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Stumptown Comics Fest: The Con That Refreshes

Portland, Oregon's sixth annual Stumptown Comics Fest, held April 18 and 19, was a raging success by almost all accounts. Final attendance figures weren't yet available by press time, but around 700 people turned up in the first two hours of Saturday alone, and the halls of the Lloyd Center Doubletree were bustling and noisy for almost the entire weekend. Most of Portland's enormous cartooning scene was there in one capacity or another, as well a lot of cartoonists from the rest of the country, many of whom seemed to be mulling over the idea of moving there.

Most of the larger Pacific Northwest comics publishers had tables and signings—Dark Horse played host to creators including Achewood's Chris Onstad, a newly minted Portland transplant. Next to them, Larry Marder had his own table, where he was signing his Dark Horse collection, Beanworld: Wahoolazuma! Oni, Top Shelf and Fantagraphics all staked out positions on the walls of the show room, too. There were long lines for Comic Book Legal Defense Fund-hosted signings by Jeff Smith and Craig Thompson; the latter also presented a slideshow detailing his process for working on his long-anticipated Habibi. A few mainstream creators were on hand, as well—Gail Simone was signing her essay collection You'll All Be Sorry! and Joe Quinones was showing off pages from his forthcoming Green Lantern serial in Wednesday Comics.

Sex and Science and Scott Morse: Ancient Books Show Modern Designers

Scott Morse, artist and designer, has a ton of art and comics projects in the works, starting with The Ancient Book of Sex and Science, out in June.

More Moomin Magic

Could Tove Janssan’s Moomin, a decades-old Scandinavian prose, picture book and comics series about a family of hippo-shaped trolls, become the next Winnie the Pooh?

Kids, Comics, Reading and Fun In the Bronx

The annual Kids’ Comic Con continues to attract kids, parents and educators to a day of presentations, comics workshops and lots of free stuff.
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This year's Stumptown Festival was a chilled gathering of cartoonists and cartoons and over 2500 local indie comics fans and readers. Local Portland cartoonists celebrated with guests such as Jeff Smith and Carla Speed McNeil, and Saturday's Stumptown Trophy Awards allowed everyone the chance to cut loose a little.
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Yoshihiro Tatsumi: A Heroic Life in Manga

Mangaka Yoshihiro Tatsumi's newly published 800-page autobiographical manga, Drifting Life, resembles less the comics memoir of a fellow auteur like Harvey Pekar, and more the Homeric legends of Greek myth. And this isn't just a matter of quantifying the nature of tragedy as defined by these two late blooming comics icons (both world-renowned for their misanthropic characters). Published this month by Drawn & Quarterly Drifting Life contains a lion's share of manga anthropology, making the book an artifact in and of itself.

The Color of Earth
KIM DONG HWA. Roaring Brook/First Second, $16.95 paper (320p) ISBN 978-1-59643-458-5

This manhwa—first in a trilogy—chronicling the lives of a single mother and her daughter in rural Korea is a moving and evocative look at love as seen through the eyes of one feeling it for the first time and another who longs to savor it once more. The story follows daughter Ehwa from age seven up as she discovers the physical differences between boys and girls, grows into young womanhood and undergoes her initial confusing experiences with attraction and romance. Ehwa’s interest is piqued by a young Buddhist monk, a lad whose interest is mutual but doomed to futility thanks to his faith’s strict code of celibacy. Meanwhile, Ehwa’s mother, who was widowed at an early age, finds her loneliness soothed by the attentions of an artistic traveling salesman known only as “Picture Man.” Their relationship later helps Ehwa understand much about the joys of making a romantic connection. This book has no conflict other than that common to youthful competition over boys, but it is a work of great humanity that sucks the reader in. Kim’s artwork is stunning, and seldom has a male writer captured the attitudes, emotions and behavior of female characters so believably. (Apr.)

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“We never made any projection—10,000 seems like a good run. The lack of research is laughable from the perspective of the book industry.” Breadpig founder Alexis Ohanian on publishing a print edition of Randall Munroe’s quirky programmer webcomic, xkcd.com, for sale online-only.

April 22, 2009 2009
  • The Bun Field (Drawn & Quarterly)
  • Chicken With Plums (Random House)
  • CTRL+ALT+DEL Vol. 1: This Is A Great Idea
  • Freakangels Vol. 2 (Avatar)
  • Halo: Uprising (Marvel)
  • Naoki Urasawa's 20th Century Boys Vol. 2 (Viz)
  • Noble Causes Vol. 2: Archives (Image)
  • Resistance (IDW)
  • Resurrection Vol. 1 (Oni)
  • Savage (Image)

  • NY Anime Fest Mascot Contest
  • Feehan’s Dark Hunger Goes Digital
  • Government Comics Now Online
  • Tomie Movies on Crunchyroll
  • Invincible on G4’s Fresh Ink
  • Warren Ellis on Wired UK
  • Mondadori Gets Spanish Rights for Stitches
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