INDIE ISLAND RECAP :: Dave Crosland, Dean Haspiel, Scott Kurtz, And Eric Powell!

September 21, 2007 at 1:58 pm By:

Okay, I know I already announced these guys, but in this ridiculous flurry of news and announcements, I wanted to give these guys their own post so that future generations looking through the Indie Island archive don’t miss the momentous additions of these titans of indie comics! Titans! Nuff Said! To that end, let me just remind all of you that “Diamond” Dave Crosland, Dean “Feen” Haspiel, Scott “Ever-So-Hot” Kurtz, and Eric “No-Relation-To-Thurston-Howell” Powell, are all large and in charge on the Indie Island Guest List! Nuff Said Again!

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Filed Under: Guest List, HeroesCon, Indie Island

Good Gravy! Still More HeroesCon Guest List Additions!

September 21, 2007 at 1:49 pm By:

We confirmed so many new guests at the Baltimore Comicon that we’re having trouble fitting in all the announcements! But for the second time this week, we’re please to announce more additions to the HeroesCon 08 Guest List! Brand new on the list are inker extraordinaire Michael Bair (Identity Crisis), artist Shannon Gallant (Marvel Adventures: Avengers), and Silver Age legend Herb Trimpe (Incredible Hulk)! And new on our Indie Island list are super-studly Dave Crosland, artist on IDW’s Scarface: Scarred For Life and the upcoming Everybody’s Dead; and Scott Kurtz, the man behind the uber-popular online strip PVP! And believe it or not, there are still more announcements yet to be made! Phew!
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Filed Under: Guest List, HeroesCon, HeroesCon News, Indie Island

SAY WHAT? Bryan Lee O’Malley Signing At Heroes!

September 21, 2007 at 10:44 am By:

Oh yes, baby! On Friday, October 5th, at 7pm, Scott Pilgrim creator Bryan Lee O’Malley will be making an appearance in our store, signing books, and meeting you! Scott Pilgrim is one of the great success stories of the last several years, having built an enormous cult following, not to mention a forthcoming movie adaptation! Good gravy! Don’t miss this chance to hobnob with Mr. O’Malley while he’s still a sweet, affable guy, before Hollywood turns him all cynical! If you’re not already a Scott Pilgrim fan (I am), this is a great chance to try it out; and if you are already, make sure you tell your friends about it!
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Filed Under: EVENTS, Heroes Aren't Hard To Find

TOP TEN :: Best Comics Artists Ever :: #3 :: John Romita, Sr.

September 20, 2007 at 1:49 pm By:

While Jack Kirby set the style for all modern comics, it was John Romita who established the look. He also had the unenviable position of following the greats of the comics industry: Kirby on Captain America and Fantastic Four, Steve Ditko on Spider-Man, and Wally Wood on Daredevil. I’ve heard many an old school fan decry Romita’s arrival on Amazing Spider-Man, with the seminal issue 39, as the end of the character. How could a romance artist, with the glossy and clean linework, replace a master of oddity and mood! This was quickly replaced with astonishment.

John Romita’s work, influenced by the great Milton Caniff, quickly won over legions of fans, making Spidey the preeminent Marvel superhero. He followed his run as penciler for Spider-Man as the embellisher on Gil Kane’s pencils, perhaps the greatest mesh of graphite and India ink ever produced. He established the popular look of Marvel’s characters in Spider-Man’s daily newspaper strip, and in almost all of their licensed material. Later, as Marvel’s art director, he guided the next generation of artists and continued Marvel’s incomparable “house style”. His hand is seen everywhere on covers from the ‘60’s to the ‘80’s, often offering the subtle changes that move a cover from good to great. John Romita is one of the most influential pencilers, and arguably the greatest inker, that comics has ever seen.

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Filed Under: DISCUSS

TOP TEN :: Best Comics Artists Ever :: #4 :: Paul Pope

September 20, 2007 at 1:48 pm By:

Paul Pope could best be described as the “rock star” of comics, at least that’s how I describe him. He most well known for his indy titles THB, Heavy Liquid and 100% and recently for Batman: Year 100, which was a more mainstream endeavor.

He fuses Eastern and Western influences into a style that is distinctively his own. His work is gritty and surreal often depicting a futuristic dystopia. The worlds he creates are both scary and beautiful. I love to travel along with the characters to see where the ride will take me. Usually it is a bumpy ride fraught with danger and excitement. Merely describing his work as “action-packed” would be selling it short: it does have a highly intellectual side. A discussion about Paul Pope’s work quickly turns into a conversation about philosophy and politics.

I highly recommend his art book Pulphope. It’s chock full of Popey goodness–he shows a wide range of his works. It even includes a few childhood drawings. Also, it includes essays written by Pope which provide insight into his work. But it is a little on the adult side. Let’s just say he likes to draw the ladies.

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Filed Under: DISCUSS

TOP TEN :: Best Comics Artists Ever :: #6 :: Will Eisner

September 19, 2007 at 1:07 pm By:


What can I say about Will Eisner that hasn’t already been said by people with college degrees? I’ll say one thing–it’s pretty shocking that he’s this low on the list–this is by no means my only disagreement with what our staff’s voting came up with, but I guess that’s the nature of the beast. If Jack Kirby represents the creative spirit and fever of American comics, then Will Eisner is surely the brain, the science, the technique. People forget that The Spirit was cranking away in the 40’s, with some of the most gorgeous page layouts ever in comics, back when most mainstream comics characters were drawn roughly and crudely. By the time Kirby and Stan Lee created Fantastic Four in 1961, The Spirit was already 20 years old!

You can’t understate Jack Kirby’s relentlessly creative output, and the incredible brute energy of his art. But for innovation, it’s Will Eisner all the way; who besides his more famous achievements–including being credited with the creation of the graphic novel–took comics from the Siegel and Shuster adapted newspaper strip style, and developed them into a language and rhythm altogether unique. His storytelling remains peerless even today; besides his enormous influence over nearly every branch of comics, he’s directly inspired many of the graphic novelists and autobiographical cartoonists of the last 30 years. For my money, there may be no more influential cartoonist in the history of the medium–and unlike many of his contemporaries, Will Eisner was not only an incredible draftsman and idea man, but a storyteller first and foremost, a necessity for good comics that is often forgotten.

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Filed Under: DISCUSS

TOP TEN :: Best Comics Artist Ever :: #7 :: John Buscema

September 18, 2007 at 12:50 pm By:


Penciler John Buscema is best known for his work on Silver Surfer, The Avengers and Conan. But he also worked on Spider-Man, Fantastic Four, and nearly every other Marvel title you can think of. His covers are iconic, especially Silver Surfer #4 where Surfer and Thor are engaged in battle.

After Jack Kirby left Marvel in the 70s Buscema helped to fill the void. He also helped to standardize the way Marvel characters were drawn. He wrote the book on it. Literally. In 1977 Stan Lee and Buscema wrote How To Draw Comics The Marvel Way.

His work is all about epic poses and dynamic compositions. I love the tension and the action in his work. But I think what I love most about Buscema is the way he would draw women. They were glamorous with their big eyes, flowing hair and long legs. I have a secret longing to look like the vixens from the Silver Age of comics. Perhaps one day… (when I grow another 8 inches or so).

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Filed Under: DISCUSS

TOP TEN :: Best Comics Artists Ever :: #8 :: Frank Quitely

September 18, 2007 at 12:31 pm By:

While Frank Quitely’s highly stylized pencils divide the majority of comic book readers into one of two camps—love or loathing—it’s difficult to deny his talent as a storyteller. Best known for his collaborations with writer Grant Morrison, he has a talent for using subtle facial expression and body language to reveal a level of character that is scarce in mainstream comics these days. But he’s no slouch in the over-the-top-comic-book-melodrama department either. To get a true taste of everything he’s capable of, check out We3, a near perfect comic series in my humble opinion. If you don’t love Bandit by the end of the first issue, well . . . I don’t know what to tell you.

Required reading: New X-Men, All Star Superman, JLA: Earth 2, We3

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Hey, I’m Famous! :: Dustin Harbin on Comic News Insider!

September 17, 2007 at 2:19 pm By:


If you like the idea of hearing me interviewed by Jimmy Aquino of Comic News Insider at the Baltimore Comicon, you’ll love this podcast. If you hate the idea, don’t worry: apparently I’m holding the mike against my shoe, so you can barely hear me. Also, I’m first, then Paul Pope and James Jean are interviewed afterward, so a little fast-forwarding will end your pain. Jimmy and I talk about how cool the Baltimore show was going, what’s coming up for HeroesCon, and a cosplaying Hellgirl. Many thanks to CNI’s Jimmy Aquino and the guys at Comic News Insider!

Direct link to their site here.

And, in case archiving breaks the link, here’s a link to the .mp3.

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Filed Under: Heroes Aren't Hard To Find, Other Events

TOP TEN :: Best Comics Artists Ever :: #9 :: Osamu Tezuka

September 17, 2007 at 12:42 pm By:


If you were to combine Carl Barks, Harvey Kurtzman, Jack Kirby and Frank Miller together into a single American artist, this amalgam would still fall far short from the influence this one man has had in the history of manga. Osamu Tezuka (1928-1989) was best known in this country for creating Astro Boy and Kimba the White Lion. With the explosion of manga, American audiences have gotten a healthy taste of Tezuka’s work, offered in a dizzying array of genres and styles: Buddha: Tezuka–an Asian Christian–tells the life story of Siddhartha; Adolph: a five part novel dealing with Japan and Germany during WWII, and a fantasy told in realistic and brutal manner; and Phoenix: Tezuka’s unfinished masterpiece, a series of time spanning morality plays combining Asian folk tales and science fiction. With over 10,000 pages already translated into English, we still have over 150,000 pages left that we can look forward to. As the works continue to be translated, watch as Tezuka’s influence in THIS country grows. I would bet is that 10 years from now, Tezuka will be much higher on the list than 9.

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Filed Under: DISCUSS




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