Archive for October, 2009

REMINDER :: Halloween Costume Contest Tomorrow

October 30, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: EVENTS, Heroes Aren't Hard To Find, NEWS, Other Events

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Don’t forget that going on all day tomorrow is our Halloween Costume Contest! Come by in costume, especially all our younger customers, and we’ll take your picture to put up on our site! We’ll judge all the entries and announce the winner on Monday!

AND THAT’S NOT ALL! Shelton and Seth have put together one of their super dollar box stocks, so be sure and come early to look for some sweet deals on back issues. Plus we’ll have a selection of horror-themed books and graphic novels discounted 20% for those of you looking for some macabre reading material! PLUS tons of free comics for trick-or-treaters, candy, and more! It’s a celebration!

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HEROESCON :: Westin Host Hotel Rate!

October 30, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, NEWS

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The many of you who inquire about hotel rates for HeroesCon each year are going to LOVE LOVE LOVE this news almost as much as we do. Usually this doesn’t go live until just a month or two before the show, but this year Shelton has flexed his mighty muscles and the contracts are signed, the rate is live and ready for you to reserve your room!

That’s right! Reservations at the Westin Charlotte are now open at the special HeroesCon rate of $109/night! We strongly suggest you reserve your rooms early rather than late, as even though we have access to nearly the entire hotel, we fully expect an early sellout of rooms.  If you’ve ever stayed in the Westin before, you know the rooms are just ridulously nice, it’s a great hotel and I’m not just saying that, friends; it is a GREAT HOTEL.

You can go to our Hotels page to see a complete list of area hotels we can recommend, including the Westin; or just click right here to go right to the reservation page. If you have any problems, or if particular nights are listed as sold-out, please post a comment so we can address that. They group the rooms in blocks so sometimes they’ll show up on the computer as sold-out, but Shelton has a magic wand to wave at that stuff.

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HEROESCON 2010 :: June 4-6, 2010!!

October 26, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, NEWS

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YES YES YESSSSSSSSS

At long last we have officially set our dates for Heroes Convention 2010: JUNE 4-6, 2010. From some of the behind-the-scenes goings-0n, HeroesCon 2010 looks like it’s going to be the biggest HeroesCon ever, which is saying something if you’ve ever been to one!

This is great news for us, as we had a terrible time trying to find a weekend that the Charlotte Convention Center was available, and that was also not taken up by another convention! As it turns out the only available date was already taken by our buddies at the Florida Supercon–fortunately for us, they very VERY kindly offered to move their dates so that exhibitors and fans could enjoy TWO great conventions instead of just one! This is a hugely gracious act on their part, and believe me when I say we’re grateful and impressed by it. Check out what they’ve already got line up for their show, going on Father’s Day weekend next year–they’re in high gear!

And we’re moving into high gear as well–look for more big announcements as we get confirmation on them, INCLUDING HeroesCon hotel rates! What?? Yes yes my damies, all lights are green for us this year! More soon!

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STORE SIGNING :: The Fillbach Brothers!

October 23, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: EVENTS, Store Signings

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Coming up in just two weeks is the very first in a whole series of signings and appearances we’re planning to take place at Heroes Aren’t Hard To Find throughout the fall, winter, and spring!

On November 7, from 1-3 pm, we’ll be hosting a special signing appearance by The Fillbach Brothers! These are the guys behind the insanely popular Star Wars Clone Wars Adventures digests’ art. They also created the Maxwell Strangewell graphic novel, Werewolves On The Moon (with Dave Land), and many more. They’ll be signing and sketching for just two hours–from all accounts they’re super friendly guys, and are big country music and Nascar fans, so they’ll probably have as many questions for us Southerners as we have for them!

We’ll be talking this up over the next couple of weeks, but don’t miss the chance to come out and meet these talented creators!

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HEROES DISCUSSION GROUP :: Parker: The Hunter

October 23, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: DISCUSS, Discussion Group, EVENTS

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Well usually our Main Mansell Andy would be writing this post, but he doesn’t have access to his computer, so it falls to me to announce our next Heroes Discussion Group, going on in a little over two weeks, on November 9 at 7pm! We’ll be discussing one of the most talked-about books of the year, Darwyn Cooke‘s adaptation of Parker: The Hunter. This was a gorgeous book, and much has been of it and the novel it’s adapted from, as well as the two movies made from that novel (“Point Blank” and “Payback”), so there’ll be plenty for us to talk about. I’m sure Andy will follow up with a lot of pre-discussion questions next week! Okay see you there!

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THIS WEEKEND :: Greenville Comic Con!

October 23, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: EVENTS, Other Events

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Well, after a crazy busy month that included the Mid Ohio Con, Baltimore Comic Con, and the Big Apple Comic Con, Shelton is taking it easy this weekend… at another convention. Although this one is in our backdoor, run by old buddy Rob Young: the Greenville Comic Con is going on tomorrow, October 24, from 10 am-4 pm at the Comfort Inn, located at 2756 Laurens Road in good ol’ Greenville, South Carolina!

Shelton will be setting up at the show with our very own Store Manager, Shawn Reynolds, so be sure to go by and say hey to Shelton and Shawn. A bunch of our SC bros will be down there too, including J. Chris Campbell and the Wide Awake Press crew, the Dollar Bin guys, and tons more! For more info check out the show’s MySpace page!

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OPINION :: What Is “Indie?”

October 22, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: DISCUSS, Opinion

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above from “Basewood” by Alec Longstreth, serialized in Phase 7 Comics.

Longtime Heroes Aren’t Hard To Find customer D. Blake Werts recently sent me an e-mail, in which he asked:

“What is the indie world? What makes it ‘better’ than mainstream? Where would one start? Who is it for?”

To put Blake in context a little, he’s been a customer since way back at the “old” location, where he would buy and play Magic and dabble a little in comics. Blake’s one of those customers who come in once in a while to check stuff out; he’ll usually catch up on a few of his favorite series, maybe try a few new ones. He’s a good representative for the kind of customer we’ve seen in the store more over the last 5 years or so, who’ve come to comics through other avenues, who didn’t necessarily grow up on them but recognize them as a potential source for entertainment, for art, for whatever.

Blake sent me a follow-up email to explain a little bit–he knows I’m into predominantly “indie” stuff, as far as my reading of comics goes, and was wondering what the allure and/or difference was. Sometimes we forget that the world of comics is still a somewhat small one, and so what we take as accepted wisdom may be inscrutable to someone new to comics. Or vice versa–notice how comics people’s eyes roll when someone refers to the new Sonic collection as a “graphic novel” or calls Japanese comics “anime.” Like any subculture, we can all be a little snobbish without realizing it, I think.

So I told Blake I’d try to address his question and explain my “indie” thinking, here on the good ol’ blog:

First of all, “indie” is just a broad term, and a pretty flawed one at that. I think we (or, at least, I) use the term “indie” in the same way we referred to “alternative” music in high school in the early 90′s. Back then bands like U2 and R.E.M. were “alternative,” ostensibly an alternative to some perceived mainstream sensibility. Which seems silly now–I mean, can you get more mainstream than U2 or R.E.M. today? It’s hard to think of any band who sells out massive arenas as anything but mainstream.

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above, from the story ”Flies On The Ceiling,” by Jaime Hernandez, reprinted in “Love & Rockets: The Girl From H.O.P.P.E.R.S.

Ditto for indie comics. To vastly oversimplify, the indie comics world started up more or less with the underground cartoonists like R. Crumb and Gilbert Shelton, who were just making weird counterculture comics that would get sold in head shops and at concerts. With the 80′s came the “black and white boom,” when titles like Love And Rockets, Yummy Fur, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and Cerebus were getting big.

Note the lack of a unifying thread between those titles–Cerebus started as a Conan parody, TMNT was a pretty violent book about.. well, you know what it’s about, Yummy Fur was a collection of absurdist and autobio short stories (sometimes both), and Love and Rockets was by THREE different brothers, all telling different stories in different genres. But while TMNT and Cerebus were more or less self-published, L&R and Yummy Fur had publishers, if not massive ones: Fantagraphics and Vortex, respectively.

Vortex is no more, but today Fantagraphics publishes some pretty high-end books, including recent strip reprint collections like Popeye, Prince Valiant, and Peanuts; the last of which has been so successful as to essentially bankroll many of the company’s other ventures. Can we say that the people who publish Peanuts are “indie”? It’s a flawed question, but maybe you see my point. Or newer publishers like Dark Horse, or more recently IDW, who began as small companies but now make much of their profit from licensed properties like Aliens, Star Wars, Transformers, and GI Joe?

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above, cover to Spawn #8 by Todd McFarlane

Or is “indie” just an alternative to “superhero”? Certainly the lion’s share of comics published today, even in these times of wildly increased diversity in comics, are superhero books published by Marvel and DC. So does “indie” just mean “not superhero”? That seems broad, doesn’t it? If I made a comic and published it myself tomorrow, a comic about a snaggletoothed comics shop employee who donned a cape at night and fought crime, and called it “Dustman,” would that be a mainstream comic just because it had a superhero in it? Also, publishers: let’s do it, Dustman has serious movie potential.

So: first of all, indie is not a great term, but who knows if there’s a better one? Comics has never been a great place for nomenclature–”graphic novels” are usually just long comics, not “novels” at all, at least in terms of narrative scope and complexity. Ditto for the term “comics” itself, which has been out of step since 1945 or so. “Comic Books” are rarely that funny, at least not on purpose.

Secondly: indie comics are certainly not better. There are indie comics that are amazing and indie comics that are awful, and the same holds true for mainstream comics. For every Maus or Batman Year One, there’s some terrible handmade comic about sociopaths or something; for every amazing handmade comic like Snake Oil or superhero story like Watchmen there’s a… well, I don’t want to call names. But you know what I mean. Making a qualitative decision on something based on its estimated popularity is just dumb and a waste of time.

A better qualifier, if you’re bound and determined to generalize something, is genre. For instance, I haven’t read Walking Dead before, mainly because I’m not much for horror, never have been. YES, I know it’s probably one of the best-written comics coming out these days, I GET IT–but that genre doesn’t do a lot for me, I don’t like being scared. Walking Dead is published by Image, which is (I think?) still the third biggest comics publisher in the U.S. market, so it’s hard to call it indie–on the other hand, it’s a creator-owned book published in black and white about zombies. On the other hand, it sells better than crack. What’s my point? I’m not sure. Let’s move on.

Thirdly: Let me suggest that the term “indie” may refer to a certain narrowing of focus, a book made with very specific ideas in mind, often for a very specific market. Think of it like this–DC can only get so adventurous with Superman, right? He’s an American icon, he’s the flagship character of their entire company, he’s tied to all sorts of licensing, whether it be in animation or merchandise or (one day) movies again… As such, DC has to make Superman, and really most of their “big” characters, appeal to the widest possible audience. Because essentially Superman exists to make money for someone. This isn’t a bad thing–after all, this is why Superman was created in the first place, originally to make some money for Siegel and Schuster, but not so much as it turned out.

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above, from intro to The Mourning Star, by Kazimir Strzepek

Indie comics also exist to make money, but usually as a secondary pursuit, or at least to a more targeted niche market. The Mourning Star (one of my faves) is a sci-fi/adventure book by genre, but that doesn’t mean it’s going to sell to everyone who likes Star Wars. Even big “indie” sellers like Sandman are created with more literary-minded readers in mind–while it’s possible that the same person buying Spawn may also read Sandman, it’s not necessarily the likeliest two books to be brought up to the counter together.

Maybe “indie” just means “more personal?” Or “niche market?” The thing I really first think of when I think of indie comics is MINI comics, another problematic name that really means “handmade” comics. Although even those are not always handmade. But usually somebody is writing, drawing, printing, folding, and stapling the thing themselves, sending them to shops or selling them at conventions. The interaction between creator and audience is immediate, there is no middleman, no publisher, no distributor, often not even a retailer! In this sense these particular indie comics are not only more personal in their content, but in their creation and delivery. Which maybe is a good original descriptor for what makes something “indie,” but in today’s massive marketplace, that line is so blurry as to be little more than a semantic argument anymore.

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above, from All Star Superman, by Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely

What it comes down to is quality. Superhero comics can be AMAZING, I think All Star Superman is one of the best comics of the last decade, and Batman Year One is my favorite comic EVER. They can also be terrible. Indie comics can be incredible, you’re often getting a story or a message undiluted by an editor or the rigorous natural selection of marketplace economics. And that can be a bad thing too–I would hazard that MOST artistic ventures could be improved with some well-placed edits..

So, to answer the last of Blake’s questions: where to begin with indie comics is: wherever you like. Talk to people, ask the employees at your favorite shop. If you shop at Heroes, you know we are bottomless wells of comics conversation, and are happy to carry you around on our shoulders if necessary to show you books we like. A question I like to ask new customers, or customers just looking to try something new, is “what’s the last good book you read?” which if nothing else provides a starting point. The comics shop is just like any book shop, except our books have LOTS more pictures. There is something on those shelves for every level and flavor of reader, and browsing those racks is one of the more pleasant ways to find new stuff. Whether you’re a superhero reader looking for some indie stuff, or an indie reader who’s looking for something a little less SERIOUS (jeez lighten up you indie guys!), there is plenty out there for you.

But what do YOU think–is there that big a difference between “indie” and “mainstream” comics? Or is the difference just one of audience? Of market? Or of content? I’d like to hear what you think, O Gentle Reader!

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SHOUT-OUT! Stacie Harris, Totally Awesome Sweetie-Pie

October 21, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: Check it Out

I came across this post by Stacie Harris, our friend and the lovely wife of some comics artist, both through Facebook and the keen eye of our buddy Casey Jones. If you don’t know Stacie, you’ve probably seen her sitting between the curmudgeonly face of her husband and the buccaneer moustache of JD Mettler at HeroesCon. Speaking of which, she says some super sweet things about HeroesCon in this blog post right here. Stacie, you make it easier to love Tony by extension!

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REVIEW :: Ghost Riders: Heaven’s On Fire #1

October 21, 2009 By: Carlton Hargro Category: DISCUSS, Reviews

ghost-riders_heavens-fire_01-fc_420pxOK, I’m officially digging the new Ghost Rider limited series “Heaven’s on Fire.”

I never thought I would ever find myself recommending a comic starring Ghost Rider; for me, the character has always been a great visual and nothing more. I actually picked up the book several times in its various incarnations over the years, but I’ve never been sold.

Well, writer Jason Aaron has sold me.

You know that old saying: “There’s no such thing as bad characters, just bad writers?” Aaron proves that in “HOF” What’s the secret of his success? One word: fun.

Aaron approaches the series with the knowledge that GR is a goofy character. That self-depricating style reminds me a little of how Joss Whedon made Buffy must-see TV — by “winking” at an audience that’s probably consumed tons of pop culture and is not interested in suspending disbelief unless absolutely necessary.

Now, that’s not to say “HOF” is one big joke. This isn’t Metal Men or anything like that. Beyond all the crazy villains (like the infamous Big Wheel and —my favorite — The Orb) and hilarious dialogue are well-developed characters and real stakes (like the fate of the world and some folks’ eternal souls) on the line.

Need a break from Norman Osborn? I’d suggest searching the stands for Marvel’s friendly neighborhood flaming skull.

Carlton Hargro is Editor-In-Chief of Charlotte’s Creative Loafing free weekly newspaper. You can read more of his comics reviews at the magazines Comic Proportions blog.

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IN MEMORIAM :: George Tuska, 1916-2009

October 16, 2009 By: Dustin Harbin Category: Comics Industry, DISCUSS, NEWS

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We were saddened to learn this morning that our friend George Tuska passed away last night at the age of 93. George had one of the longest and most incredible careers in comics, starting with the legendary Eisner/Iger studio in the late 30′s, all the way through the 80′s. In recent years he was a prolific commission artist, still with more artistic chops in his little finger–in his 90′s!–than many up-and-comers will have in entire careers. He’s probably most closely identified with characters like Iron Man and Luke Cage, but he worked throughout comics and was as influential as he was well-loved by his contemporaries.  Tom Spurgeon has posted an excellent overview of his life at The Comics Reporter, I highly recommend it.

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(above, George in foreground, next to Nick Cardy and Jim Amash, at HeroesCon 06)

It always hurts when someone passes away, but George in a way represents the entire history of comics–he was there at the very beginning, and according to Tom’s post he was producing art even just weeks prior to his death. Think of that for a minute–George Tuska was making comics before World War II. While he never had the “star” status of a Jack Kirby or Neal Adams, his knowledge of human anatomy let him create some of the most dynamic tussles in comics this side of Kirby himself. I love looking at George’s art, even in books where I’m less interested in the story–his dynamic figures are what make his comics so fun, so energetic.

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Heroes owner Shelton Drum, up in New York this weekend manning a booth at the Big Apple Con, sent me this note when he heard the news:

“George was a tremendous supporter of HeroesCon over the years, and it was always a pleasure to see him and his wonderful wife Dorothy. And of course he was an incredible talent. I will forever cherish the originals he did for me for the HeroesCon programs. I will be eternally grateful to have known him.”

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We bid our most heartfelt condolences to George’s wife Dorothy and his entire family, and to all those others who love him and will miss him.

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