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Comics A.M. | The comics Internet in two minutes


Croquis Pop, Vol. 5

Croquis Pop, Vol. 5

Publishing | More than a dozen Yen Press titles set for July release have been canceled by Diamond, apparent victims of the distributor's minimum-order policy. According to Ken Hassler, publishing director of Yen Press, "the books are all still very much being published," and are available for order through other outlets. [MangaBlog]

Publishing | Creditors of Quebecor World have approved a reorganization plan that will allow the Montreal-based printing giant to emerge from bankruptcy in mid-July. Quebecor, the largest printer of comic books in North America, filed for bankruptcy protection in January 2008. [Publishers Weekly]

Longbox

Longbox

Publishing | Writer Kieron Gillen and blogger Andrew Wheeler delve into the possibilities for Longbox, the iTunes-style digital comics platform officially announced over the weekend. "Jamie [McKelvie] and I saw Longbox in an earlier demo at New York Comic Con in February and were impressed," Gillen writes. "In fact, I was so impressed I made sure that a clause related to this kind of sales was written into the next comic contract I signed. Clearly, I have no idea if it’ll take off. I hope it does. I also think that Longbox does so many things right that it’s got the best chance I’ve seen for a digital-comics-format system to do so. This would be a good thing. In fact, possibly a necessary thing."

This morning's installment of our "Slash Print" feature has a little more on Longbox. [Kieron Gillen's Workblog, The Post-Game Show]

Creators | Writer Larry Hama will receive the Henry Y. Kiyama Award on July 11 at the first Asian American ComiCon in New York City. The award is named in honor of the pioneering cartoonist and creator of The Four Immigrants. [press release]

Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman

Creators | Neil Gaiman discusses his novels, the broadening appeal of comics, and why he didn't return to The Sandman for the property's 20th anniversary: "I wanted to do a 20th anniversary story and it broke mostly because DC Comics would have loved me to do a 20th anniversary story at the same terms that were agreed upon in 1987 when I was a 26-year-old unknown. And my thought was, 'You know what guys, it really doesn't work like that.' I wasn't going to do a deal at the same terms we had in 1987 and they were not willing to do any better than that." [Canoe]

Creators | Brian Heater wraps up his two-part interview with Jason. [The Daily Cross Hatch]

Tiny Titans, Vol. 1

Tiny Titans, Vol. 1

Creators | Cartoonist Art Baltazar is briefly profiled, with the focus on DC's Tiny Titans. [Chicago Tribune]

Creators | Ben Morse spotlights the work of artist Paolo Rivera. [The Cool Kids Table]

Manga | Deb Aoki compiles her list of 12 great manga for grown-ups. [About.com]

Art | Letterer Todd Klein begins a study of Aquaman logos through the years. [Part 1, Part 2]

Pop culture | American Express cardholders can get a jump on everyone else today, as they can begin purchasing tickets for the musical Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark ... which doesn't actually open until Feb. 18. They call it "pre-sale," which makes Broadway sound a lot like the direct market. [Playbill]


6 Comments

Rodger McAWESOME

June 24, 2009 at 7:38 am

I can't imagine sitting through anything worse than a Spider-Man musical. I think it would have to be my own electrocution or something.

I don't know... the Rodger McAWESOME I remember would've loved seeing a Spider-Man musical.

Hm. Does that joke translate through text? Perhaps it helps if the delivery is imagined to be as dry and bland as text on a tan background. And you see there, now I'm afraid I've come across as a jerk.

Have a good day.
John Cage

If you don't have an AMEX but have 11 friends you can get group priced tickets right now as well. Those 11 friends may beat you up afterwards but hey at least you will have seen the show!

I find it funny in the Gaiman interview that whenever Neil dropped an F-bomb it was sometimes redacted and sometimes not, in the same sentence no less.

If anyone could do it, Julie Taymor could. She's pretty much the master of visual spectacle in large-budget theater, which is what a comic-book-hero-turned-musical-theater-lead needs. I think it'll either be amazing or fail so spectacularly that it won't matter, both of which can be considered wins to a certain kind of theater artist.

Not being a jerk here, but noting that Gaiman discussed this several months ago on his blog.

Today's post was about a bear on his property. http://journal.neilgaiman.com/

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