May 082009
 

20090420

My friend Chris Noto turned me on to this online comic, Least I Could Do — featuring a real jerk as the main character. But it’s funny. Anyway, the most-recent story arc features that main character, Rayne, being hired to save a newspaper. Well, actually, he’s hired because they need an asshole (their word) at the bargaining table.

Hilarity ensues.

But it’s also got some interesting things to say about newspapers and where they may go. Check it out! (Don’t forget to skip ahead past the full-page ads for “Least I Could Do: Beginnings”)

The story arc starts here, but my favourite strip was this one (click on it for full-size):

20090428

Thanks, Noto!

Free Comic Book Day

 Posted by on 30 April 2009  Modern Life
Apr 302009
 
Photo of T. Keith, with the two graphic novels he'll be handing out on Saturday, by Grant, but courtesy the Brandon Sun.

Photo of T. Keith, with the two graphic novels he'll be handing out on Saturday, by Grant, but courtesy the Brandon Sun.

Free Comic Book Day!

What a great concept for a holiday (of sorts).  Every year since 2002, the first Saturday in May (May 2, 2009) is Free Comic Book Day — a day in which participating retailers give away FREE comic books.  Selected titles only, of course.

This sounds too good to be true!  Free comics?  Why on Earth would anyone do such a thing?

According to my research (read: Wikipedia), there are three main reasons for Free Comic Book Day:

  1. To introduce everyone to the joys of comic books.
  2. To bring former comic book readers back into the fold.
  3. To thank current comic book readers for their ongoing support.

In other words, it is a huge marketing event.  Yet – FREE COMICS!  And it seems to be effective.  How else could you explain the more than 2,000 retailer participants from over 30 countries in the first six years of this event?

You can check the database at Free Comic Book Day to find a participating retailer in your area.  Or, you can call around to see who is taking part.  (I know that at least two retailers are doing something in Brandon and neither is in the online database at that site.)

Apr 242009
 

It’s only a pet peeve, but for want of a better forum to spout off about it, I’m going to subject you to my geeky vitriol.

Almost every day, in my role as a bookseller, I hear someone exclaim “Oh, look!  They have comic books!”  From my lofty perch behind the counter, I try to patiently explain that the display of reasonably-priced product they are looking at is not, in fact, one of comic books but graphic novels.

Sometimes I’m ignored.  Occasionally, people will shrug and say “whatever.”  Most often, however, I am asked to explain the difference between the two.  To date, my answer has been consistent and based on nothing but my own personal opinion that the difference lies in the binding.  I hold that comic books are the traditional saddle stitched (held together with staples in the spine) comic magazines, while graphic novels are bound like books — either in a hardcover or tradepaper book format.

Although this answer satisfies most curious individuals, I’ve decided I need someone with more authority to back me up on this argument.  I also want to slap down the “whatever” people to make them realize that there is indeed a fundamental difference.

It might not matter to them, but it matters to me.

Thus begins my search for support for my thesis (sure, I could look for counter-arguments, but I come from the Michael Moore school of debate). 

When searching for THE voice of graphic novels, comic books and all things wild and wonderful, the first and often only person to look to is Neil Gaiman.  Trust Neil.  He’ll have something to say.  In fact, he says it in answering a question:

I’ve been trying to figure out if there’s actually some meaningful difference between a “comic book” and a “graphic novel.” Sandman started off its life as 76 comic books, but now it seems almost univerally referred to as a series of graphic novels. Are graphic novels just comics that someone, somewhere believes are art? Does a comic become a graphic novel when its collected? Is it just an arbitrary term that people can feel free to use however they please?

Yes.

No, there’s no meaningful difference. For some reason the term “big thick collected or original comic published in book form” has never really caught on, while “Graphic Novel” did.

It’s a sales category, and a clue to where in the bookstore (or comic shop) you can buy the story. Sandman was indeed 76 comic books, and you can still find those issues on eBay, and on the walls and back-issue bins at comic stores. But if you want to read the story now, the easy way is as a series of ten graphic novels. That’s how they stay in print.

Then there are weirder things. My book with Dave McKean, “THE WOLVES IN THE WALLS”, is a children’s book in Barnes and Noble, but it’s a graphic novel in Borders. This is because it was bought by the children’s buyer (who decides what goes into the children’s section) at B&N, but by the graphic novel buyer at Borders.

There you go.  It’s a “big thick collected or original comic published in book form.”  That seems to imply that it is the format that is the important aspect to consider when trying to determine if something is a comic book or graphic novel.  Thus, I am able to forego purchasing my, say, Spider-Man monthly comics with the idea of purchasing the same story arc bundled into a sturdier tradepaper format at some point down the road.

Simple.  But, as with anything worth knowing, there’s more to the story…

Diamond Comics is the world’s largest distributor of English-language comics, graphic novels, and related pop-culture merchandise.  According to their website:

A comic book or “pamphlet” is the traditional periodical form most people are familiar with. A comic book can stand on its own or be a part of a series. A series is also sometimes called a “title,” which refers to the entire series, not a single, discrete unit.

Sometimes, multiple issues of a series are collected into one volume. It can be hardcover or softcover. Softcover editions are often called “trade paperbacks,” or just “trades,” regardless of size. A hardcover or a softcover can also be called a “graphic novel.”

When a story is published in the hardcover or soft cover format first (that is, without periodical serialization), it is referred to as a graphic novel and only a graphic novel.

Many of these terms are inter-changeable, as you can see. A “graphic novel” can refer to a hardcover or soft cover, to a reprint collection or an original story. Similarly, all of the formats referenced can be called “comics” or “comic books.”

Sigh.  I was sure that this blurb would back up my argument — and it did, right up to the last sentence.  But I think they threw that in there just to make sure they didn’t offend any geeks who might have differing views on the issue.

Next up:  “geeks” vs “nerds”.

Jan 302009
 

2007-01-03

I love a good zombie story, and I don’t mind vampires one bit either. How’s this for a mind-blower of a twist, though: the last humans on earth (or at least in North America) are holed up in a small town, trying to stave off the zombie apocalypse when out of nowhere comes … vampires? Vampires who say they need to protect the humans as a food source!?

Yeah! How kick-ass is that?

The comic series is called “Last Blood” and it’s an amateur labour of love, but you can read it here. Recommended!