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  • Colorful Kim Dong Hwa is A Big New Voice in American Comics

    When first published in 2003, The Color of Earth was a milestone in manhwa (Korean comics). The initial volume of Kim Dong Hwa’s trilogy tracing the life of a young girl in nineteenth-century Korea was noteworthy for its complex portrayal of women and its popularity with both male and female readers.

  • Comics Briefly

    2009 Eisner Award Nominees; Vertigo Crime Arrives in August; Swamp Thing Reviewed on NPR; Winick’s Pedro and Me Reissued; 60’s Spidey Toon Free Online; Free Naruto Preview; Comics 101 Primer; YA Author Goes Graphic; Bristol Comic Expo and Small Press Expo; New Geary Treasury of Murder; and Vampire D3 Contest

  • Yen Press Launches Toxic Planet Comic Online

    Yen Press, Hachette Book Group’s graphic novel imprint, will first unveil French cartoonist David Ratte’s satirical/environmental graphic novel, Toxic Planet, as a webcomic in effort to build an audience for the book’s English-language publication in August.

  • Failing Diamond Minimum, Asylum Press Offers Title Direct

    Indie comics publisher Asylum Press has been forced to distribute the latest issue of its tongue-in-cheek adventure comic, Fearless Dawn, direct to retailers after the issue failed to meet Diamond Comics Distributors’ new minimum order.

  • Galley Talk: Dark Places by Gilliam Flynn

    Deanna Parsi, mystery buyer, Borders, Ann Arbor, Mich. The heroine of Gillian Flynn's Dark Places [Crown, May] is the sole surviving member of her murdered family. Libby Day's family was murdered when she was very young and her brother was convicted of the crime, based in part on Libby's testimony. She is now a barely functioning adult.

  • Pulp Hero: The Angel's Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafon, PW Book of the Week

    The Angel’s Game Carlos Ruiz Zafón . Doubleday , $26.95 (464p) ISBN 978-0-385-52870-2 Fans of Zafón’s The Shadow of the Wind and new readers alike will be delighted with this gothic semiprequel. In 1920s Barcelona, David Martin is born into poverty, but, aided by patron and friend Pedro Vidal, he rises to become a crime reporter and then a beloved pulp novelist.

  • Universal Westerns: PW Talks with Author Craig Johnson

    Craig Johnson’s The Dark Horse is his fifth contemporary mystery featuring Wyoming sheriff Walt Longmire. What would you want everyone to know about Walt’s home state of Wyoming? It’s diverse, and even if there are only 535,000 of us, it’s not as square as it looks, culturally or physically.

  • Children's Books: Virginia Lee Burton Turns 100

    With so many major literary commemorations this year—the 200th anniversary of Edgar Allan Poe’s birth and the 150th of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, to name just a few—Virginia Lee Burton’s son, Aris Demetrios, says that he’ll do whatever it takes to make his mother’s centennial stand out, including donning a sandwich board and walking around the Boston Common.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 4/6/2009

    Among this week's reviews: Kate and Jules Feiffer's take on the pet heading to the White House; new fiction from Margarita Engle and Jenny Valentine; and round-ups of advice titles and books with inventive formats.

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 4/06/2009

    This Week's Web: lyrical essays on a life in poetry, a celebrity psychologist on the sickness of celebrity, a graphic ambulance ride-along, the new science of talent development, and two excellent volumes on music and race relations. Plus: Cezanne the Godfather, Thoreau the arsonist, and Paula Deen the health-conscious (not to worry, it's just for a chapter).

  • Nonfiction Book Reviews

    The Wild Marsh: Four Seasons at Home in Montana Rick Bass . Houghton Mifflin Harcourt , $26 (384p) ISBN 978-0-547-05516-9 Novelist and naturalist Bass (The Lives of Rocks) gets up close and personal with local fauna, flora and folks in this account of the passing seasons in northwestern Montana’s Yaak Valley wilderness range, where he and his family—four of the estimated 150 inha...

  • Bailouts of the Self-Help Kind: Self Help Books in a Down Ecomony

    Millions of jobs lost. Companies struggling to stay afloat. Economies around the world teetering on the brink of ruin. No one reads today’s headlines and feels better. But the endless litany of bad news might have a silver lining for one segment of publishing: the self-help category. Conventional industry wisdom holds that books focusing on personal improvement have done well in recession...

  • Fiction Book Reviews

    A Fair Maiden Joyce Carol Oates . Houghton Mifflin Harcourt , $22 (160p) ISBN 978-0-15-101516-0 Sixteen-year-old Katya Spivak and elderly Marcus Kidder share a bizarre romance in Oates’s derivative and unpolished new novel. In bland Bayhead Harbor, N.J., Katya serves as a nanny to the Engelhardts’ two young children.

  • The Original Joy of Cooking: PW Talks with Author Richard Wrangham

    In Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human (Basic), Richard Wrangham dishes up an intriguing theory of human evolution. On behalf of sushi haters like me, tell our readers how nature has fitted humans to eat cooked food. Biologically, we are not well-adapted to raw foods. Our teeth and stomachs are small compared to those of chimpanzees or gorillas, because we don’t eat ...

  • ‘Twilight’ Hits Arab World

    The Arab Cultural Center, bought the Arabic-language rights to Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight quartet at last year’s Frankfurt Book Fair, and will be publishing the books this May.

  • In Defense of Historical Fiction

    Someone who owns a successful independent bookstore told me recently that if I ever decide to write a novel about an officer in the army in the American Revolution I’d better give him dripping fangs, bat wings and a tail. Well, he wasn’t far from wrong, because as we all know, the bestselling young adult novels today are either about vampires, fantasy or romance.

  • The Boys Blow up at Dynamite

    The Boys and writer Garth Ennis have found a happy home at Dynamite Entertainment, with 100,000 copies of various Boys collections in print.

  • 10 Years and Counting At AiT/Planet Lar

    San Francisco indie comics publisher AiT/Planet Lar celebrated it’s 10th anniversary in March.

  • Carol Tyler Recalls “A Good and Decent Man”

    Cartoonist Carol Tyler’s father, Chuck, is a regular guy. He’s gruff and he’s loyal and he builds things. In her new graphic novel, You’ll Never Know: A Good and Decent Man, Tyler begins to tell Chuck’s story, which is also, of course, her story.

  • Stan Mack Revisits the American Revolution

    Cartoonist, children’s book author and pioneering graphic novel creator Stan Mack has teamed with writer/editor Susan Champlin to create a four book series of fictional graphic novels for Bloomsbury that are aimed at 10-14 year-old readers and set during important American historical periods.

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