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  • Flux Holds Steady Through Changes

    Llewellyn Worldwide’s YA imprint, Flux, which has published teen fiction for the past three years, is moving in a new direction this fall with the release of its first graphic novel: Black Is for Beginnings (Sept.). The book is a continuation of Laurie Faria Stolarz’s Blue Is for Nightmares series of four novels, the first of which launched the Flux line in 2006.

  • Simultaneous Pub for Takahashi Manga

    U.S. manga publisher Viz Media and Japan’s Weekly Shonen Sunday will join forces to present Rin-Ne, a brand new series by international manga superstar Rumiko Takahashi, simultaneously in the U.S. and Japan beginning April 22.

  • Math, Philosophy, Comics and Bertrand Russell’s Search for Truth

    In October Bloomsbury will publish Logicomix: An Epic Search For Truth by Apostolos Doxiadis and Christos H. Papadimitriou with the art team of Alecos Papdatos and Annie Di Donna, a work of serious nonfiction that, among other things, is a biography of the noted mathematician/philosopher Bertrand Russell.

  • Comic Books, Fetish Art and the Co-Creator of Superman

    Craig Yoe’s new book Secret Identity: The Fetish Art of Superman’s Co-creator Joe Shuster, sheds light on a seminal comics creator while unearthing illegal works that played a pivotal role in the establishment of the Comics Code Authority

  • Top Shelf Gets Sweded

    Top Shelf is helping to bring Sweden's blossoming comix scene to the US.

  • CTL+ALT+DEL Moves to Bookstores

    Already collected in self-published form, the popular webcomic CLT+ALT+DLT is getting a new bookstore push via a series of new editions.

  • April Comics Bestsellers

    Jeff Kinney’s Last Straw rules the top slot; Naruto takes slots 2-6; Bone: Crown of Horns is #10 and Watchmen tops backlist.

  • Comics Briefly

    Secret Identity Caught in #amazonfail; CBLDF, Stumptown Benefit; New York Anime Festival Registration; Green Lantern Movie Release; Marvel Marketing Tool; Viz Unveils Virtual Merchandise; and Smith Comic Goes Melville

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 4/13/2009

    This week on the Web: literature's greatest misses, the war stories of a reformed drug smuggler, a real-life WWII spy worthy of Bond and Bourne, hunting in China for a human kidney, math as if it didn't matter, and tips from the Farm Chicks. Plus: a rigorous, geological fact-checking for the Exodus story, with potentially earth-shaking results.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 4/13/2009

    This week's reviews include picture books from Valeri Gorbachev, Samantha Berger and Yumi Heo; a round-up of titles for Mother's Day and Father's Day; and the return of a pair of spirited protagonists—Julia Gillian and Emma-Jean Lazarus.

  • Gardening Publishers Set Spring Tour

    Three Workman imprints are sending authors of some of their major gardening titles to visit indepedent booksellers to convince them to Get Gardening.

  • Q & A with Graham Salisbury

    Graham Salisbury’s books for middle-graders and young adults have won numerous accolades; his often dramatic tales of boyhood adventure in a rich Hawaiian setting are fan favorites. While continuing to work on a five-volume cycle of novels set during WWII, Salisbury has also created a new series for younger readers, beginning with Calvin Coconut: Trouble Magnet.

  • DC Takes Jeremy Love’s Bayou from Web to Print

    Zuda.com is releasing a print version of Jeremy Love’s Bayou in June—the first printed book-format work to be released by the online site.

  • Emerald City Brings In the Green

    Emerald City ComiCon, held at Seattle's Washington State Convention Center April 4 and 5, is rapidly becoming one of the staples of the comics convention circuit.

  • Superman, Super Teacher: Using Comics to Teach Reading

    Once in a while, you meet someone whose pure enjoyment of comic books is so uncomplicated that you're both delighted and envious. For me, one of those people is Gary Shapiro, who was a fellow student in the San Jose State University graduate creative writing program.

  • 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.

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