Thursday, December 19, 2024

Chatting with Matt Madden, Constraint Cartoonist and an SPX Mainstay

 


By Mike Rhode

photo by R. Carter Studios, 2022
Matt Madden is one of the defining indy cartoonists of the early 21st century, and he has been coming to SPX for decades. He has a new book out this year, Six Treasures of the Spiral, so I used that as an opportunity to ask for an interview.

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

I was born in May of 1968 in New York City, in the midst of student riots at Columbia University and in Paris. My mother was finishing her college degree at Columbia but was pretty oblivious to the student activism—she just remembered the riot police being alarmed at a pregnant young woman showing up to class.

Where do you live?

I've been living in Philadelphia since 2016.

What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

I’m entirely self-taught, though I have benefited from advice and resource-sharing with peers and mentors throughout my career. I learned how to draw and tell stories visually by reading a lot of comics, drawing copies of panels I liked, and above all by making comics before I was “ready” and self-publishing them as photocopied minicomics to sell and (mainly) trade with other artists.

What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

I would say I'm part of the world of indy comics or alternative comics or maybe literary comics. I love doing one-pagers and short stories, strips more rarely, and I do book-length comics even though I'm very slow.   I work on paper and I always have books in mind even if I share a lot of stuff online.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

I do a combination. My final pages are India ink on Bristol board using a combination of different nibs and watercolor brushes. Some correction with Deleter white #2. Then I scan and do more clean up in Photoshop.

Increasingly, I use the computer and my iPad to write and plan my comics: I lay out my stories in InDesign using a technique developed by Alison Bechdel and I do a lot of my pencils on my iPad using Procreate, which I then print out and lightbox on to final pencils on Bristol board.


What's your new book about? How does it build on your previous works?

Six Treasures of the Spiral: Comics Formed under Pressure is a collection of short comics I’ve drawn over the last 25 years, all of them made using some kind of formal constraint or conceit: one story uses the letters of the alphabet to generate the art and story; another is a narrative palindrome; some were made by adapting fixed poetry forms like the sestina and the pantoum to the comics page.

These stories weave through my entire career as a cartoonist and show how formal experimentation has been a uniting thread in my work since even before my discovery of the tradition of constrained writing as exemplified Oulipo and Raymond Queneau, which led to my pivotal book, 99 Ways to Tell a Story: Exercises in Style (2005)

You're probably best known as a 'constraint' cartoonist. If I have that term right, can you explain it and how you got into it?

Yes, "constraint" is the term I like to use, and what that means for me is a rule or structure that you impose on yourself as a combination of prompt and creative challenge to create a work of art. We use constraints or limitations all the time when we make art, for example you might decide to make a wordless comic or a comic with the exact same panel grid on every page: how do you tell a good story that makes use of those restrictions? Maybe it's an interesting challenge to try to convey a scene of dialogue in a wordless comic, or to try to create a sense of wide open space in a comic with a 12-panel grid on it. These kinds of constraints are kinds of parameters or guidelines, part of the decision-making and planning of any comic (to stick to one medium—these principles apply across the board, though).

What I like to do is add a weird, often arbitrary constraint on top of whatever pre-existing format constraints there are because I find it forces me to hone my creative problem solving and discover surprising solutions for drawings and stories.

For example, the lead story of my new book is called "Prisoner of Zembla" which was created by making drawings for each panel that evoked the letters of the alphabet, in order, meaning there are 26 panels (plus a title panel for 27 total, which makes for a neat 3-page comic using a 9-panel grid). As I doodled shapes of letters and tried to make them into faces, bodies, and spaces, a story started to suggest itself to me which was about alphabets and language.

The short version of how I got into using constraints is that I owe it all to Raymond Queneau's Exercises in Style, which I adapted into comics between 1998-2004. Drawing the same comics 99 times really sensitized me to how significant and how fun these formal decisions are that we often take for granted. It's been my primary creative focus ever since.

For a longer explanation, I invite you to read the afterword to my new book, "Thinking Inside the Box, or: The Method to My Madden-ness," which you can also read on my Substack: https://mattmadd.substack.com/p/thinking-inside-the-box

Who are your comic art influences?

To stick to comics, here are some major formative influences in no particular order:

    George Herriman

    Winsor McCay

    Hergé

    Julie Doucet

    Carol Swain

    Daniel Clowes

    Muñoz and Sampayo

    Edmond Baudoin

    Gary Panter

    Art Spiegelman

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?  

A creative career is always a crapshoot full of would-haves and could-haves so I don’t like to dwell on that stuff too much. The two things I sometimes wish (and which are probably incompatible) are that 1) I had committed to regularly and only producing comics instead of branching out into teaching, editing, making textbooks, etc., and 2) that I had gotten a decent day job early on that would have allowed me to separate the desire to make art from the need to make money.

What work are you best-known for?

That's easy: I will probably always be best known for 99 Ways to Tell a Story: Exercises in Style, my riff on Raymond Queneau's Exercises in Style (1947), where I redrew the same story 99 times using different points of view, different genres, different formal approaches, and so on.

What work are you most proud of?

 These days I feel most proud of my short story "Bridge" (first published as a standalone mini by Kuš and collected in Six Treasures). It is an excellent example of how constraints can draw entirely novel and surprising stories out of you: this comic was created and drawn as a 24-hour comic (24 pages conceived, written, and drawn in 24 hours) with the additional constraint that there had to be a 10-year time gap between each page. Despite that straitjacket of a challenge, I was able to summon up a story which I believe is the best single piece of fiction I have ever created.

I’m also happy with the drawing though I’d like to point out that I completely re-drew the story a few years after the 24-hour version.

What would you like to do or work on in the future?


My kids are in high school and the prospect of being an empty nester is on the horizon. I have several older artist friends whom I’ve seen really thrive with that new freedom and I plan to do the same.

I have two book-length projects that I’m already working on (slowly but surely) and several other projects on deck.

Mostly, I want to keep making comics but as time frees up in the coming years I’d also like to devote more time to playing guitar and making music, doing more translation, and doing drawing or printmaking projects.

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

I usually have more than one project going on at a time so if I get stuck or disenchanted with one I’ll switch to the other for a while. Often, by the time I get back to the stuck project after a break I can see it with fresh eyes and find a new way to approach it. The creative process is cyclical and any given work is always in a stage between near-finished and near-ruined.

I don’t really get writer’s block, that’s one of the appeals to me of constraints: if I’m not sure what I want to draw or write about, I can set myself an arbitrary constraint (say: make a one-page comic using only triangles and circles) and that puts me in problem-solving mode rather than worrying about whether I have anything to say.

What do you think will be the future of your field?

Overall I think comics have a great future—creatively, at least. So many new artists are bringing all kinds of new energy to the art form all over the world and the combination of the internet and the ever-growing network of small press-focused comics shows means that it's easier than ever to share your work. Then again, that also makes it harder than ever to get your stuff noticed amidst the tsunami of impressive minicomics, graphic novels, translations, and archival reprints that come out every week, but I think that's a healthy problem for an art form to have.

I'm speaking here about author-driven independent or "art" comics, not necessarily mainstream genre stuff.

Matt at SPX in 2024

What cons do you attend besides The Small Press Expo? Any comments about attending them?

SPX is my main annual con. One addition in recent years has been the Philly Comics Expo (PCX), organized by our amazing local store Partners and Son, which also happens in the fall. The show has a local focus but increasingly brings in out-of-towners like Bubbles Zine or even my tablemate this year, Johnny Damm, who came all the way from California.

I go to MoCCA from time to time and will be there in 2025 but I don't really have a sense of what it's like these days.

I think the vibe of these American indy festivals has evolved over the years to something pretty different from the 90s—which is a good thing. It's a very young scene and much more diverse than it used to be. I admit that I sometimes feel like a bit of an outsider in my own scene as an old grayhair with my books amidst a crowd of risograph zines, t-shirts, and stickers, but I'm happy to see the scene grow and I plan to stick around long enough to see the current youngsters find themselves as befuddled as me in 10-15 years' time.

I was lucky enough to regularly attend the Angoulême Comics Festival four years in a row and again in 2023 and that remains a whole other beast. It's like SDCC if there were no toys or video games (which is to say: it's nothing like SDCC). It's as exciting as everyone says it is, despite its commercialization and the brouhahas that pop up every few years.

You spent time in France as cartoonist invited to live there? How did that come about?

In 2012, my wife Jessica Abel and I were both accepted for residencies at La Maison des Auteurs, a studio residency for cartoonists in Angoulême, France. It's not directly associated with the festival, rather it's part of a whole institution that has grown in parallel called La Cité Internationale de la Bande Dessinée et de l'Image. We initially went for a one-year residency, then renewed for a second year before finally extending to four years total—the maximum allowed!

Our children were two and four when we moved so we dropped them in the local public school and they quickly became fluent French speakers.

It was an incredible experience to be able to live abroad as a family in a country that places value on the arts (and on families: we received a monthly stipend from the French government simply because we had two children, through a quasi-UBI program called La Caisse d'Allocations Familiales). Angoulême is a quiet, even dull, place but it's great for a young family and it is within hours of Paris and Bordeaux or even Bilbao. We were able to travel all over Europe by car and train, often to comics festivals that invited us: Helsinki, Stockholm, Luzerne, Gijón…

You and Jessica Abel are a long-standing married comics couple. Do you talk about work at home? Share projects? Both teach professionally? Have different views on making comics? Have similar ones?

Jessica and I met through the comics scene and the early years of our relationship in particular were steeped in one long conversation about comics. These days it's more of a background part of our everyday lives (I write that even though tonight we are going out to the closing reception for "Philly Comics Now," an amazing exhibit of local artists that features both of our work). Our comics have always been quite different but complementary: my work is very formally experimental but I love a good story and try to populate my comics with well-rounded and interesting characters, whereas her work is very much focused on people and their relationships above all, yet she has a keen feel for the formal aspects of cartooning and uses experimental techniques regularly.

We have only rarely collaborated on creative projects but we have taught side-by-side for years, wrote two textbooks together, and we were also series editors of the Best American Comics for six years. She's a great editor and problem-solver and she's always my first reader on new comics.

What comic books do you read regularly or recommend? Do you have a local store?

My local store is Partners and Son (https://partnersandson.com/ ) and it is not just a shop but a social and cultural hub for the Philly comics community since it opened in 2020. I don't really read any serialized comics (even with indy comics, I'm a wait-for-the-trade kind of guy) but here are a few more-or-less recent releases I would recommend:

    Sunday by Olivier Schrauwen

    Blurry by Dash Shaw

    Unwholesome Love by Charles Burns (a floppy produced by Partners and Son!)

    Processing by Tara Booth

    Cutting Season by Bhanu Pratap

    The Gull Yettin by Joe Kessler

    The Great Beyond by Léa Murawiec

Do you have a website or blog?

I'm mostly concentrating on my new Substack (https://mattmadd.substack.com/ ) these days and I invite all of your readers to subscribe--it's mostly free content and I share a lot of thoughts and resources related to comics and constraints there.

I also maintain my website, mattmadden.com, where you can find information about my books, my comics coaching and other educational work, and other news. It's also an easy way to contact me.

What's your favorite thing about visiting DC?

Unfortunately, I rarely make it down to DC proper during SPX. I have some good friends in Alexandria but we haven't gotten together outside SPX since before the pandemic. I remember a nice trip to Eastern Market…

Matt at SPX in 2023

How has the COVID-19 outbreak affected you, personally and professionally?

I feel pretty lucky about how the pandemic played out for me and my family. No one close to me got dangerously sick and my kids were at an age where they were old enough to take care of themselves at home yet not so old that they were going to stir crazy. Jessica and I were already mostly working at home already and I spent the lockdown year refining my last book, Ex Libris, and eventually pitching it to Tom Kaczynski, who published it in the fall of 2021, just as the lockdown was easing up.

I would say I definitely took a hit professionally as I had pretty regular gigs traveling to schools to give talks and workshops and all of that is basically gone now. On the other hand, I was forced to finally reckon with how to teach and interact using Zoom and that has led to online opportunities—teaching regularly for SAW, offering one-on-one comics coaching to authors—that I might not have pursued otherwise.

All that said, I feel like it's going to be years before we fully absorb the weirdness and trauma of that first year in particular. I remember crossing the Benjamin Franklin Bridge into New Jersey (in search of a loaf of fresh bread!) and not seeing a single other car for most of the ride. My heart was pounding as if I was in 28 Days Later or some other apocalyptic movie…

John DeVore remembers his first comic book store, in NoVa

I have no idea what store this might have been though.

When I Sleep, I Dream About A Comic Book Shop That Never Closes

Roll Call's R.J. Matson best of 2024

Capitol Ink: Putting the cap on 2024

R.J. Matson shares some of his favorite political cartoons of the year

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

WaPo on ‘Marvel Rivals’ videogame and Jeff the Land Shark

'Marvel Rivals' has a surprise star — a deadly land shark named Jeff

[in print as 'Marvel Rivals' players are raving about an adorable, malevolent shark]

Washington Post December 16, 2024: C5.

Library of Congress adds ‘KoKo’s Earth Control’ to National Film Registry

Fleischer Toon 'KoKo's Earth Control' Added to National Film Registry

 https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/12/fleischer-toon-kokos-earth-control-added-to-national-film-registry/

NPR on Simpson's birthday

Updated for the Incoming President by Daniel Boris



Liza Donnelly on meeting Herblock and Hustler v Falwell's importance

Trump's Threats

How to draw it?

Comics Research Bibliography citations update, 12/17/2024

Interview: Joe St. Pierre Presents their latest project: A sketchbook of 20+ years of comics!
By Diego Higuera on 12/17/2024 https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-joe-st-pierre-presents-their-latest-project-a-sketchbook-of-20-years-of-comics/

Irving Anderson, Parliamentarian, Has Died, Aged 40
Irving Anderson, Parliamentarian, comics consultant, and concierge to the world, had died at the age of 40.
by Rich Johnston
 , 17 Dec 2024
https://bleedingcool.com/comics/irving-anderson-parliamentarian-died-40/

Marvel Veteran, 'Black Panther' Producer Nate Moore Leaving Studio
The longtime executive will transition to independent producing, and will be a part of the 'Black Panther 3' producing team.
By Aaron Couch, Borys Kit
December 17, 2024
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/marvel-veteran-black-panther-producer-nate-moore-1236088965/

EXCLUSIVE: DSTLRY HIRES ANDRé D. ANDERSON AS HEAD OF SALES & RETAILER RELATIONS For Direct Market and Book Channel
 Brigid Alverson on December 16, 2024
https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/58465/exclusive-dstlry-hires-andr-d-anderson-head-sales-retailer-relations

Reviews: Kate Carew: America's First Great Woman Cartoonist
Nicholas Burman | December 17, 2024
https://www.tcj.com/reviews/kate-carew-americas-first-great-woman-cartoonist/

Recipe Swap
By Suerynn Lee and Liz Maynes-Aminzade
December 16, 2024
Published in the print edition of the December 23, 2024, issue, with the headline "Recipe Swap."
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/12/23/recipe-swap
https://downloads.newyorker.com/projects/2024/cartoons-and-puzzles-2024/lee-maynes-aminzade-rebus.pdf

Goops and Slops
Two cartoonists dig into their food-texture issues.
By Roz Chast and Jason Adam Katzenstein
December 16, 2024
Published in the print edition of the December 23, 2024, issue, with the headline "Goops and Slops."
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/12/23/goops-and-slops

Bored Game
Traverse the morass of traffic, the sea of awkwardness, and the soup course to win the game.
By Liana Finck
December 16, 2024
Published in the print edition of the December 23, 2024, issue, with the headline "Holiday Meal."
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/12/23/holiday-meal
https://downloads.newyorker.com/projects/2024/cartoons-and-puzzles-2024/finck-holiday-meal.pdf

Kate Beaton's "A Murder Mystery"
Take a closer look at the cover of the annual Cartoons & Puzzles Issue.
By Françoise Mouly
December 16, 2024
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cover-story/cover-story-2024-12-23
https://downloads.newyorker.com/projects/2024/cartoons-and-puzzles-2024/beaton-cover-word-search.pdf

First Fast
A lapsed Muslim tries to revive a tradition.
By Navied Mahdavian
December 16, 2024
Published in the print edition of the December 23, 2024, issue, with the headline "First Fast."
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/12/23/first-fast

Disney Reaches $233M Settlement in Minimum Wage Lawsuit
The class action accused the entertainment giant of refusing to follow an Anaheim minimum wage law passed in 2018. [Disneyland]
Winston Cho
December 17, 2024
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/disney-minimum-wage-lawsuit-settlement-1236088774/

From the Brink to the Big Screen: How the Looney Tunes Film Defied the Odds
The director of 'The Day the Earth Blew Up' opens up about the turbulent journey to bring the first animated Looney Tunes film to the screen in more than 80 years. "We made an indie Looney Tunes movie through Warner Bros. — how surreal is that?"
Scott Roxborough
December 16, 2024
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/how-the-looney-tunes-film-defied-the-odds-1236075465/

'Bluey' Hitting The Big Screen: Feature Film in the Works From Disney, BBC Studios
The CG-animated film based on the smash hit family series will hit theaters in 2027.
Alex Weprin
December 17, 2024
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/bluey-movie-disney-bbc-2027-cg-animated-1236088411/

Disney Pulls Transgender Storyline from Pixar's 'Win or Lose' Streaming Series (Exclusive)
The original animated show about a co-ed high school team debuts on Disney+ in February.
Pamela McClintock
December 17, 2024
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/disney-pulls-transgender-storyline-win-or-lose-1236088172/

'Mufasa: The Lion King' Review: Barry Jenkins Can't Quite Save Disney's Scattered Prequel
Beyoncé Knowles-Carter, Blue Ivy Carter and Kelvin Harrison Jr. lend their voices to the "live-action" animated origin story about the young cat (Aaron Pierre) who becomes Simba's royal father.
Lovia Gyarkye
December 17, 2024
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-reviews/mufasa-the-lion-king-review-barry-jenkins-1236087876/

She Drew That Releases 2024 U.K. Animation Industry Salary Survey
Joe Fordham | 12/13/2024
https://www.cartoonbrew.com/artist-rights/she-drew-that-releases-2024-u-k-animation-industry-salary-survey-244291.html

She Drew That
2024 Salary Rates Report
Survey conducted between 9/2024 - 10/2024
Hannah Lau-Walker et al
https://www.shedrewthat.com/_files/ugd/8da591_1c11e67887434b788c5dd481eaee9418.pdf

See Winston Churchill Through the Eyes of the Political Cartoonists He Inspired
A new exhibition at London's Imperial War Museum brings together political cartoons from around the world that celebrate and satirize the wartime prime minister
Ella Feldman
December 12, 2024
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/see-winston-churchill-through-the-eyes-of-the-political-cartoonists-he-inspired-180985640/

Is there value in turning the great works of literature into graphic novels?
Alexander Wells
November 8 2024
 https://www.the-berliner.com/books/literature-adaptations-graphic-novels-comic-books-nicholas-mahler/

'Superman' writer loves Alabama football as much as superheroes [Jason Aaron]
    Matt Wake
  Nov. 08, 2024,
https://www.al.com/life/2024/11/comic-book-icon-loves-alabama-football-as-much-as-superheroes.html

Graphic novelists craft the true story of an Ontario soldier who never came home
Lt. Ernie Phair was killed in action in 1944. He left behind a widow, a daughter and unanswered questions about his death.
Jeff Outhit
Nov. 9, 2024 https://www.therecord.com/news/waterloo-region/graphic-novelists-craft-the-true-story-of-an-ontario-soldier-who-never-came-home/article_8be8909b-413d-5af9-9a87-448e4536ce16.html

Welcome to this month's CartoonStock caption contest.
Bob Mankoff, Lawrence Wood, Trevor Hoey and Joel Mishon
CartoonStock, a Cartoon Collections Co.
  Dec 13, 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_CI-eS86RMs

"Cat Rap" Caption Contest Commentary with Lawrence Wood
December 16, 2024 by Lawrence Wood
https://www.cartoonstock.com/blog/cat-rap-caption-contest-commentary-with-lawrence-wood/

In the frame: Best of the year in comic books and graphic novels
Irish artists and writers had another strong year, writes Don O'Mahony
Tue, 17 Dec, 2024 - 11:00
Don O'Mahony
https://www.irishexaminer.com/lifestyle/artsandculture/arid-41537576.html

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Comics Research Bibliography citations update, 12/16/2024

'It's not an homage, but at least it's an understanding': Mark McGuire & Alain Chevarier on Clay Footed Giants [French Canadian]

Tahneer Oksman | December 16, 2024 https://www.tcj.com/its-not-an-homage-but-at-least-its-an-understanding-mark-mcguire-alain-chevarier-on-clay-footed-giants/

 

Comic relief: Meet Aaron Curtis Jr., the Waldorf native using art to address issues facing young, urban audiences

by Aria Brent

November 6, 2024 https://afro.com/aaron-curtis-comic-book-solu/

 

INTERVIEW: Jacksepticeye Looks Toward a Creative Future [Ireland]

Meg Fabbri on 12/16/2024 https://www.comicsbeat.com/nycc-interview-jacksepticeye/

 

Preston comic book store announces closing date

The Hero's Tale will be closing its doors for good on Nov. 13

CambridgeToday Staff Nov 5, 2024 https://www.cambridgetoday.ca/local-news/preston-comic-book-store-announces-closing-date-9761683

 

South Korea's Webtoon To Release Tactile Digital Comics

Two of Webtoon's digital series are being produced and released free of charge in Dot Inc's 'Dot Pad' technology for sight-impaired readers.

Porter Anderson

November 6, 2024

https://publishingperspectives.com/2024/11/south-koreas-webtoon-to-release-tactile-digital-comics/

 

Detective Comic Book Digs Into Belgium's Past

By AFP - Agence France Presse

November 7, 2024

https://www.barrons.com/news/detective-comic-book-digs-into-belgium-s-past-1e4d525b

 

Meet Mark Bernal

November 7, 2024

https://canvasrebel.com/meet-mark-bernal/

 

Disney Animation Producer Daniel Ridgers Dies at 52

Ramin Zahed

December 13, 2024

https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/12/disney-animation-producer-daniel-ridgers-dies-at-52/

 

'Phineas and Ferb' Storyboard Artist Nadine Promes García Discusses the Ups and Downs of Life in Animation

Ramin Zahed

December 14, 2024

https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/12/phineas-and-ferb-storyboard-artist-nadine-promes-garcia-discusses-the-ups-and-downs-of-life-in-animation/

 

Cartoonist Jamie Smith releases dank second book

    David James Dec 5, 2024

https://www.newsminer.com/features/latitude_65/cartoonist-jamie-smith-releases-dank-second-book/article_ddeeb302-b284-11ef-9cd6-7794dc187cfe.html

 

One of the best action movies of the '90s is a Disney princess musical

Mulan charted new ground for Disney—and gave us an action heroine for the ages

By Caroline Siede  |  December 16, 2024

https://www.avclub.com/women-of-action-mulan-disney


Exploring the Fever Dream of Wretched: An Interview with Henrik Rehr and Jan Solheim
Dec 16, 2024
https://previewsworld.com/article/279218

Macoto Takahashi, Shojo Manga Artist & Trailblazer, Dies at 90
Tulisha Srivastava
December 16, 2024, https://comicbook.com/anime/news/macoto-takahashi-shojo-artist-dies-90/

Sandman: The Chrysanthemum and the Sword
P. Craig Russell
Behind the Drawing Board 12.16.24
https://lurid.com/watch/v/sandman-the-chrysanthemum-and-the-sword

Ep. 116: Born Again, by Miller & Mazzucchelli
MSX: Mangasplaining Extra
Dec 16 2024 https://mangasplaining.substack.com/p/ep-116-born-again-by-miller-and-mazzucchelli

Sunday, December 15, 2024

That darn Edith Pritchett, Baldo, and Nick Galifianakis in WaPo



Through the years, we all will be together, if the fates allow [Baldo letter]

Ana Adams, Rockville

Washington Post Dec 14 2024: a13

In the "Baldo" comic strip, there is a girl named Rayna who gets to hang out with others through "telepresence," a monitor on a wheeled robot.

To someone who often has to interact with others during the holidays through video chat because of illness, attending events via telepresence would be genuinely life-changing.

Unfortunately, it's still pricey, and, much more significantly, people would treat my attendance as strange.

I hope with time it will become an accessibility feature at events, schools and conferences, not unlike offering wheelchairs.

Thank you for normalizing it and making me feel represented. It means so much.



Blossom of snow, may you bloom and grow [ Nick Galifianakis letter]

Thank you, Nick Galifianakis, for the beautiful illustration that accompanied Carolyn Hax's Dec. 7 column, "Grieving parents 'shocked' that surviving child plans a wedding two years later," about planning a wedding while grieving a loss. The posture and expression of the bride, with her hand over her heart, her eyes closed and her face upturned, perfectly evoked the poignant, mixed emotions expressed by the reader and in Hax's response. I enjoy your cartoons immensely, usually for their wry humor, but this one captured my heart.



Feel the love in the room from the floor to the ceiling [Edith Pritchett letter]

Norman Michael Harman, Harpers Ferry, West Virginia

Washington Post Dec 14 2024: A13.

online at https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/12/13/jordan-peterson-mow-leaves-gift-guide-transgender-charity/

I'd been mulling over this letter for months, and Edith Pritchett's Nov. 30 cartoon finally gave me the impetus to write. My biggest question is: Why? Why is half of the op-ed page given to Pritchett's non-funny, non-political, non-satirical, non-mocking, non-anything scribbling? Compared with her work, the comic strip "Nancy" is an icon of cogent political satire and high-minded fine art.

I pine for the days of the great Pat Oliphant and Art Buchwald, but, alas, it seems their caliber of humor is gone from The Post forever.


WaPo talks to Chris Ware and Adrian Tomine

Two of the greatest living cartoonists talk about their lives

Chris Ware and Adrian Tomine discuss their latest works, "Acme Novelty Datebook" and "Q & A." [in print as Drawn to Life]

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Comics Research Bibliography citations update, 12/13/2024

Comic Book Retailers Share Their Diamond… And Lunar… Stories

In the last few weeks, Bleeding Cool has covered issues that comic book retailers have been suffering from Diamond Comic Distributors delays.

12 Dec 2024

 Rich Johnston

https://bleedingcool.com/comics/comic-book-retailers-share-diamond-lunar-stories/

 

'Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim' Review: Side Quest

By Maya Phillips

A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 13, 2024, Section C, Page 5 of the New York edition with the headline: This Side Quest Is for the Fans.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/12/movies/lord-of-the-rings-the-war-of-the-rohirrim-review.html

 

Cartoonist and TV vet Bruce Eric Kaplan details the Hollywood life in memoir

'They Went Another Way: A Hollywood Memoir' describes his day-to-day struggles experience in the entertainment industry.

By Stuart Miller

 Orange County Register December 12, 2024 https://www.ocregister.com/2024/12/12/cartoonist-and-tv-vet-bruce-eric-kaplan-details-the-hollywood-life-in-memoir/

 

Cartoonist's Cartoonists: Influences of Alex Hallatt

Alan Gardner December 12, 2024

https://www.dailycartoonist.com/index.php/2024/12/12/cartoonists-cartoonists-influences-of-alex-hallatt/

 

2025 Oscars Short Film Contenders: 'Nube' Directors Christian Arredondo And Diego Alonso Sánchez de la Barquera Estrada [Mexico]By Kévin Giraud | 12/12/2024  https://www.cartoonbrew.com/awards/2025-oscars-short-film-contenders-nube-directors-christian-arredondo-and-diego-alonso-sanchez-de-la-barquera-estrada-244396.html

 

2025 Oscars Short Film Contenders: 'A Crab In The Pool' Directors Alexandra Myotte And Jean-Sebastien Hamel

By Kévin Giraud | 12/13/2024  https://www.cartoonbrew.com/awards/2025-oscars-short-film-contenders-a-crab-in-the-pool-directors-alexandra-myotte-and-jean-sebastien-hamel-244405.html

 

'Kraven the Hunter' Review: A Seriously Silly Movie

Robert Daniels

A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 14, 2024, Section C, Page 5 of the New York edition with the headline: Suffused With the Law of Tooth and Claw. And Silliness.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/13/movies/kraven-the-hunter-review.html

 

Rachel Cooke's best graphic novels of 2024

From Aimée de Jongh's contemporary reworking of a William Golding classic to an extraterrestrial tale from Charles Burns, here are the best titles of the year

Rachel Cooke

Sun 8 Dec 2024 https://www.theguardian.com/books/2024/dec/08/rachel-cookes-best-graphic-novels-of-2024

 

'Diary of a Wimpy Kid' author Jeff Kinney: The Boston.com interview

By Peter Chianca

December 2, 2024

https://www.boston.com/culture/books/2024/12/02/diary-of-a-wimpy-kid-author-jeff-kinney-the-boston-com-interview/

 

Peter Chianca and Dave London

Episode 52, Jeff Kinney of 'Diary of a Wimpy Kid'

Strip Search Nov 30, 2024 https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/forcedn/stripsearch/SS_1224_Kinney_audio.m4a

 

Marshall Ramsey stops by the Queen City to sign copies of his newest children's book

Norman McLeod

WTOK Dec 11 2024

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/marshall-ramsey-stops-by-the-queen-city-to-sign-copies-of-his-newest-children-s-book/ar-AA1vDo7a

 

Square Enix Launches New Web Version of Manga UP! for Ultimate Reading Flexibility

By Hayame Kawachi on 12/13/2024 https://www.comicsbeat.com/square-enix-new-web-version-manga-up/

 

Yule Be Sorry – This Week's Links

Clark Burscough | December 13, 2024

https://www.tcj.com/yule-be-sorry-this-weeks-links/

 

Restlessly Wandering Through Delhi In Sarnath Banerjee's Corridor

The 2004 graphic novel is a delightfully wayward city-ode

Debanjan Dhar

Updated on: 9 December 2024

https://www.outlookindia.com/books/restlessly-wandering-through-delhi-in-sarnath-banerjees-corridor

 

Why Charles Burns keeps returning to teenage angst in his graphic novels

The American cartoonist discussed his latest book Final Cut on Bookends with Mattea Roach

CBC Radio · Posted: Dec 11, 2024

https://www.cbc.ca/books/bookends/why-charles-burns-keeps-returning-to-teenage-angst-in-his-graphic-novels-1.7405724

 

Scunnered Ink's Gordon Tait on giving Still Game the graphic novel treatment [UK]

Ian Downes December 10 2024

https://www.brandsuntapped.com/scunnered-inks-gordon-tait-on-giving-still-game-the-graphic-novel-treatment/

 

INTERVIEW: Emma Rios Talks Sea Monsters, Isolation, & Trauma in Anzuelo

  Jenna Ledford December 10, 2024

https://womenwriteaboutcomics.com/2024/12/interview-emma-rios-talks-sea-monsters-isolation-trauma-in-anzuelo/

 

Patton Oswalt and Jordan Blum unpack the Marvel comics that made them cry — or scream

Inside The Folio Society's Unforgettable Stories compilation: 'We tried to pick comics that were very personal to us'

by Tasha Robinson

Polygon Dec 12, 2024,

https://www.polygon.com/marvel/495020/patton-oswalt-interview-jordan-blum-unforgettable-stories-best-comics-ever

 

Tom King on his Black Canary series: 'This is a fight that if Batman got in the ring, he'd get his ass kicked'

Writer Tom King and artist Ryan Sook unpack Black Canary: Best of the Best, and DC movies vs. DC comics

by Susana Polo

Polygon Dec 10, 2024

https://www.polygon.com/comics/493134/dc-black-canary-best-of-the-best-tom-king-interview

 

X-Men Monday #278 – Steve Foxe Talks 'Timeslide'

Chris Hassan

December 9, 2024

https://aiptcomics.com/2024/12/09/x-men-monday-278-steve-foxe-timeslide/

 

The Comic Adaptation of Lao She's Short Story "Vision": A Critical Analysis

    Jianlong Yang

    Journal of Cultural Interaction in East Asia December 4, 2024

https://doi.org/10.1515/jciea-2024-0009

https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/jciea-2024-0009/html

 

Application of Onomatopoeia in the Comic "Popeye the Sailorman" Volumes 60-65

    Alfia Tawaffani  

    Eri Kurniawan  

    Budi Hermawan  

    Tamaddun Life Vol 23 No 2 (2024): December /

DOI: https://doi.org/10.33096/tamaddun.v23i2.778

https://jurnal.fs.umi.ac.id/index.php/tamaddun-life/article/view/778

 

Voices Through Art: Co-Creating the School Daze Comic for and with Autistic Young People to Support Educational Transitions

Hanna Kovshoff, Charlie Raufi, Samantha Davies, Fate Keefe, and Sarah Parsons

Sociological Research Online

December 6, 2024

https://doi.org/10.1177/13607804241296258

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/13607804241296258


Ryan Reynolds Multitasks Like a Mofo
Punching up lines in 'Deadpool & Wolverine' while creating a commercial with Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce? No problem for THR's Producer of the Year, who made his antihero sequel the most successful R-rated film in history.
Pamela McClintock
December 13, 2024
https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-features/ryan-reynolds-interview-boy-band-film-ads-deadpool-1236085447/

Ryan Reynolds says Deadpool should never be an Avenger
Reynolds also sounded unenthused about another solo Deadpool movie: "A fourth time feels a little iterative and redundant."
By William Hughes  |  December 13, 2024
https://www.avclub.com/ryan-reynolds-says-deadpool-should-never-be-an-avenger

The Best Animated Shows of 2024
By Paste Staff and Elijah Gonzalez  |  December 13, 2024
https://www.pastemagazine.com/tv/best-of-2024/best-animated-series-2024

THE WAR OF THE ROHIRRIM's Writers Talk Evolving Tolkien's Rohan Lore and Creating Original THE LORD OF THE RINGS Characters
by Rotem Rusak
Dec 11 2024 https://nerdist.com/article/the-lord-of-the-rings-the-war-of-the-rohirrim-writers-phoebe-gittins-arty-papageorgiou-interview/

THE WAR OF THE ROHIRRIM's Gaia Wise on Héra as a Shieldmaiden of Rohan and Her Connection with THE LORD OF THE RINGS' Éowyn
by Rotem Rusak
Dec 11 2024 https://nerdist.com/article/the-lord-of-the-rings-the-war-of-the-rohirrim-gaia-wise-hera-interview-shieldmaiden-of-rohan-eowyn/