STAFF PICKS :: ART OF DISNEY GOLDEN BOOKS HC :: APRIL 16, 2014
ANDY’S PICK :: ART OF DISNEY GOLDEN BOOKS HC: Chances are good that the first book you ever held in your hand, ripped its pages, drew in, or drooled on was a Golden Book and if your parents were anything like mine and in as much of a hurry to buy a Golden Book to shut me up that they only noticed and bought the one’s that featured familiar Disney characters, well sir (or madam) this is the book for you. These books have inspired generation after generation of budding animators and cartooists. Now comes The Art of Disney Golden Books. It is a beautiful hard cover book celebrating eighty years of the marvelous Disney character art that every kid spent time tracing, copying or spilling juice on. Either way, Golden Books are an essential link in the chain that eventually can lead to …comic books!! Enjoy! And good luck keeping it ‘mint’.




JUSTIN’S PICK :: BOHEMIANS GN: Being sequestered in the sticks as a teenager, and being something of an inherent weirdo, I took some solace in my creative side, and also developed a healthy fascination with the Beats (i.e. Kerouac, Ginsberg, and my personal favorite, William S. Burroughs). Bohemians promises to chronicle the predecessors of America’s original counter-pop-cultural movement. If this is an area that interests you, I’d also heartily recommend the late Harvey Pekar’s Beats Graphic History (mostly illustrated by Hip Hop Family Tree’s Ed Piskor, among others, but happy hunting…it’s out of print!). Hopefully, Bohemians will take a similar tack to Pekar’s examination, and dispose with the glamorizing of its subject matter. The lives lived under the radar, by their own rules, are easily romanticized with the benefit of hindsight. In all honesty, it’s a lot more squalid than that. Either way, I’m reading.


HEATHER’S PICKS: It’s a two for one staff pick for me this week thanks to Marvel debuting solo books of two of my favorite characters this week. That’s right, both Doop and Nightcrawler are getting their own series this spring. I’m not sure how one week is going to be able to contain so much awesomeness.

RICO’S PICK :: DEAD LETTERS #1: I’ve seen a black and white preview of this book and it sucks you in immediately. It’s a great first issue. The story begins as a classic amnesia fiction so we are learning what’s going on right along with the main character Sam. Writer Chris Sebela and artist Chris Visions will BOTH be at HeroesCon this year. You should probably get your copy of Dead Letters #1 signed and get a sketch from Visions this year before the rest of the world catches on to his greatness and he’s hard to meet, his bold art won’t stay a secret for long!



SETH’S PICK :: ALL NEW GHOST RIDER #1: Admittedly, Ghost Rider has never been a book for those seeking multi-layered depth of character and plot. It’s always been a fairly straightforward idea. There have been exceptions to that – notably in the excellent, under-read run of Jason Aaron – but mostly, it follows a reliably simple formula: a motorcycle rider gets inhabited by a spirit of vengeance and brings holy hell down on evils both supernatural and human. This week’s All New Ghost Rider looks to build a new layer onto this formula. No, it’s not just because this incarnation drives a ’69 Dodge Charger instead of the time honored motorcycle. This Ghost Rider is an 18 year old gear head named Robbie Reyes, who is navigating the violence he’s grown up around. I applaud Marvel for introducing another minority as a title’s main protagonist, but am also thankful that they brought this particular creative team together. Felipe Smith and Tradd Moore’s collaborative designs for this character (in and out of the Ghost Rider form) represent a very modern aesthetic, which matches the new energy they seem to be aiming for. While I’ve long appreciated the art of Tradd Moore, his work here not only looks more kinetic than anything he’s done before (and that’s saying a lot), but it looks like he really enjoys working on this book. I love comics where the creators’ enthusiasm for the work seems to run off the page. 








