Saturday, September 11, 2021
Friday, September 10, 2021
Oct 26 reschedule - P&P Live! Siena Cherson Siegel and Mark Siegel-Tiny Dancer
P&P Live! Siena Cherson Siegel and Mark Siegel-Tiny Dancer
Due to a publishing delay beyond our control, this event has been rescheduled to Tuesday, October 26, at 7 EST.
Teenage Siena lives and breathes ballet. Her dedication earns her a spot at the School of American Ballet; her long-term plan is New York City Ballet or bust. In spite of her talent, Siena struggles with self-doubt and injury, leading her to question her dream. But what else could she do, when ballet is all she knows? This loving ode to ballet also questions its sometimes grueling practices. Siena Cherson Siegel's graphic memoir of her own experiences as a young ballet dancer will engage readers of all ages who love dance. Illustrations by Mark Siegel exquisitely capture the dancers' graceful movements.
Siena Cherson Siegel is an author and former dancer who trained at the School of American Ballet. To Dance and Tiny Dancer are stories from her life.
Mark Siegel is known both as an author, illustrator, and as the editorial director of First Second Books, a Macmillan imprint that publishes graphic novels for all ages.
Ages 12 to adult
Each purchase of Tiny Dancer will come with a signed bookplate, while supplies last.
Click here to join the Live! event.
Flying Dog beer's Ralph Steadman label banned in North Carolina
North Carolina Banned This Beer Because Bureaucrats Dislike the Label [Ralph Steadman]
Now they'll have to explain to a federal judge how this isn't a violation of the First Amendment.
Eric Boehm | 9.8.2021
https://reason.com/2021/09/08/north-carolina-banned-this-beer-because-bureaucrats-dislike-the-label/
Ralph Steadman Ale Art Banned in North Carolina
Maryland Brewery Sues North Carolina for Rejecting Label With Naked Man Cartoon
By Associated Press •
Raging Bitch, Good Shit, and Flying Dog Beer's Fight for Free Speech
LadiesCon 2021 - History in Comics! (Panel) with Sierra Barnes
Sept 23; With Great Responsibility: The Spider-Man Origin Story in Art and Comic Books
Date and Location
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When: Thursday, September 23, 2021
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm EDT
Add to calendar This live presentation will premiere online with captioning as part of the National Book Festival and will be available for viewing afterwards in the Library's Event Videos collection.
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Where: Online Only
- More information at zoomgov.com External.
- Genre: Your Library of Congress
Part of 2021 National Book Festival
Request ADA accommodations five business days in advance at (202) 707-6362 or ADA@loc.gov.
Before Spider-Man leaped off the pages of comic books into the movies, Steve Ditko, a cartoonist, and Stan Lee, a scriptwriter, sat down at their desks and invented him. The Library of Congress possesses the original drawings for their collaboration, which appeared in the August 1962 issue of "Amazing Fantasy." Together we look at the moment the radioactive spider bit Peter Parker, turning him from a lonely teenager into a superhero. We discuss how Steve Ditko changed his art in reaction to Stan Lee's editorial notations in the margins of the drawing. Specialists present the art in an interactive format, highlighting the artistic creative process, including how Ditko drew the costume for the first time and how it differs from what Spider-Man wears today. We also discuss how Peter comes to learn "with great power there must also come — great responsibility!" Conceived as an interactive event aimed at children and young adults who may be aware only of the Marvel movies, Library staff will highlight and discuss that the story came from a book — a comic book — and the imaginative possibilities of a talented writer and artist working as a team.
Learn more about the Library of Congress experts participating in the National Book Festival, including Sara W. Duke from the Prints and Photographs Division and Megan Halsband from the Serial and Government Publications Division.
NPR on Q-Force
In 'Q-Force,' Queer Agents Find Agency
NPR Pop Culture Happy Hour Sep 9, 2021
Thursday, September 09, 2021
Patricia Maginnis, trailblazing abortion rights activist (and amateur editorial cartoonist), dies at 93
Patricia Maginnis, trailblazing abortion rights activist, dies at 93
2 more Cartoonist Kayfabe with Warren Bernard
The First Comics Were From The Platinum Age! We're Looking at 100+ Yr Old Books With Warren Bernard!
CGC SNUFF FILM: Mad issue 10 (and a bonus history of Lampoon from Warren Bernard).
YouNeek Studios' artist Godwin Akpan interviewed by Troy-Jeffrey Allen
Get Graphic: Godwin Akpan Creates a World of Wonder [Iyanu: Child of Wonder; YouNeek Studios]
Aug 31, 2021
Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco gets money from John Oliver
John Oliver is helping museums through the pandemic — by lending them rat erotica [Cartoon Art Museum]
The Post on family animated movies and superhero franchises
The delta variant may be slowly killing the family movie
A staple of the entertainment business is in trouble because of the new coronavirus strain, among other factors
Opinion: The movies want you to believe anything is possible within a franchise. It isn't.
Ann Telnaes on cartooning during social media madness
(written by a local student cartoonist too!)
4 top political cartoonists. 1 virtual room. Here's what they had to say about virtual satire in the age of social media.
By Alexandra Bowman
SPJ President Matthew Hall moderated the panel "Editorial Cartooning in an Age of Cancel Culture and Death Threats" — a conversation between Pulitzer-winning cartoonists Darrin Bell, of the King Features Syndicate, Steve Breen, of the San Diego Union-Tribune, Ann Telnaes, of The Washington Post, and Pulitzer finalist Marty Two Bulls Sr., a freelancer.
No Halloween comics for handing out this year
Diamond Cancels Halloween ComicFest For 2021
Sept 11: BOOK SIGNING WITH JANET HARVEY at Fantom Comics
>>>IN-STORE EVENTS >>>Saturday, September 11th @ 12pm to 2pm >>>BOOK SIGNING WITH JANET HARVEY We're having an in-store signing with lovely comics writer Janet Harvey! She wrote the super cool graphic novel Curie Society, where a covert team of young women—members of the Curie society, an elite organization dedicated to women in STEM—undertake high-stakes missions to save the world. Harvey also wrote a story in the recently released Wonder Woman Black & Gold #3! We'll have copies of it in the store during the signing! Get copies of Curie Society on our website here: https://stores.comichub.com/.../products/the-curie-society Check out more about Janet here: https://www.janetharvey.com/aboutmenew As usual, masks are required at the event. |
Wednesday, September 08, 2021
Latest Goodwyn editorial cartoons.
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Baltimore Comic-Con's COVID policy, and additional guests
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Tuesday, September 07, 2021
SPX announces more guests for virtual con
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Monday, September 06, 2021
Flugennock's Latest'n'Greatest: "Happy Trails"
"Happy Trails"
http://sinkers.org/stage/?p=3306
Is it just me, or has The Atlantic become our one-stop shop for
tone-deaf shit takes? My current favorite clunker concerns the fascist
abortion law in Texas, and its potential to turn out the vote for the
Democrats. Yeah, that's right — Texas has gone full-on fascist with
this shit, a fistful of other states are reportedly considering going
that way, and the Democrats' number one priority is — exploiting
encroaching fascism to rustle up votes and money for the midterms, and
herd the Left back into the Party. Git along, little dogies. H'yahhh.
if you are playing games with reproduction rights to stick it to
the other side in the midterms then you're not fighting for anyone's rights,
you're fighting for your own power.
And while we see you doing nothing in power except offering
empty promises for when you get more, no
— vegan honk thinks it's fucked, @VeganHonk666 on Twitter
C'mon, Trigger, we can still ketch 'em...! Yippie Ty yi yayy!
Time for a song, now...
11x13 inch medium-res color .jpg image, 934kb
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"Happy Trails", closing credits to "The Roy Rogers Show", 1951
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEqUyNaSdvg
"Is This How Democrats Break Their Midterm Curse?" Elaine Godfrey in
The Atlantic, 09.03.2021
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2021/09/texas-abortion-law-means-midterms/619966/
"if you are playing games with reproduction rights to stick it to the
other side in the midterms then you're not fighting for anyone's
rights, you're fighting for your own power.
And while we see you doing nothing in power except offering empty
promises for when you get more,
no" — vegan honk thinks it's fucked, @VeganHonk666 on Twitter
https://twitter.com/VeganHonk666/status/1434146247368052736
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Mike Flugennock, Political Cartoons: http://www.sinkers.org/stage
and follow me on Mastodon at https://mastodon.social/@flugennock
The Post's Shang-Chi review, a few days late
Marvel's 'Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings' breaks new ground, and has fun doing so [in print as Marvel's latest is actually a kick to watch]
That darn Prickly City & Candorville
Opinion: A poignant question in the funny pages [ Scott Stantis "Prickly City" letter]
David Garner, Woodbridge
Drawing a reasonable conclusion ["Candorville" letter]
Vince Krevinas, Fairfax
Washington Post September 6 2021 p. A17
Vince Krevinas, Fairfax