Finally! Fumi Yoshinaga’s What Did You Eat Yesterday? Coming From Vertical

I am thrilled to hear that the long-anticipated What Did You Eat Yesterday? is coming from Vertical in March 2014. I’m a huge fan of Fumi Yoshinaga’s works, including her previous book of restaurant reviews, Not Love But Delicious Foods Make Me So Happy! There are seven Japenese volumes out so far of Kinō Nani Tabeta? (What Did You Eat Yesterday?), beginning from 2007, and Vertical plans to bring them out one every two months. The story is about a […]

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Upcoming Pixar Releases: The Good Dinosaur, Inside Out, Finding Dory, Toy Story of TERROR!

News out of the D23 Expo, Disney’s fan convention, about upcoming Pixar releases: The Good Dinosaur explores what might have happened if dinosaurs never became extinct because the Earth was never hit by a giant “cataclysmic” asteroid. Arlo (voiced by Lucas Neff, Raising Hope), a 70-foot-tall teenage Apatosaurus, adopts a young human named Spot during his quest to restore peace to his tranquil community. It’s due in theaters May 30, 2014. Additional voices include Bill Hader as Forrest; Judy Greer […]

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Divas, Dames & Daredevils: Lost Heroines of Golden Age Comics

Mike Madrid, author of The Supergirls, a history of comic book heroines, is now bringing us reprints of vintage stories featuring female heroes with Divas, Dames & Daredevils: Lost Heroines of Golden Age Comics. Madrid, in his introduction, defines “Lost” as “characters you may have heard of, but whose stories you never had the chance to read. Or they may be women who only made a few appearances and then disappeared.” Since the comics date from 1940-1947, the art style […]

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Blue Is the Warmest Color (aka Blue Angel)

You may have heard of Blue Is the Warmest Color earlier this summer. The French movie adaptation won the Cannes film festival Palme d’Or, followed by the author Julie Maroh denouncing the film. (The movie is due to be released in North America in October 2013 through Sundance Selects/IFC Films (USA) and Mongrel Media (Canada).) Now, the graphic novel is being translated into English, and it’s well worth reading. It’s the story of Clementine, a high schooler coming to terms […]

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Look Straight Ahead

I value graphic novels that give me another experience, one I would never otherwise be able to sample or understand. That’s the strength of Look Straight Ahead, the story of Jeremy Knowles’ struggle with mental illness and treatment (collected from a webcomic I’ve previously mentioned). Jeremy’s life seems typical for a comic protagonist — he’s an artist, without many friends, picked on by the popular bullies, with a crush on his friend’s girlfriend whom he’s too shy to even say […]

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KC’s Teaching a Comic Book History Course This Fall

This fall, KC will be teaching The History of Comic Books in America for Madison Area Technical College. He’s excited about it, and so am I. It’s a survey/enrichment course. Here’s the description: This course tracks the development of a true American artform. Love Superman, Spider-Man, Batman, the Avengers? Learn their history and the forces that shaped their creation. But it’s not just superheroes! This 12-hour class also covers historical genres, from crime and horror to romance and teen comedy, […]

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Utsubora: The Story of a Novelist

Utsubora: The Story of a Novelist by Asumiko Nakamura is a visually striking puzzle of a story playing with parallelism. Shun Mizorogi is a noted author who, after a number of years blocked, has recently begun publishing again (a story called Utsubora, just as this one is). He’s also taken up with a beautiful young woman named Aki. At the beginning of the story, he’s just gotten a call from the police; Aki has jumped off a building and been […]

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Bloodhound: Brass Knuckle Psychology

Bloodhound: Brass Knuckle Psychology reprints an excellent (but flew under the radar) series published by DC Comics in 2004 by Dan Jolley, Leonard Kirk, and Robin Riggs. I talked about the series history a little when the book was announced, since I was a fan during its original release. Kurt Busiek also addresses the topic in his foreword to the book. But that doesn’t matter, because what we have here isn’t nostalgia — “oh, I’m so glad a favorite is […]

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