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  • Comics Briefly

  • Taschen Readies $1,000 Apollo 11 Book

    Famously edgy illustrated book publisher Taschen is about to release its biggest project since GOAT, the $5,000 homage to Muhammad Ali it published in 2004. Next month, Norman Mailer, MoonFire: The Epic Journey of Apollo 11 will go on sale for $1,000.

  • Desert Noir: Crossers by Philip Caputo

    At first glance, this multifarious book skirts country familiar to readers of McCarthy or McMurtry, but Caputo's west supersedes elemental cowboys and lone justice with the malaise of post-9/11 America and the violence of the Mexican desert—as gruesome as in Iraq—frothing with moral ambiguity and fraught with complicity.

  • Allworth Press: Helping Artists Live in the Real World

    Writers and artists don't always have their heads in the clouds—sometimes they need real world advice. At least that's the premise on which Tad Crawford founded Allworth Press in 1989. From its inaugural title, Legal Guide for the Visual Artist, Crawford explained, “I wanted to create a company to give practical advice to the creative professional.

  • Finder Ties Comic To Novel

    Late last year, bestselling thriller writer Joseph Finder was walking around Bouchercon, the World Mystery Convention, and ran into “a couple of guys” from DC Comics. He had just finished Vanished, a novel coming out this August featuring a young alienated teenager who is creating his own comic book.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 6/15/2009

    This week's reviews include a picture book debut from swimmer and Olympian Michael Phelps; new novels from Sharon Draper, Jamila Gavin and Phyllis Reynolds Naylor; and a round-up of science-themed titles just in time for summer exploration and experimentation.

  • Galley Talk

    Nothing about Ian MacKenzie's City of Strangers (Penguin, July) tips the reader that this complex and riveting work is a first novel by an author not yet 30. MacKenzie's ideas suggest experience and depth. The central character is a writer in his mid-30s who is not quite estranged from an older half-brother; he's also not nearly over his ex-wife and struggling with the impending death of his on...

  • Fiction Book Reviews: 6/15/2009

    Reviewed this week, new novels by Faye Kellerman, Victor LaValle, Kathy Reichs, J.A. Jance and Sophie Kinsella. Plus, a hapless couple courts trouble in upstate New York in Nancy Maruo's off-beat debut, Dixie Cash cranks out another fun chicken-fried cowgirl-power crime novel, and Luanne Rice maintains her status as a tear-jerking force of nature.

  • A New Role for ‘Nanny Diaries’ Authors

    In 2002, Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus suddenly found themselves in the spotlight when The Nanny Diaries, their debut novel based on their experiences as Manhattan nannies, hit the bestseller lists. Now, seven years later, they have published their first YA novel, The Real Real (HarperTeen), centering on a 17-year-old whose life takes a similarly dramatic turn when she is cast in a reality show filmed at her Long Island high school.

  • A Tweet Treat?

    Forget watching The View. On Wednesday morning, plugged-in booksellers, writers and fans instead viewed a live, one-hour Twitter exchange between Nancy Mercado, executive editor of Roaring Brook Press, and Nan Marino, author of Neil Armstrong Is My Uncle and Other Lies Muscle Man McGinty Told Me. Are author-editor tweet-fests the marketing wave of the future? Perhaps.

  • I Spy... a Series with Legs

    Aimed at readers who like heroines that are more concerned about pulling off covert operations than pulling off the perfect outfit, the first two books in Ally Carter’s Gallagher Girls series have been steadily gaining fans for the past few years. This week, the third book, Don’t Judge a Girl by Her Cover, also starring teenage spy-in-training Cammie Morgan, went on sale with a 250,000-copy first printing.

  • MoCCA Festival's Heated Success

    Overcoming some administrative snafus and a lack of air conditioning, this year's MoCCA festival was another successful show for indie comics, with long-awaited major works—David Mazzucchelli's Asterios Polyp, Seth's George Sprott—vying with unexpected treats—Kazimir Strzepek's The Mourning Star #2—and a wealth of foreign cartoonists showing off their chops.

  • The Wages of Sinfest

    After nearly 10 years of writing and drawing Sinfest, a popular satirical webcomic about angels, devils, sex and politics, Tatsuya Ishida is publishing a book collection of the strip due from Dark Horse this month.

  • Terry Moore Talks Echo; SiP Omnibus and More

    Terry Moore prepares to release a three-volume hardcover Strangers in Paradise omnibus at San Diego Comic Con, while he also publishes the sci-fi romance/thriller, Echo.

  • Comics Briefly

  • Sales, Temperatures Sizzle at MoCCA 2009

    Despite having to overcome the daunting combination of a new venue, an overheated hall and organizational gaffes, this year’s MoCCA Art Festival drew impressive crowds and offered another vibrant display of the state of indie comics and graphic novel publishing.

  • Photo Mania: MoCCA Art Festival 2009

    Pictures from the 2009 MoCCA Art Festival at the Lexington Avenue Armory

  • Encyclopedia of Country Living Lives On

    Talk about a long tail: Seattle independent Sasquatch Books posted a 14% growth last year, and the driving force behind that increase was not a new book, but an old one—a very old one—about living off the land. The Encyclopedia of Country Living is now in its 10th edition, and has sold 650,000 copies to date. It’s a happy success story, and one many publishers, big or small, would envy.

  • Two New Orleans Cookbooks for Fall

    Cookbook publishers have long mined New Orleans’s famous cuisine, releasing books on its classic restaurants and legendary chefs. Although most don’t become national bestsellers, last year's Cooking Up a Storm was nominated for a James Beard Award. This fall brings two more New Orleans-focused cookbooks, DamGoodSweet by David Guas and Raquel Pelzel (Taunton Press) and My New Orleans by John Besh (Andrews McMeel Publishing).

  • Review: Real Food for Mother and Baby

    Nina Planck, an expert on whole, unprocessed, local, traditionally produced food, practices what she preaches in this memoir cum guidebook. Her food guidelines for fertility, pregnancy, nursing and young kids propose a wide variety of whole grains, seasonal vegetables and fruits, and raw milk and organic animal fats necessary for healthy pregnancies and fetal and childhood development--instead of skim milk, “carbage”(junk carbohydrates) and trans-fats.

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