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  • IDW to Publish Umezu Horror Manga

    This month, IDW is releasing its first manga, Reptilia by Japanese horror master Kazuo Umezu

  • Comics Briefly

    Vertigo to Publish Demo; Amazon Picks Dark Tower; ‘Unseen Peanuts’ Exhibition; RH Signs Iron Man Novels; NYAF Unveils Programming; The Spirit Movie Website[ Rivkah on PBS; PW's Best Comics 2007; Del Ray Debuts Blog; Anime on Starz; and New York Previews Shooting War

  • Viking Clash Pits Old Against New in Northlanders

    Acclaimed writer Brian Wood’s new Viking epic Northlanders mixes the modern sensibilities of his DMZ and Demo with the appeal of a colorful pre-modern era, as in 300. P

  • Panel Mania: Dan Dare

    In this 6-page preview of the first issue of Garth Ennis and Gary Erskine's Dan Dare, Britain's greatest space commander, Danel McGregor Dare, comes out of retirement to fight a new and terrible threat from Outer Space. The first issue was released this month by Virgin Comics.

  • War as a Human Experience

    British novelist Pat Barker, who won the Booker Prize in 1995 for The Ghost Road, the final volume of her Regeneration trilogy, revisits World War I in Life Class.

  • Fiction Reviews: Week of 11/12/2007

  • Nonfiction Reviews: Week of 11/12/2007

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 11/12

    This week, an all-star lineup: Dennis Kucinich's childhood memoirs, Rhett Butler's People, Nancy Drew's Clues for Real Life, Rudolph, Frosty, and Captain Kangaroo, as well as the usual assortment of Mogrels, Bastards, Orphans, and Vagabonds.

  • Just Let Go

    In The Geography of Bliss, Eric Weiner searches for the happiest place on Earth. Why did you decide to study happiness? Normally, news correspondents—and I was a foreign correspondent for 10 years—go to the least happy countries, where there's war or famine or civil strife and we look for the least happy people and spend lots of time interviewing them.

  • Children's Book Reviews: Week of 11/12/2007

  • Judge Declares Mistrial in Gordon Lee Case

    A mistrial was called in the trial of Rome, Ga. comics retailer Gordon Lee, after the prosecutor reneged on an agreement not to mention previous legal actions against Lee.

  • Robert Kirkman: Hardest Working Writer in Comics?

    Besides working on a screenplay for Paramount, Robert Kirkman is involved with a staggering number of comics projects for Marvel, DC and Image.

  • AudioBooks: The New Sound of Comics

    Given the trend to franchise intellectual property in different media—from movies and TV to the Internet and books—it is no wonder that the superhero genre is turning up in the form of audiobooks. Indeed the Bethesda, Md., Audiobook producer Graphic Audio released an audiobook production of DC Comics’ crossover series Infinite Crisis in June and has just released an audiobook version of 52: The Audiobook, Part 1, DC’s groundbreaking weekly comics series from 2006.

  • Shooting War Aims for Print Success

    Originally a webcomic, the new graphic novel Shooting War follows the trials and travails of a cocky young video blogger who finds himself reporting on the front lines of the Iraq war

  • Whedon Can’t Get Enough Serenity

    In November Dark Horse is releasing a hardcover collection of theSerenity: Those Left Behindminiseries Joss Whedon co-wrote in 2005, and he’s already got another miniseries in the works for early 2008.

  • November Comics Bestsellers

    Naruto continues its domination of the list and is joined by Marvel Zombies and Get Fuzzy.

  • Comics Briefly

    Fall 2007 Xeric Winners; Jimbo’sWins American Book Award; 2008 MoCCA Applications; Viz Licenses Shojo Movies; and Dinosaurs Across Americain NYC

  • St. Martin's Revives Margaret Mitchell...Again

  • Web Exclusive Reviews: Week of 11/05

    This week: The Anti-Matter Anthology, Conversations with Woody Allen, Our Dumb World, The Nature of Dogs,Veganomicon, the Journals of Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. and many more.

  • Agreeing to Disagree

    At a moment when the boundaries of freedom of speech are being debated, ex—New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis recaps America's love-hate relationship with the First Amendment in Freedom for the Thought That We Hate.

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