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BookExpo America Remains Strong for Comics Publishers

BookExpo America 2009: Attendees crowd the Diamond booth The book publishing industry may be in a crisis over the future of BookExpo America, but you couldn't tell that from talking to comics and graphic novel publishers at the show. Comics publishers big and small seemed to have nothing but praise for this year's BEA, citing a steady stream of foot traffic, meetings, deals and new opportunities during the show. And the praise wasn't only about business deals and networking; such comics as David Small's Stitches, Bloomsbury USA's Logicomix: an Epic Search For Truth and R. Crumb's Genesis Illustrated, were among the biggest and most talked about books at BEA.

Maybe it's because comics and related materials seem to do well despite the economy or maybe it's because comics publishers, mainstreamed into the book industry only over the last 7 or 8 years, are still riding a wave of trade and educational recognition by the book world—but most comics publishers contacted by PWCW at the show were enthusiastic about this year's BookExpo America. In fact, many comics professionals and publishers (as well as some small book publishers) seemed a bit puzzled by the pessimism surrounding BEA's future.

Archaia: Back In Business

Archaia Studios Press is back in the publishing mix after being acquired by Kunoichi Inc., an American media and entertainment company, late last year.

Q&A: Geoff Johns Prepares for 'Blackest Night'

Writer Geoff Johns talks about DC's big summer event, Blackest Night, which brings Green Lantern to the forefront of a battle between rainbow warriors and zombie hordes.
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Novelist and comics writer Barry Lyga (Wolverine: Worst Day Ever) and Diamond's John Shableski bond at Marvel's 70th Anniversary beer-bash at BookExpo America 2009.
Novelist and comics writer Barry Lyga (Wolverine: Worst Day Ever) and Diamond's John Shableski bond at Marvel's 70th Anniversary beer-bash at BookExpo America 2009.
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Taking Some Quiet Time Before the Con

It seems to be pretty quiet on the comics news front right now. The big news now is that Archie is going to marry Veronica in an imaginary story set in the future. And possibly he'll marry Betty, too, in another imaginary story set in the future. Oh, and Megan Fox said that Wonder Woman is "lame." That's what we have right now—nuptials that don't actually take place in a fictional universe and an actress of dubious talents maligning superheroines. I foresee some slow news days ahead.

A.D.: New Orleans After the Deluge
JOSH NEUFELD. Pantheon, $24.95 (208p) ISBN 978-0-307-37814-9

American Splendor artist Neufeld beautifully depicts the lives of seven New Orleans residents who survived Hurricane Katrina. In the dialogue-free opening chapter, "The Storm," Neufeld powerfully intersperses images of the hurricane gathering speed with the cities it crippled when it hit Louisiana on August 29, 2005, specifically New Orleans and Biloxi, Miss. Readers are then introduced to seven New Orleans residents, from all walks of life and parts of the city. Denise and her family—mother Louise, niece Cydney and Cydney's daughter, R'nae—join thousands of hungry and thirsty New Orleanians waiting to be evacuated after their apartment is destroyed. Leo, the publisher of a local music zine, and Michelle, a waitress, reluctantly leave the city for Houston and are devastated when their apartment (and Leo's impressive comics collection) is flooded. Other characters flee, or try unsuccessfully to ride out the storm. Neufeld's low-key art brings a deeply humanizing element to the story. Though the devastation caused by the hurricane and the government's lackluster response are staggering, Neufeld expertly underscores the resilience of the people who returned to rebuild their lives and their city. (Aug.)

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  • IDW Announces Robert Bloch Collection
  • Tezuka's Swallowing the Earth
  • The Original Human Torch
  • IFC, Dash Shaw Web Animation
  • Alan Moore's Future Shocks on iTunes
  • Madman Atomic Comics to End
  • Lolita Fashion with NY Anime Fest
  • Cartoon Art Museum Classes
  • Comics @ Impact University
  • This Week @ Good Comics for Kids
  • Gerberg Wins Reuben
  • This Week @ The Beat


June 3, 2009
  • Avalon Warlock Diaries Vol. 1 (Seven Seas)
  • Cirque Du Freak Vol. 1 (Yen Press)
  • Jungle Journal Vol. 1 (IDW)
  • Love Is A Peculiar Type Of Thing (Box Brown)
  • Pirates Vs. Ninjas: It Takes A Pillage (Antarctic Press)
  • Rasetsu Vol. 1 (Viz)
  • Sentry: Age Of The Sentry (Marvel)
  • Side B: The Music Lovers Comic Anthology (Poseur Ink)
  • Terry Moore's Echo Vol. 2: Atomic Dreams (Abstract)
  • Tezuka's Black Jack Vol. 5 (Vertical)



"Japanese folklore has stories of the dead coming back to life, but zombies in the Western sense are unknown in traditional mythology. I wanted to do a story that takes elements from both cultures."

Stan Sakai on his samurai rabbit hero, Usagi Yojimbo, fighting zombies. From Newsarama.

PW Comics Week
Editors: Calvin Reid and Heidi MacDonald
Contributing Editors: Douglas Wolk, Kai-Ming Cha and Laura Hudson
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