Saturday, 8 September 2018

A Preview of ‘Adrift’ by John Tucker.




Adrift.


Created by John Tucker.


40 pages - Black and White - £2.


(Launching at Thoughtbubble Festival this month).



The General Idea - This is a world exactly like ours. Full of motorways and people and forks.


One day gravity decided that it wanted to just up and go. Suddenly and without any kind of warning it just left the Earth.


At first the occupants of the Earth liked the effect of floating around. It was a novelty. Just like that first day of snow where we can stay at home and play with it. Later though, it might, maybe, become a pain in your neck, and/or possibly a little dangerous.


That’s what it’s like when gravity goes away. How will the human race cope? How would you cope? Will we adapt or will everything go to hell?


That’s what John Tucker posits in this new illustrated tale.


What is for sure is that there are a whole load of naked and old and fat people having sex right there in front of you!


Don’t go gravity? Please.....






What I thought (as if you aren’t already hooked!).


“The Guide says there is an art to flying", said Ford, "or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.”


Douglas Adams, Life, the Universe and Everything


I’ve always loved the every day simple yet funny nature of that quote. It came back to me after reading the new book from John Tucker.


This has a wry and sarcastic wink at you as you read through it’s pages. It is fun, telling and at one moment just a little bit touching. From page one when that fork with a life of it’s own floats past the reader I knew this was something I would enjoy. It is not done in a traditional comics style but rather a series of full page images that face a page of commentary, comments and text. It’s an interesting and very readable style. It is a short read but really entertaining.


It takes all the cynicism of the depressing things like The Walking Dead and The Road and shows that as changes come that are considered catastrophic we can find a little humour and just possibly some light at the end of the tunnel. It is written with that idiosyncratic humour that is recognisably a Tucker creation. A little bawdy, a little strange and a whole lot funny.






I heartily recommend anything by this creator.


This will be getting a release at Thoughtbubble this year and you can find John and all of his art and comics in the ComiXology Marquee at table 120B. You can find him online at www.johntucker.co.uk on Twitter @JohnTuckerArt and on Instagram @JohnTucker


Many thanks for reading.


And PS. The Review copy came with this comment that made me laugh loudly in Cafe Nero.


‘Please don’t cross my name out and release it as your own. Thanks.’

Tuesday, 4 September 2018

In Review - ‘The Needleman’ by Martin Simpson


The Needleman.


Created by Martin Simpson.


Published by Soaring Penguin Press.


19 pages - Full Colour.


‘Needlemen are the dark enforcers of a dystopian city of slaves. For one particular Needlman, a seemingly everyday investigation will spiral out of control and comprehension....’






The Review - This is a collection of a series that was previously published in Soaring Penguin’s anthology series Meanwhile. It is however new to me and was kindly sent through to us at The Awesome Podcast by the creator Martin Simpson. I opened it on my phone and immediately swapped messages with Vince and Dan on how ‘Fucking great’ this book looks.


I think the cover is worthy of a mention. It immediately stands out. The face of the Needleman (aka Agent Rasp) is that of a cross between a Steampunk zombie and a funeral director in a 1970s western. A wizened and skinny tough guy with a bow tie. He looks out at you with vicious efficiency from the cover daring you to try something. Either side of his face are the flared lights of a golden city shooting up into the night sky.


‘They only wanted black and white. Do you see?’


I am taken immediately by Simpson’s art. He combines some cleverly interlocking panel arrangements and then throws in some gorgeously detailed splash pages full of mood and menace. The Needleman comes across in his intentions as a cross between Judge Dredd in that he is prone to acts of sudden and violent punishment and the characters who seem faceless and mechanical crawling over the movie Dark City. Simpson portrays the humans as grey in a bright world of light and gold. There’s some remarkable design work on show here.


This is a city where the life of it’s inhabitants is cheap. The people are crammed into city blocks and named only as numbers. The Needlemen are the feared enforcers, snuffing lives out with expertly effective bullets. They use the Needles of their names to torture and interrogate.


Rasp is a special case. His voice is portrayed in square and black backgrounded speech balloons and he narrates much of the action. He is tasked with tracking down an escaped and missing female employee working in one of the factory complexes. He finds something else. Something that may well change him.






This is a book that I highly recommend. Something that you really need to read for yourself and I have purposely left out a couple of the splash pages that will blow out the bulbs in your downstairs toilet with how incredible they look. I would say that the last third suffers a little from too much talking and that there is a moment right towards the end that may have spoken to much of what they said without the need for a couple of pages of explanation. But this is a small aside from what is a book that speaks to much and does so with absolute style.


What did Rasp find?


Something wonderful. 


The revolution will be lead by the artists..... (they just need to keep off Twitter for five minutes - sorry, couldn’t resist that.)


You can find out more about the creator at www.martinsillustration.com Buy some of his art at www.etsy.com/shop/tweekhed and follow him on Twitter @SIMO_paints


Many thanks for reading.



Monday, 3 September 2018

Nobrow and Thoughtbubble a perfect double act!





So.... Thoughtbubble huh? Still the big event of the comics year here in the UK. This year is looking like a cracking event.





I’ll be there with my first convention outing for Nobrow and their great children’s’ book imprint Flying Eye. A publisher that you’ve seen a lot in reviews and interviews by me both on here and on The Awesome Comics Pod. I am genuinely, as well as being employed by this company, a huge fan of their output. They have books of real quality and contain some of the best art and stories you are likely to see anywhere.


You can find the Nobrow goodness in the Victoria Hall at table 28 (handy map attached below).






So with the convention only a few short weeks away I thought I could feature a few of the newer books and special items we’ll have on sale there.






An Illustrated History of Filmmaking

Adam Allsuch Boardman

£16.99

Hardback | 88pp | 185 x 245 mm £16.99 | ISBN 978-1-910620-40-3


An essential read for any film lover, this beautifully illustrated volume explores the tradition of filmmaking that stretches from today’s blockbusters back to its roots in prehistory.


Emerging talent Adam Allsuch Boardman guides the reader on an epic filmmaking journey that covers cameras, directors and stars through the ages. Landmark films and innovations in technology and composition are presented with endearing, stylized illustration in a celebration of cinema’s profound impact on entertainment and the way we see and remember the world.’



I’ve just seen this one as it came as newly revealed in the box of stock I got from the offices last Friday. I was counting and cataloguing the items for sale and had to take a pause to look at this great graphic novel.

It is another gorgeous hardback book with a striking black cover. It doesn’t mess about in setting out in a fun way the movies of our time. It lays out the industry with a. Combination of history, comedy, warmth, caricature and opinion. Just a fun book for anyone with even a casual interest in the medium.


Highly recommended.


If you cant make it to Thoughtbubble then head to https://nobrow.net/shop/an-illustrated-history-of-filmmaking/? And get a copy.



Also follow Nobrow on Twitter @NobrowPress and Flying Eye can be found @FlyingEyeBooks


See you there!



Many thanks for reading.

Friday, 31 August 2018

In Review - ‘Luisa: Now & Then’ by Carole Maurel (adapted by Mariko Tamaki).





Luisa: Now and Then.


By Carole Maurel.

Adapted by Marino Tamaki.


Published by Humanoids.


Softcover Trade

272 pages - 7.6 x 10.2 in - Colour

EAN 9781594656439

$29.95 - £22.99



At 32, Luisa encounters her 15-year-old self in this sentimental and bold story about self-acceptance and sexuality.


A disillusioned photographer has a chance encounter with her lost teenage self who has miraculously traveled into the future. Together, both women ultimately discover who they really are, finding the courage to live life by being true to themselves. Luisa’s sexuality is revealed to be a defining element of her identity, one which both of her selves must come to terms with. A time-traveling love story that turns coming-of-age conventions upside down, Luisa is a universal queer romance for the modern age.’



The Review - Who would have thought that a book that is essentially about the awakening, both spiritually and sexually, of a time complicated 15 year old and 30 year old gay woman would mean so much to this normally grumpy forty something heterosexual male. I was kindly sent a review copy by Humanoids and read it on a three hour train journey. You hear stories of people reading a book in one sitting? I hardly even looked up from this 273 page graphic novel.


This is a book that occupies a short moment of emotional change and has a small and perfectly formed cast. It delivers on some of the most genuinely touching, real and funny moments that I have read in a comic for a long, long time. 






The creator cunningly shows the direction and evolution of a woman’s life by comparing the 15 year old with the 30 year old. Who amongst us wouldn’t be hugely irritated by a real life encounter with our younger self? I know that I was a grade ‘A’ wanker at age fifteen (a fact that has probably hardly changed in my case?). You see that annoyance in the actions, faces and words of both the time travel Luisas. They bicker and wander the streets of Paris and also teach each other so much. Both time travel versions are unhappy with their lot but through the relationship and their friends they discover a little light at the end of the tunnel.


There is also a bit of a mystery going on, something fantastical that Carole Maurel adds into the mix. I won’t spoil this aspect of the book but it adds some cool moments that you might not expect.





This graphic novel also doesn’t rush you into an expected story. It takes it’s time and unfolds the twists and turns at a well constructed speed. Never are you presented with something as a shock but you do see things unfold before you expect them At 273 pages it is long but I could have easily read it at twice the length.


The book is full of stand out moments but I thought I’d pick a couple I really enjoyed.


I suppose it’s the interplay between the characters that I found so enjoyable in this book. There are numerous examples of this but one that I found to be sharply observed was when older Luisa took her younger self to meet her friends. You have to remember that it seemed like only yesterday that the younger version met these women as teenagers. She remembers what games they played like it was yesterday because for her it was. 





This causes some friction as the older friends think that older Luisa has been talking about their private moments from their childhoods to this girl they believe to be ‘a long lost cousin’ and a stranger. You can see that the decision to make this visit becomes a huge mistake. The words and body language of the reprimanding of the time traveler is just cartooning perfection.


‘I’m going to be single and I’m going to repeat a load of grades!’


‘No. Just Ninth Grade....’

 

I can only guess that the moment that people will most probably love is the scene in the nightclub. 





Who hasn’t got that friend who enjoys themselves like older Luisa does. That moment where she takes her shirt off and waves it over her head on a packed dance floor is just pitch perfect and shows such a great grasp of character. The lushness of the colour palette along with the funny drunk dance moves and awkward looks of friends and lovers make this hilarious. You feel the music in the air, the buzz of red wine and beer and the feelings as they dart across the page. Older Luisa let’s her guard down, she lets her emotions and attractions out in the open. She then heads off and we get an hysterical aftermath.


The art has both detail in it’s panels, just look at some of those city scenes, as well as the simplistic shortcuts of a good cartoonist. You feel like you are in every single setting, the streets, bedrooms, living rooms cafes and so on are crafted with realistic efficiency and a big dollup of personality. You the reader emote the feelings of the characters as they are immediately communicated by some gorgeously designed comic landscapes and touchingly rendered reactions. Everyone looks and feels like a real person and are sharply designed visually. The use of colour is stunning and changes the mood deftly and on a couple of occasions you are thrown into a flashback that you immediately recognise through palette choices. This is a comic that you feel like you are living as it moves along at a great pace.






This is part of the Life Drawn imprint from Humanoids that is releasing some really interesting slice of life books. You can find this and other great books at http://www.humanoids.com


Many thanks for reading.


Wednesday, 29 August 2018

Coming Soon to Kickstarter - ‘Kia Wordsmith’ from Accent UK.

Coming soon to Kickstarter.






I recently got chatting to Ian Ashcroft and he and I are are venturing on a short story for an upcoming anthology. He asked to show me some art from his current project entitled Kia Wordsmith. I immediately insisted that he send me some samples. The quality of what he and Dave West are working on is flabbergastingly original and beautiful (I’ve dropped page two into this preview below). I’ve had a look at some of the other pages and I can tell you that this is one of the 2018 Kickstarted projects that will be well worth your time. 


You can see that this is a labour of love in all the multi faceted pages, incredible detail and original layouts. It is a ballet of storytelling and combines all that we love in fantasy from the storytelling of books like The Sandman, Mage and Fables to the album covers of progressive rock bands in the 1970s that you could stare at all day! It is also a tale of growth and experience in a world that lives in the shadows of the fantastical and the impact of wartime. Impressive stuff indeed.


I’ll keep you updated with the progress of the project but I’ve added the Press Release below and will be updating you with news of the crowd founder and the release at Nottingham Comic Con in October. Keep them peeled. 





‘Accent UK are publishing their first fantasy comic book in the shape of Kia Wordsmith. Written by Dave West (Stephenson’s Robot, WesterNoir and Whatever Happened To the World’s Fastest Man?) with art by Ian Ashcroft (Tales of WesterNoir) the comic follows the story of a teenage girl living in a city that’s at war. It’s a distant war but it has changed her city in many ways. Kia escapes her daily routine by running the city’s rooftops at night, and it is only here that she feels truly free and truly alive. But there are others who also use the city’s rooftops and Kia finds herself in a game of cat and mouse with Thar-Lax, master thief. A thief who is breaking into the Floating Tower of  the Wizard Zax-Al. Will she follow?’






Kia Wordsmith will be looking for Backers on Kickstarter in September, and will be launched at the Nottingham Comic Con in October.’


Find out more about Accent UK at http://www.accentukcomics.com/ and follow them on Twitter @AccentUK


You can find Ian and examples of his artwork on Instagram at Ian.ashcroft.art and contact him for commissions etc at Ian.ashcroft2018@outlook.com




Many thanks for reading.

Monday, 27 August 2018

In Preview - ‘Amnesia Agents’ from Jason Cobley and James Gray.



Amnesia Agents.


Written by Jason Cobley.

Art and Lettering by James Gray.


Black and White interiors - 52 pages - £6.99.



The Story - ‘Amnesia Agents are tasked with tracking down missing memories and forgotten people. The barrier between Earth and Echo has cracked...


Have you ever wondered what happens to the things you forget? When you forget where you put your keys or an odd sock, where a building was or when an appointment should be, where do you think your memories go? Do you ever get that feeling where you know you've forgotten something important, but can't remember what it is? Do you ever revisit the street that you grew up in but something seems to be missing?


There is a place where these memories end up, a place just beyond what we can normally see and hear - or remember. Sometimes, when enough people forget a person, or a person wishes hard enough to be forgotten, he can find himself in this place. It is a place full of forgotten things. It is a place for the lost, and for stray memories. It is a place full of cracks where dangerous things from other places can slip through, but also where lost sources of hope can be found. It is a place called Echo.


Amnesia Agents can be anyone. Any one of us at any time could have knowledge of who were are wiped from the world and replaced by a new persona until the job is done. Theseus Brown is a newly recruited Agent paired with the more experienced Persephone Mills. When a strange anomaly causes memories to go astray, they are tasked with tracking down and fixing the problem. They haven't counted on a murderous jealous brother of a rock star, or a desperate teenager searching for a man only she can remember. And what evil forces drive the Forget Foxes and the mysterious Lurids?’


The Press Release - Amnesia Agents' is an original graphic novel with 48 pages of story plus supplementary material in US comic book sized format with a full colour glossy card cover, squarebound.


Based on the novel Amnesia Agents Book 1: The Forgotten Child by Jason Cobley.





I’ve just started reading this big old volume of a book. I’m about twenty pages in as I type and can see what a class act it is! It’s got some crisp black and white artwork and some snappy dialogue. It’s an interesting premise and I’ll be giving it my full attention for a more detailed review in the coming weeks. (It’s been a busy week for reasons I’ll be able to reveal soon). The pencils in this volume have a excellent level of detail and the structure has a great balance of action and drama. A real sense of personality. Well worth a look at the price of £6.99.


I’ve stuck this press release preview up early as I’m really enjoying what I’m reading and so that you can get your preorders in as soon as possible before it launches at the ICE Festival in Birmingham on the 15th of September. I’ll be heading there to meet some chums and hopefully buy a physical copy and grab an interview with the creators.


The book will also soon be available on Comichaus and ComiXology so look out for it there.


You can order your physical copy over at the guys Etsy Store at https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/598644206/amnesia-agents-the-graphic-novel-out-now or at their Lulu store at http://www.lulu.com/shop/jason-cobley/amnesia-agents/paperback/product-23720684.html


Head over to http://writingcobblers.blogspot.com/ for more about this book and others by these creators.








Many thanks for reading.

Wednesday, 22 August 2018

Slaughter Hawk is coming......




SLAUGHTER HAWK.- CORPORATISM HAS A NEW FOE.


Created by Dave Broughton.


U.S. FORMAT COMIC BOOK. 

52 PAGES FULL COLOUR.

PERFECT BOUND. 

RETAIL PRICE £6.99p.


2048 AD: A corrupt government rules the United Corporate States of America. Most people live in slum districts while their corporate masters rule from vast tower blocks in comparative luxury. Is the shadowy figure known as ‘Slaughter Hawk’ the hero that the people so desperately need? I’m going to add to this press release (as I got an early read of this comic) and say that we’ve never needed Slaughter Hawk more than we do now. 


I read this from cover to cover and couldn’t put it down.





This is of course a superhero, albeit a rather dark portrayal of one. But it is also one that would fit in well with the tastes of a 2000 AD reader. It has a grittiness about it but also includes hilariously overblown characters who are in return in possession of numerous steroid induced muscles on muscles on muscles. We also get gadgets, tech armour, a militarised government and female ninja(ish) assassins. Dave does all the above with a little satirical glint in his eye. He knows what he is doing and he is also having great fun doing it. What more can you ask for?


Each comic book comes with a free gift (while stocks last) - an A3 full colour Slaughter Hawk poster.


SLAUGHTER HAWK is launching at the ICE ‘International Comic Expo’ being held on September 15th at Birmingham City Centre. More information on the event here: www.smallzone.co.uk






A promotional Digital Ashcan ‘Slaughter Hawk a prelude’ will be posted daily on Dave’s personal and various other Facebook, twitter, Blog pages and other social media plat forms from September 1st to 14th before it’s launch on September 15th.


You can find out about Dave’s work and other books he’s created like his excellent ongoing series Shaman Kane at the following social media.


FACEBOOK PAGE: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100008159144954

TWITTER ADDRESS: @DbroughtonDavid

BLOG PAGE: dbroughton.blogspot.com









Many thanks for reading.