PW Comics Week


Passion and Business at Tokyopop

It's impossible to discuss the impact of manga on the American comics market without talking about Tokyopop and its CEO, Stuart Levy. The 39-year-old entrepreneur describes himself as a "weird creative person who understands business." He's a Georgetown law school grad, fluent in Japanese, who's worked as a graphic designer and mutimedia producer in Japan. While there he got the manga bug and went on to found Tokyopop in Los Angeles in 1997.

He's managed to aggressively publish manga in its original right-to-left reading format—teaching a generation teenagers to happily read comics backward—while also managing to attract an unprecedented number of young American women to manga. PWCW dropped by Tokyopop's offices in L.A. to talk with Levy about global manga, the movie business and the ongoing state of the manga revolution.



Fighting Censorship: Guidelines for Libraries

Three free speech organizations have joined to create a guide to help librarians deal with potential comic book censorship issues.


Comics Anthologies Return as Graphic Novels

Graphic novel anthologies like Flight and Mome are giving both established and new talent a venue for short stories and finding commercial success.
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In this chilling 10-page preview of Setona Mizushiro's After School Nightmare, a wary young student is informed of a strange class he will be required to attend. However, he is completely unprepared for the lesson in terror a mysterious young girl has prepared for him. After School Nightmare is due this September from Go! Comi.
Note: Dialogue balloons read from right to left.
Click above for the full preview.
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"Batman vs. Al Qaeda! It might as well be Bin Laden vs. King Kong! Or how about the sinister Al Qaeda mastermind up against a hungry Hannibal Lecter! For all the good it's likely to do. Cheering on a fictional character as he beats up fictionalized terrorists seems like a decadent indulgence when real terrorists are killing real people in the real world."


Grant Morrison on Frank Miller's upcoming Holy Terror, Batman, interviewed at Newsarama.


Finder: Five Crazy Women
CARLA SPEED MCNEIL. Lightspeed, $15.95 paper (128p) ISBN 0-9673691-7-7

The "aboriginal science fiction" setting of McNeil’s long-running serial is a framework for an enormous range of stories, and this eighth collection is romance—from the point of view of the kind of guy who usually leaves women’s apartments through the window. Jaeger Ayers is a ritual sin eater for a tribal religion, a hot-looking lowlife from the country on the loose in a big city and a total tomcat. Maybe he brings out the worst kinks, fetishes and neuroses in women, as he describes them in hilarious, R-rated terms to a friend; maybe his experiences with them are just a reflection of his own macho unreliability. The story’s got a marvelous, unusual tone—light comedy with flashes of chilling psychological darkness—and McNeil’s artwork is a joy, meticulously observing each of her characters’ expressions and body language. She packs every panel with details that suggest how her invented culture works, like a professional bathgiver with tiny bars of soap-on-a-rope for earrings. A lot of what McNeil does is world building, fleshing out the ethnography and technology of her imaginary society, but it’s a natural extension of her characters’ amorous collisions and near-misses. (Aug.)

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Comics and The Monkey King

Gene Luen Yang is not your average high school teacher. For one thing, he draws comics. For another, he’s used comics to teach his classes. His ability to integrate two seemingly divergent interests shows one aspect of what makes him unique as both a teacher and a comic book artist—a talent for reconciliation. Yang's latest book, American Born Chinese, coming in September from First Second, shows this talent to full advantage.

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August 30, 2006 2006
  • Book Of Lost Souls (Marvel/Icon)
  • Captain Amazing (Image)
  • Bus Gamer 1999-2001: The Pilot Edition (Tokyopop)
  • The Darkness: A Comic By Rachel Cattle TP (Kingly Books)
  • The Empty Empire Vol. 1 TP (DC/CMX)
  • Gerard & Jacques Vol. 1 (Blu Manga)
  • Green Lantern: The Greatest Stories Ever Told (DC)
  • The Gremlin (Dark Horse)
  • The Museum of Lost Wonder: A Graphic Guide to Reawakening the Human
  • Imagination (Weiser Books)
  • Nextwave: Agents Of HATE Vol. 1 (Marvel)
  • Silk Road To Ruin (NBM)

  • Exhibitor Space Limited At New York Comic Con
  • DramaQueen Launches Rush Anthology Website
  • USPS Releases Stamps Featuring Marvel Heroes
  • Blair Butler's Weekly Comics Reviews On G4TV

PW Comics Week
Editors: Calvin Reid and Heidi MacDonald
Contributing Editor: Douglas Wolk
     pwcomicsweek@reedbusiness.com
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