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  • R. Sikoryak’s Comics Masterpiece

    R. Sikoryak's dead-on recreations of historical cartooning styles—utilized to adapt canonical Western literature—were immediately striking as witty, smart, and intensely well-crafted manifestations of the postmodern impulse within the comics form.

  • Jewish Life and Comics in ‘The Big Kahn’

    Superheroes, action comics and horror stories—comics writer Neil Kleid does it all. But in an unusual twist, two of Kleid’s recent books, have pointed their story-telling lens at Jewish life and history. Brownsville, which came out in 2006, is set in 1930’s Brooklyn in the world of the Jewish mob, and his newest book, The Big Kahn, is a family drama that takes place in a contemporary Orthodox Jewish community

  • Comics Briefly

    Reed Combines NYCC, NYAF at Javits Center; Stitches Online Video; SPX Programming Listing ; A Day for the Bookstores; Seven Seas Manga For Kindle; Archie, Veronica Wed; Old Characters Return; Full House Comes To Netcomics; and Picture Box; Top Shelf Offer Book Sales;

  • Short Order: September 14

    In this installment of cookbook-related news, a federal judge throws out Sneaky Chef author Missy Chase Lapine's claim that Jessica Seinfeld copied her with Deceptively Delicious; Oxmoor House prepares a series of grit-centric events throughout the South; Clarkson Potter buys book by M. F. K. Fisher's grand-nephew; Wiley Canada partners with women's magazine Chatelaine on two books; PW reviews this fall's cookbooks for kids; and are Zagat guides on shaky ground?

  • The Flavor Bible Still Selling One Year Later

    On September 7, The Flavor Bible celebrated one year on Amazon’s “Cooking, Food & Wine” top 100 bestseller list. And, its authors are quick to add, before Julie & Julia-related books took over much of list’s prime real estate, The Flavor Bible spent most of its life in the top 25. How did a book without a movie tie-in, national TV presence or celebrity authors, that doesn’t contain one recipe, achieve such success?

  • Panel Mania: Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth

    Logicomix: An Epic Search for Truth is an examination of the life and ideas of the mathematician and philosopher, Bertrand Russell, which surveys both his increasingly messy personal life and the intellectual issues that motivated his groundbreaking work in mathematics and logic. Logicomix is written by Apostolos Doxiadis and Christos H. Papadimitriou, with art by Alecos Papadatos and Annie Di Donna, and will be released by Bloomsbury in October.

  • Welcome's Slow Food Book Could Be Breakout Indie Hit

    Sleeper alert: one of this fall’s indie hits could be a gorgeous photography book on Italy's slow food movement. Welcome Books won’t release Slow: Life in a Tuscan Town by photographer Douglas Gayeton until next month, but it has already gone back for a second printing, bringing the total to 25,000 copies. The project began as a PBS Web series, grew into an art exhibition, and is now Welcome’s lead title for fall.

  • Fiction Reviews: 9/14/2009

    Reviewed this week, new novels from Stephen King, J.D. Robb, Orhan Pamuk, Clive Cussler, Marian Keyes and Penelope Lively. Plus, Aleksandar Hemon edits the first Best European Fiction anthology from Dalkey Archive, DeVa Gantt wraps the Colette trilogy after 30 years, Michael S.A. Graziano goes to hell and more.

  • Children's Book Reviews: 9/14/2009

    In this week's reviews: new picture books from David Lucas and Molly Bang; novels from Pete Hautman and Gena Showalter; a round-up of picture book sequels; plus starred reviews for a pair of debuts: Il Sung Na's A Book of Sleep and Jennifer Brown's Hate List.

  • Review: Hot and Hot Fish Club Cookbook

    Husband-and-wife team Chris and Idie Hastings showcase the best offerings of their Birmingham, Ala.—based restaurant, the Hot and Hot Fish Club. More than a cookbook, this is a personal tribute to seasonal offerings and the hardworking, dedicated purveyors who supply the restaurant with the freshest ingredients. The authors focus on honest, unassuming dishes with a Southern flair that highlight rather than bury the natural flavors of the ingredients.

  • Flux to Issue 40th-Anniversary Edition of Seminal John Donovan Novel

    Released in 1969, John Donovan’s I’ll Get There. It Better Be Worth the Trip tread on turf previously considered taboo in young adult publishing. Widely regarded as the first YA novel to touch on the topic of homosexuality, the book centers on a 13-year-old whose efforts to cope with his estranged mother lead to a close friendship with another boy. Originally published by Ursula Nordstrom at Harper & Row, I’ll Get There will be reissued in fall 2010 by Flux...

  • Candlewick Goes Hi-Tech with DiCamillo

    Kate DiCamillo has come a long way from her debut author tour in 2000, which consisted of only two bookstore appearances in Minnesota: the Red Balloon Bookshop in St. Paul, and Wild Rumpus in Minneapolis. While the turnout at both events promoting DiCamillo’s first novel was "nice," the Twin Cities resident recalls, it was only "because my friends all came." This fall, DiCamillo’s publisher is making sure the bestselling author reaches more readers than ever before.

  • Q & A with Shannon Hale

    Q: What made you decide to write Forest Born? A: I really just go where the story takes me. It’s funny—with every one of the Bayern books, I thought each one was a stand-alone. The character of Enna was so different from Ani in Goose Girl, and after writing about Ani who was so quiet, the idea of writing about a character so fiery, so outspoken and dangerous was what attracted me to Enna Burning.

  • Penguin Young Readers Shares Its New Point of View

    Five backlist novels and two new titles are featured in Point of View, a fall marketing initiative from Penguin Young Readers Group. The campaign, which focuses on literary books with strong, somewhat challenging themes, entails consumer and trade components and aims to connect readers who embraced such novels as Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher and Wintergirls by Laurie Halse Anderson to new books with a similar appeal.

  • The Shows Go On with Lance Fensterman

    Lance Fensterman is increasingly running an empire of his own. As v-p at Reed Exhibitions, not only is he the show runner for BookExpo America and the four-year-old New York Comic Con, but a growing portfolio of consumer shows, including the just-concluded video game show PAX (in partnership with founders Penny Arcade), the New York Anime Festival (to be held Sept. 25-27), and next April's C2E2 comics show in Chicago.

  • Tokyopop: Good News, Bad News

    The past week was a mixed bag for manga publisher Tokyopop: They revealed they would no longer be doing business with the Japanese publisher Kodansha but also announced a handful of new licenses and put several stalled series back on schedule.


  • ADV Shuts Down; Assets, Staff Shift to New Companies

    U.S. anime distributor and manga publisher AD Vision is no more. The company's assets (and an undetermined number of its employees) have been divided up among four separate companies: AEsir Holdings, SXion 23 (Section 23) Films, Valkyrie Media Partners, and Seraphim Studios. Section 23 will continue to service former ADV accounts.

  • September Comics Bestsellers

    Jeff Kinney’s Wimpy Kid: Last Straw continues its long run at the top, followed by Viz’s Vampire Knight vol. 7, Naruto and Tokyopop’s Fruits Basket, Vol. 23. Neil Gaiman’s Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader is #5 and just below the Top Ten are Darwyn Cooke’s The Hunter, David Mazzucchelli’s Asterios Polyp and David Petersen’s Mouse Guard: Winter 1152.

  • Comics Briefly

    Del Rey Hosts New York Anime Fest Party, ‘Action Philosophers’ Collected, Jaime Hernandez Book Signing in L.A., Spiegelman, Mouly Sign in New York City; Ben Katchor In Concert; and This Week @ Good Comics for Kids

  • Costumes and Comics at Dragon Con

    Dragon Con, North America's largest fan-run pop culture convention, was held in downtown Atlanta over the Labor Day weekend. Now in its twenty-second year, Dragon Con is remarkable not merely for its size—the annual show generally attracts more than 30,000 fans—but for its remarkable variety.

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