Login  |  Register          Free Newsletter Subscription
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

The Crumbs Move to Norton

This story originally appeared in PW Comics Week on March 11, 2008 Sign up now!

By Calvin Reid -- Publishers Weekly, 3/10/2008 4:33:00 PM

W.W. Norton executive editor Robert Weil has acquired the publishing rights to two titles by acclaimed underground cartoonist R. Crumb in addition to acquiring a new work from his wife, noted underground cartoonist Aline Kominsky Crumb. Weil acquired both the R. Crumb Handbook, originally published in 2005; and the 2006 work The Sweeter Side of R. Crumb.

The deal was negotiated by the Judith Hansen Agency, in collaboration with Crumb’s literary representative, The Lora Fountain Literary Agency. Both of the R. Crumb titles were originally published by MQ Publications and the rights have since reverted back to the author.

Weil said that the R. Crumb Handbook (which was written with longtime Crumb collaborator Peter Poplaski) will have “significant revisions, of at least 50 pages, to bring it up to date.” The Handbook and The Sweeter Side will both get new introductions.

Aline Kominsky Crumb’s new work, tentatively titled Aline Crumb’s Graphic Life’s Work, is described as “part graphic novel, part memoir, chronicling a life in graphic arts for nearly forty years.” The book will include stories from Love That Bunch, her 1990 book of autobiographical stories originally published by Fantagraphics; some previously unpublished stories as well as some of the comic strips she has co-created with her husband for the New Yorker magazine. The book will also include original stories. In 2007, Kominsky Crumb published Need More Love: A Graphic Memoir, also by MQP. The rights to that work have since also reverted back to the author.

Weil was enthusiastic about the acquisitions, pointing to “significant foreign rights interest” in the two artists’s books as well to the opportunity to expand the mainstream American distribution of their titles. “We feel we can bring a wide range of women readers to Aline’s work,” said Weil, “especially younger women. Aline is the model for a liberated women.”

 

 

 

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

By This Author

PW PARTNERS




 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs


Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

» VIEW ALL BLOGS

Photos

Advertisements






NEWSLETTERS
Click on a title below to learn more.

PW Daily
Religion BookLine
Children's Bookshelf
PW Comics Week
©2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites