Browse archive by date:
  • BookExpo America Embraces Comics

    This year’s BEA showed off the continuing growth and enthusiasm around comics and graphic novel publishing—despite the rumors swirling around Tokyopop’s restructuring.

  • Marvel's Iron Man "Invincible" in Comics Shops

    For nearly a decade, comic book movies have been big business, but unfortunately for comics publishers, translating that big box office to comic book sales hasn’t been easy—at least when it comes to superheroes. But the recently released Marvel Studios film Iron Man is not only earning of hundreds of millions in ticket sales, it’s also pulling off what most superhero movies never found a way to do: Sell a lot of comics.

  • Marvel To Adapt King’s ‘The Stand’ into Comics

    This fall, bestselling horror author Stephen King will again team with Marvel Comics to produce a new comics adaptation of one of his most popular novels, The Stand.

  • June Comics Bestsellers

    Abrams Wimpy kid holds steady at #1, followed by DC Comics's Batman: The Killing Joke, while Marvel has 4 titles on this month's list led by Secret Invasion: The Infiltration at #5.

  • More Nonfiction Comics from Hill & Wang

    Hill and Wang and its nonfiction comics line, Novel Graphics, will offer two new works that will examine the War on Terror and The U.S. Constitution.

  • A Japanese Manga-Ka Takes on Batman

    Japanese manga-ka Yoshinori Natsume made his American comics debut this spring with Batman: Death Mask, a 4-issue miniseries published by DC Comics.

  • Comics Briefly

    MoCCA Art Festival; Prince of Persia GN Trailer; Comics Symposium at NYU; Cartoonists Discussion in NYC; and Signing at Books of Wonder

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 6/2/2008

    This week on the Web: a modern adoption story, finding a good job, finding a good employee, inside the White House district attorney scandal, inside the Pentagon 9/11 rescue effort, art crit from a conceptual pioneer, cooking with beer, dressing with superheroes, and how to stay healthy with supplements and skepticism. Plus: knives, knives, knives!

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 6/2/2008

  • Nonfiction Reviews: Week of 6/2/2008

  • Fiction Reviews: Week of 6/2/2008

  • Dan Didio Talks Final Crisis and the Future

    DC's Senior VP and Executive Editor Dan Didio talks about Final Crisis, this year's mega-event for the DC characters.

  • Tokyopop Showcases Korea’s Hee Jung Park

    Tokyopop published the first volumes of Korean manga artist Hee Jung Park’s Fever and Hotel Africa series in the spring and plan to publish two more series, Martin and John and Too Long, later this summer.

  • ‘Faust’ Comes to the U.S. this Summer

    The first volume of Del Rey’s U.S. edition of Faust, the critcally acclaimed Japanese literary anthology, is due out in August and the publication looks to break new ground for American publishers:

  • Del Rey to Bring Fairy Tail’s Mashima to San Diego

    Del Rey Manga and its Japanese publishing partner, Kodansha, will bring Hiro Mashima, creator of the hit manga series Fairy Tail, to the San Diego Comic-con International in July

  • Marvel’s Jeff Parker Travels First Class

    Writer Jeff Parker has become the go-to guy for Marvel’s more youthfully oriented titles.

  • Books on Comics: Superheroes At The Met

    Peter Sanderson takes a look at the catalogue accompanying the Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute show on superheroes and fashion.

  • Comics Briefly

    Will Eisner Exhibit; Bleach’s Tito Kube To Visit SDCC; NBM Retailer Contest; Gary Panter, Matt Groening Sign; Lynda Barry at the Strand; Jason at Rocketship; CBLDF’s Brownstein Turns 30; and PWCW Needs Interns!

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 5/26/2008

    This week: Bubba in the back seat, opposing excursions into the legacy of liberlism, practical and biological lessons for women, and the man who fell in love with non-stop televised congressional coverage. Plus: Southern salves for American woes, more reasons the kids are not all right, a two-pronged holocaust survival narrative, and an impressive survey of the new Urban Age.

  • Comics, Bowen Press and the Wave of the Present

    Former Disney kids book publisher Brenda Bowen has moved to HarperCollins to start her own press and intends to integrate comics projects into her list.

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