars of Manga UK The Third – Tokyopop will be launching their 3rd UK-specific RSoM competition, with full details and presentations only available at the Bristol International Comic Expo – congratulations to last year’s winners John Aggs, Selina Dean, Hannah Saunders and Suzanne Lam: the playing field is wide open for a new year.
Self-Made Hero bring their first two manga-literature crossover titles to the Bristol International Comic Expo, with Hamlet and Romeo & Juliet – manga-style – hitting the show big-time. Artists Emma Vieceli and Sonia Leong will be on hand to sign and sketch at the Self-Made Hero stand all weekend. Writer William Shakespeare sadly had other commitments.
Also Manga-related, Sweatdrop Studios will be hosting a manga workshop on Sunday afternoon at the Bristol International Comic Expo – following on from the amazing success of the workshop last year. It’s a one-stop-shop for any aspiring manga creator to see behind the scenes, pick up tips for their own work, and make contacts with one of the most productive manga collectives on the UK scene.
Charity Events:
The Bristol International Comic Expo is proud to be associated with the superb online support website www.bullying.co.uk which offers help and support to the victims of bullying. The charity is funded totally by contributions and we at the Bristol International Comic Expo are delighted to announce a very special fund raiser at the show!
Based on an suggestion from Craig at Silver Bullets and in association with Rebellion we will have a LIVE Charity Art Auction at the show which we are calling the 2030AD Art Auction. As part of our 30th anniversary celebration of Dredd and Co. We have some of the classic 2000AD Art Droids creating their favourite 2000AD heroes but with the twist of " what if they had aged that 30 years" ?
Dave Gibbons, Alan Davis, John Burns, Jock, Ian Gibson, Mark Buckingham, Bryan Talbot, Mike Collins, PJ Holden and one Carlos Ezquerra are busy working on their sketches, with special previews of the art appearing here and in 2000AD.
Totally unique and only at the Bristol International Comic Expo in support of Bullying.co.uk. Be there!
READ A MILLION WORDS launched in October 2004, during National Children’s Book Week. It is a groundbreaking project, which sets a goal for every child to read a million words in a year. Backed by Bristol City Council the project and is committed to raising literacy standards amongst children in Bristol.
The project is endorsed by the National Literacy Trust and the Basic Skills Agency and is based at GWR FM, the leading commercial radio station in Bristol, which supports the project and has donated airtime.
Over 145 schools signed up for the challenge, and more than 40,000 children took part in Read a Million Words in the first year.
Now in year 3, Read a Million Words will have a major presence at the Bristol International Comic Expo including, workshops and reading/activity packs. More to be announced soon!
For further information on Read a Million Words Visit: www.readamillionwords.org.uk
Virtual Bristol Anthology:
Can’t make it to Bristol but want to know more about some of the exclusive books available? Trying to decide in advance which tables to spend how much time at? A bit scared of approaching the UK Comics tables, thinking there might be some “hard sell” to avoid? Or do you just want a sampler of some of the finest UK Comics around?
Welcome to the Virtual Bristol Anthology, a FREE online preview of many of the upcoming UK Comics attractions – if you’re at the event, check this out to give yourself some idea of what books might be worth checking out in details – if you’re not at the event, check it out to see if there’s something that sparks your imagination and looks worthy of supporting further, incorporating a number of exhibitors already, with more to follow.
Everything is free. Check the preview out at:
http://bristol2007.monkeyswithmachineguns.com/
and keep checking back weekly for the latest additions.
More Exhibitors, Events And Signings:
Top Shelf Productions (http://www.topshelfcomix.com) are not only bringing across Jeffrey Brown as noted above, not only bringing their usual line-up of graphic novels, but also will be bringing several new 2007 releases, such as Nicolas Mahler's LONE RACER, Aleksandar Zograf's REGARDS FROM SERBIA, James Kochalka's AMERICAN ELF (BOOK 2) & SUPER F*CKERS #4, Jeff Lemire's TALES FROM THE FARM, Renée French's MICROGRAPHICA, Christian Slade's all-ages KORGI, and the all-new OWLY (VOL 4): A TIME TO BE BRAVE by Andy Runton.
Silver Bullets Comic Books (www.silverbulletcomicbooks.com) and MangaLife (www.mangalife.com) have a table for the sixth successive year, and once again will be bringing along a set of “Officially Cheaper Than Amazon!” books and comics, but with only one copy of each – once they’ve gone, they’ve gone. It’s the table the retailers shop at too…this year they are accepting reservations for books, email (craig@silverbulletcomicbooks.com) for a list of what will be available.
As usual, half the table space will be given over to promoting new and upcoming releases from self-publishers just starting out on their careers. This time, one of the new gals is Zoe Stead (http://zoestead.deviantart.com/) with her novel THE AMULET OF VICHALACE, plus more dark fantasy manga-esque work….more details to come.
Rob Jackson Comics will have a new issue of Random Journeys: issue three is the final, concluding part of this series, and all three issues will be available as a value pack to purchase in one go – along with some of RJC’s earlier publications.
Rufus Dayglo will bring along some vintage 2000AD art to the show, some prime pieces available to buy which should be snapped up quickly…and he’s also working on some new projects for 2000AD and IDW, which could be available to check out in preview form…before anyone else gets to see them.
ACE Comics, our perennial supporters, bring virtually their entire shop to the Bristol International Comic Expo – as last year, it’s shelves, it’s tables, it’s a real walk-in shop in the Expo itself. Trades, new releases, bargain 50p comics from 2006 (mainly DC, Dark Horse and IDW). Two special signings will be held at the ACE stand – Barry Kitson and John Watson.
Polycomical make their first appearance at the Bristol International Comic Expo. They are an online subscription comic studio, dedicated to new twists on the comic genre. Their first title is Reynard City, best described as "Watership Down On Acid", which can be previewed at: www.reynardcity.co.uk
Orang Utan Comics is not a publisher or a studio, it is a comics collective - essentially a group of artists and writers who are on the cusp of breaking into the comics industry. 11th Hour is their anthology title, which will showcase the talent within Orang Utan Comics. It will be a mix of short stories and also sneak previews of our larger projects and properties. Issue 1 launches at the Bristol International Comic Expo and features an international rosta of talent:-
Supernatural drama Purgatory Blues features Tanzanian artist Azim Akberali (Eye of the Storm, Vampires Unlimited), vampire tale Bloodstain showcases the work of Portugese artist Nuno Nobre, Scotsman Tom Walsh draws post apocalyptic tale Brothers in Arms and Phillipino Randy Valiente (Bronx Angel), provides us with a sneak peak into the superhero world of Young Gods. There is a possibility that a Slam Ridley preview will also feature with an artist that will be unveiled nearer the time along with one more short story. The first 11th Hour cover will be provided by Austrian tattooist and album cover artist Franke and features stories written by Ian Sharman (Smoke & Mirror, Shadowmancer) and Peter Rogers (Eye of the Storm).
Flying Monkey Comics (www.flyingmonkeycomics.com), aka Simon Perrins and Andrew Livesey, will be bringing ongoing series Hope For The Future, as well as the first trade collection of the issues one through eight. A number of their webcomics are currently available from their site, along with this animated Halloween special with singing zombies: http://www.flyingmonkeycomics.co.uk/index.php?cid=47
Will Dunlop brings Phoenix Handmade Books & Journals to the Bristol International Comic Expo for a second year – individually crafted unique copper covers for diaries/books/sketchbooks at competitive prices, Will’s challenge is to craft anything the purchaser desires…any hero, any villain, any characters. www.phoenixac.4t.com is his website for some ideas of previous commissions.
Linoleum Press will be attending for the third year running, with Kel, Joel, Cam and Rich manning the table providing a wide selection from their range www.Linoleum-press.com – along with a number of customised surfboards courtesy of www.EcticShortys.com … these will be drawn on and personalised over the course of the weekend. Also the 3rd Annual Comic Jam will be happening on the Saturday night in the Ramada Plaza with DJs to be confirmed and loads of cool things to draw on. More details on all of this in our next update.
Jimmy Bott, artist of the Marvel/Dabel Brothers’ original Graphic Novel “Half-Dead”, will be in artist alley all weekend to sign copies of the book, do sketches and generally chat about the book, Marvel and life in general. Jamie Delano: "As if the tube wasn't already edgy enough, what with suicide bombers and police execution squads... now we have terrorist vampires to contend with too. But at least the victims of vampire gas attacks are rendered only half dead and get their chance to join in the fun. Intelligently written and well-drawn, this book promises opportunities not only for fast-paced entertainment, but also a darker ironic subtext to the 'long war' of the 21st Century".
About the Bristol International Comic Expo 2006
Organised by Mike Allwood, the Bristol Expo is the longest-running and most successful comics event in the UK ever. Advance tickets are available through the official website (www.comicexpo.net) at a bargain price (£5 per day for an adult ticket, children 10 and under FREE, children 11 to 16 just £1). The Ramada Plaza hotel offers special Expo rates, see the website for details.
Joe Gordon at the FP Blog Kidnapped, but not before receiving details regarding Leo Baxendales upcoming exhibition, Stroppy Women! While Kenny on the FP Blog has interviewed Mike Conroy about taking over Comics International from Dez Skinn. (Apparently 201 is being printed right now!)
Another quick update for the ZOMBIES 2007 Accent UK anthology... check out the DIARY page please as usual ...
CULT FICTION
Art and Comics
A Hayward Touring Exhibition
Opening at the New Art Gallery, Walsall
4 May – 1 July
Cult Fiction explores the reciprocal relationship between comics and art. Featuring the work of 16 contemporary artists, including Raymond Pettibon, Laylah Ali, Marcel Dzama, Olivia Plender and David Shrigley, and 12 leading comics artists and graphic novelists, the exhibition explores links between the two genres. Among the comics artists are underground legend R. Crumb, the innovative French graphic artist Killoffer, award-winning investigative comics journalist, Joe Sacco, and renowned illustrator Posy Simmonds. This new Hayward Gallery Touring exhibition will open at New Art Gallery Walsall on 4 May before touring nationally.
The visual language of comics and graphic novels has influenced many contemporary artists who have used its conventions of pictorial narrative and unique fusion of word and image. Fine artists Adam Dant, Kerry James Marshall and Olivia Plender have published their own comics while others, like Glen Baxter, Raymond Pettibon and David Shrigley employ a combination of word and image in forms that are reminiscent of popular cartoons. The recurring themes and characters typical of comics iconography can be seen in Laylah Ali’s cast of bowling-ball headed characters, or the ragged furry felines that appear in Jon Pylypchuk’s sculptural tableaux. Kerstin Kartscher and Paul McDevitt employ graphic elements from comic book imagery to create works that suggest narrative without using words.
The comics artists in Cult Fiction are mainly from the generation of independent author-draughtsmen whose subject matter tends to be autobiographical, offbeat and sometimes transgressive. In her New York Diary, Canadian comics artist Julie Doucet’s portrays herself in vulnerable and compromising situations, exemplifying the comic medium’s ability to communicate difficult emotional themes, as do Debbie Drechsler’s candid personal explorations of childhood abuse. The realities of life within a war zone are sensitively charted in Joe Sacco’s Palestine, while everyday characters such as R. Crumb and Harvey Pekar’s file clerk in American Splendor and Daniel Clowes’ misfit David Boring …/… become unlikely heroes of everyday tales. Classical literature gets a makeover for the twenty-first century in Melinda Gebbie and Alan Moore’s epic Lost Girls (shortly to be published in the UK), which charts the sexual awakening of three characters from children’s literature – Alice from Alice in Wonderland, Dorothy from The Wizard of Oz and Wendy from Peter Pan.
Cult Fiction has been originated by artist and curator, Kim L Pace and is co-curated with Hayward curator Emma Mahony. A fully illustrated catalogue, designed by Jacob Covey, Art Director of Fantagraphics Books, features essays by Paul Gravett and Emma Mahony and a picture-essay by Kim L Pace. All of the participating artists in Cult Fiction have contributed a drawn self-portrait together with their handwritten answers to questions posed by the curators. The book is distributed by Cornerhouse Publications.
Artists: Laylah Ali, Glen Baxter, Stéphane Blanquet, Daniel Clowes, Liz Craft, R. Crumb, Adam Dant, Julie Doucet, Debbie Drechsler, Marcel Dzama, Melinda Gebbie in collaboration with Alan Moore, Mark Kalesniko, Kerstin Kartscher, Killoffer, Kerry James Marshall, Chad McCail, Paul McDevitt, Travis Millard, Kim L Pace, Raymond Pettibon, Olivia Plender, Jon Pylypchuk, James Pyman, Joe Sacco, David Shrigley in collaboration with Yoshitomo Nara and Chris Shepherd, Posy Simmonds, Richard Slee, Carol Swain
The New Art Gallery Walsall, Gallery Square, Walsall. WS2 8LG
Website: www.artatwalsall.org.uk
Telephone: 01922 654 400
Opening hours: Tuesday – Saturday & bank holidays 10am – 5pm
Sunday 12pm – 5pm
Admission: Free
National Tour dates
14 July – 16 September 2007 Nottingham Castle
21 September – 11 Nov 2007 Leeds City Art Gallery
17 November – 13 January 2008 Aberystwyth Art Gallery
19 January – 9 March 2008 Tullie House, Carlisle
There's a cold biting snowstorm lashing the Gold Rush era town of Tin Cup, and in it the merciless outlaws, The Heavy Gang, have enslaved the townsfolk to dig them their fortune! Led by a metal plated monster they have made these honest people's lives hell. However, vengeance is floating back to town, Vengeance of the Vapor!
This is how the new Markosia mini series from creators Sal Cipriano and Jok begins and from there, things just get grittier and uglier by the second!
Paul Gravett Writes:
Hello again
This is just to bring you all up-to-date on events this month, which i hope
some of you can attend, and some related news.
First off, in another web-exclusive, after the Angoulême Festival reports
and Gabrielle Bell interview, tomorrow's article is a transcription of a
rare live Q&A session with Robert Crumb recorded during a visit to London in
2003.
This article ties in neatly ahead of next Sunday's Comica/ICA special event
in the big Cinema 1 at the iCA on the Mall in London from 4pm on March 11th:
Aline Kominsky Crumb will be in conversation about her fantastic new graphic
memoir NEED MORE LOVE from MQ Publications with Melinda Gebbie, co-creator
with Alan Moore of Lost Girls. Both Aline and Melinda are brilliant comic
creators who emerged out of the 1970s West Coast underground comix scene.
They admire each other's work immensely, but they have never properly met
and talked together until now, so it is bound to be a fascinating encounter.
On top of this, after their Comica Conversation, Aline will introduce a
screening of The Confessions of R. Crumb, with the BBC Arena documentary's
director Mary Dickinson - and of course Aline will be signing copies of her
new book.
Don't miss this unique occasion - for more details and to book see:
www.ica.org.uk/Aline+Kominsky+13217.twl
Also timed perfectly on Sunday March 11th, The Sunday Review Magazine of the
Independent on Sunday will run my profile of Aline - as well as regular
features like Chris Ware's Building Stories serial and Simone Lia's new
puzzle strip.
The day before, Saturday March 10th, I'll be hosting a Graphic Novel Panel
with Cape authors Bryan Talbot, Simone Lia and Paul Wright at the Bath
Literature Festival. Hope you can join me for what promises to be a lively
debate. Details and tickets here:
www.bathlitfest.org.uk/h12-the-jonathan-cape-graphic-novel-event.html
The following week I'm jetting down to University College Falmouth to join
Dan Franklin from Jonathan Cape (UK), Chris Oliveros of Drawn & Quarterly
(Canada), Yvan Alagbé of Fremok (France/Belgium) and Gita Wolf of Tara
Publishing (India) at a one-day forum on Publishing Graphic Literature.
Visit here for more details:
www.falmouth.ac.uk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=595&Itemid=312
And finally, for anyone in or near Stockholm, I'll be giving a free talk
about Graphic Novels and Manga at the Serieteket (Comics Library) there in
their Kulturhuset (Culture House) on Wednesday March 28th from 6-9pm.
www.kulturhuset.stockholm.se/default.asp?id=5658&Category=Serieteket
All the very best and looking forward to meeting some of you, somewhere,
sometime, somehow, at some of these upcoming events!
Paul
---------------------------------
www.paulgravett.com
www.greatbritishcomics.com
The Bugpowder inbox is bursting at the seams, so lets see what nuggets we can post...
Chaz Wood writes: I'm Chaz Wood, creator, writer and illustrator of 'graphic novels'. I' worked for five years on my main project, 'The Black Flag', completed in 2005 and now posted in its entirety online at http://www.comicartists.org/chazwood. (Not the best quality, but I'm working on moving the hosting).
I also have another graphic novel work in progress, a Scottish historical adventure/fantasy which is located at: http://members.lycos.co.uk/swordoflochglen/?
I also have my own artist's web site, which is more general but includes a lot of my comic and illustrative work: http://www.chaz-wood.com
That's all from me just now. Hope you can find space for a couple of the links.
Thanks for your time and your attention!
Leonie O Moore writes: Hi,
just writing to let you know that I am redesigning my website: www.lomoore.com and it should be up and running 1st March.
Thanks
Richar dKrauss writes:
Vojtko's Comic Works
Bob Vojtko's wonderful comix and gag cartoons have entertained readers since the seventies. Bob was a big part of the newave comix scene at that time. His comix were published by Clay Geerdes, George Erling, Everyman Studios, Jabberwocky Graphix, and many others during those golden days of mini comix. With the help of his wife Sue, he also published nearly a dozen of his own books under the Vojtkomics Productions banner. Midnight Fiction has collected this list of his published works. Since his newave days, Bob has continued to create comics and cartoons. His latest work appears in Nickelodeon Magazine and the Saturday Evening Post.
Cambodian Web Comics:
Our Books, a local nonprofit focused on Khmer comics, is pleased to announce that a new web comic is online. "Life's Choices" is available in English and Khmer at: www.lifes-choices-cambodia.net
The story was developed in cooperation with PACT, with support from Danida and USAID. The comic aims to raise awareness about corruption in everyday life and how individuals can respond. Print copies are available via Our Books in Phnom Penh: http://www.siewphewyeung.org.kh
Karl Stephan writes:
I am an artist/writer living in the UK and I've recently created a website archiving some of my self-published comics from 2000 to about 2003. It's all very underground, sardonic, introspective stuff. They can be found in the Gallery section under the Children's Books archive.
Could you please link my site to your page? The url is www.thebside.co.uk
Banana Man is a high school nutrition teacher who preaches the importance of potassium while dressed accordingly. If you can’t get enough of Banana Man, the comic books are available at http://www.deercrack.com/banana/index2.html.
woodrow phoenix podcast interview by jesse morgan here:
http://www.maximumfun.org/blog/2007/01/podcast-japanese-toy-culture-with_24.html
Jenika writes:
Hello!
My name is Jenika (www.neptunefactory.com) and I am looking for somebody who would like to share a table with me during London Expo (26-27 May) and
Bristol Comic Expo (12-13 May).
Both expos have no more free tables! It is possible to put this ad on
bugpowder?
Thanks!
Dave Miller:
I've just found a link to BugPowder, and wonder if you'd be interested
in a few stories I've drawn recently. They're all listed on my blog:
http://dev1.manme.org.uk/~davem/davemiller_art_blog/?cat=41
My stories tend to mix topical social and political issues, trends and
events, with my own life experiences and life-views.
I've printed "Kenezuela" as a 20 page colour A6 booklet, which I've
priced at £2.50 each. Alternatively titled "Our Ken Livingstone goes
to Cuba". The story deals with conflict – the conflict of: (1) ken's
desire for a holiday and to see his hero (2) the London public/ press/
political enemies ready to attack him at every opportunity (3)between
what ken tries to do and what story he has to convey to the media.
It's mostly fact, with some fiction thrown in for good measure.
The other stories are:
'Like bees around a honeypot'
http://dev1.manme.org.uk/~davem/images/tesco_drivers.png
This is a small (true) story about Tesco delivery drivers preying on a
vulnerable lonely woman. I haven't printed this yet, as unsure of the
legal issues...
'Child poverty in perspective'
http://dev1.manme.org.uk/~davem/images/child_poverty_in_perspective.png
"The UK has been accused of failing its children, as it comes bottom
of a league table for child well-being across 21 industrialised
countries."
Newsnight (BBC2) supposedly 'debated' the subject, and I felt angry:
the politicians don't listen and look for excuses, they seem
disinterested and disconnected, why should they care- their kids go to
private schools, they have no interest in kids, they are discussing
lives/ worlds they have no contact with or understanding, they just
think of themselves.
This hasn't been printed yet either, but if there's interest I'll go ahead.
Does you know of a cheap way of printing? The Kenezuela cost me £1 a
booklet, and I wonder if there's a cheaper way?