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  • Bill Willingham Recreates the Fables

    Besides the ongoing Jack of Fables spin-off title, written by BBill Willingham's frequent collaborator Matthew Sturges, and an upcoming book collecting artist James Jean's covers for Fables itself, there are three more Fables-related projects coming in 2009.

  • Bat-Manga: Go Go Go!

    Thie Chip Kidd-edited and designed anthology of an obscure Janapanese Batman manga is a vivid, primal take on the character

  • This American Elf

    James Kochalka celebrates the 10th anniversary of his daily diary strip, American Elf

  • Comics Briefly 10/28

  • Panelmania: World of Quest

    World of Quest, Jason Kruse's kid-oriented sword and sorcery Web comic, which recently made the leap to both print and television animation, hits stands with its second volume this December. In our exclusive 6-page preview, Quest faces the wrath of The Hive.

  • Nonfiction Reviews

    Stealing MySpace: The Battle to Control the Most Popular Website in America Julia Angwin . Random , $27 (336p) ISBN 978-1-4000-6694-0 Angwin, an award-winning journalist for the Wall Street Journal, recounts the history of MySpace.com in this well-written, entertaining and drama-filled chronicle. From its founding by Chris DeWolfe to its surprising purchase for nearly $600 million by Rupert ...

  • Children's Book Reviews

    Picture Books I Got Two Dogs John Lithgow , illus. by Robert Neubecker. Simon & Schuster , $17.99 (32p with CD) ISBN 978-1-4169-5881-9 Lithgow’s (I’m a Manatee) singing tribute to a couple of canine ne’er-do-wells named Fanny and Blue strives for the kind of goofy, bouncy simplicity of Burl Ives’s classic Little White Duck album.

  • A Look at the Real Alaskans

    Fifty Miles from Tomorrow: A Memoir of Alaska and the Real People William L. Iggiagruk Hensley . Farrar, Straus & Giroux , $24 (288p) ISBN 978-0-374-15484-4 Although this fascinating memoir is set hundreds of |miles from where most Americans have ever dared to travel, Hensley brings to life this “little-known part of America” through myriad tales of toil, triumph and the Inu...

  • In Profile

    Barbara Dianne Savage Diversity Reigns in the Black Church In the clash between Sen. Barack Obama and his former pastor Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Barbara Dianne Savage sees the conflict between the African-American political experience and the so-called “black church” writ large. “One of the problems is that both Obama and Wright spoke as if there was such a thing as the black ch...

  • Fat Is a Laughing Matter

    Meeting author-artist Carol Lay in the flesh is wonderfully disconcerting. So closely does she resemble the cartoon version of herself in her whimsical cartoon memoir about dieting, The Big Skinny: How I Changed My Fattitude (Villard)—tall, brunette, with black horn-rimmed glasses and, yes, a slender figure—that shaking Lay's hand becomes an almost metaphysical experience.

  • Fiction Reviews

    A Fortunate Age Joanna Smith Rakoff . Scribner , $26 (416p) ISBN 978-1-4165-9077-4 Rakoff’s debut novel is a ponderous, meandering and nostalgic portrait of a postcollegiate group of Gen-Xers awkwardly navigating weddings, pregnancies, betrayals and funerals in pre- and post-9/11 New York City.

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 10/27/2008

    This week: the invisible engine of the green market, memoirs of pre-Civil Rights struggle and American immigration, the true story of the fake Cardiff Giant, a plan for Barack Obama and a biography for his wife, and two photo collections of giants in rock. Plus: Lincoln, two mathematicians and one reality TV villain (makes good).

  • Poetry Book Has Readers Feeling the Beat

    Hip Hop Speaks to Children (Sourcebooks/Jabberwocky, Oct.), a collection of 51 songs and poems edited by Nikki Giovanni, isn’t only turning children on to poetry; the book and its companion audio CD is resonating with adults, too.

  • 'Nerd' Night in NYC

    Author John Green kicked off his national tour for Paper Towns (Dutton) last Thursday evening at the Barnes & Noble in New York City’s Tribeca neighborhood.

  • Art Spiegelman Breaks It All Down For You

    With Breakdowns, Maus, and In the Shadow of No Towers, Spiegelman taught his fellow artists about what he calls the "grammar" of comics, and he taught the larger book world about a new kind of literature that could grab national attention, illustrate painful and personal subjects, and win a Pulitzer Prize.

  • The Mainstreaming of Haruhi Suzumiya

    The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiyais a cult favorite among anime fans, so it makes sense that Yen Press is launching the Haruhi manga this month with a strong pitch to anime and manga fans.

  • Funnies Business: Abandon All Revenue, Ye Who Enter

    Several publishers are exploring Web comics, but their revenue stream isn't always clear.

  • Panelmania: Alan's War

    French creator Emmanuel Guibert writes and illustrates the true story of former American G.I. Alan Cope in his new graphic novel, Alan's War, out on Oct. 28th from First Second Books. In this six-page preview, Cope observes the strange days in Prague before the German surrender at the end of WWII.

  • Otsuichi's Goth: Nancy Drew meets Dexter

    Just in time for Halloween, Tokyopop is releasing the English translation of the light novel Goth by Otsuichi. A manga adaptation of Goth was released in September, and a Japanese live-action adaptation of Goth is slated for release in Japan in December.

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 10/20/2008

    This week's Web: just why oil is as bad as it seems, the man who knew what inquiring minds want to know, Marilyn French completes her history of women, two worthy new Holocaust entries, the history of food fraud and the strangling of Los Angeles's air supply. Plus: a slick, sexy photobook from Prince explores his famously impenetrable image, while the leftover polaroids of the "Jazz Baroness" achieve effortless intimacy with greats like Coltrane and Monk.

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