Browse archive by date:
  • Fan Creativity Explodes at Comiket

    550,000 attendees gathered for 3 days to buy fanzines and parodies at Tokyo's enormous Comiket show.

  • Udon on the Upswing

    Wide-ranging Udon Entertainment will launch a line of Korean Manhwa this fall.

  • Harper Hopes Teens Fall for Miki Falls

    Mark Crilley is the creator of the manga-influenced Akiko kids comics and the popular Akiko prose book series, but his new graphic novel series, Miki Falls, is a step beyond global manga.

  • Kannagi knows the Ring Finger

    Boys love pioneer Satoru Kannagi has written heartfelt romances for both prose and manga.

  • Panel Mania: Inanna's Tears

    In this 8-page preview of Rob Vollmar and mpMann's Inanna's Tears, a political tragedy set in ancient Sumeria circa 3000 BC, residents of the city of Birith prepare for a successor priest to the goddess Inanna, while powerful interests outside the city challenge the authority of the Temple. Archaia Studios Press will begin serializing the story this month.

  • Comics Briefly

    Dabel Brothers announce Koontz license; 2007 Doug Wright Award winners; and Thor leads July sales

  • Children's Galleys to Grab

    At this fall's regionals, attendees can nab galleys that range from everyday teen life to the unexpected—Norse myths, the laws of physics and even tooth fairies all get their due. Some Don't-Miss Debuts Alex and the Ironic Gentleman by Adrienne Kress (Miramax/Weinstein). An orphan goes on a quest to rescue her teacher.

  • Fiction Reviews: Week of 8/20/2007

  • When Things Get Tough

    Throughout the recorded history of armed conflict, there has been this certainty: that no writer, no matter how gifted, can truly relate what it is like to be in war. “War happens inside a man,” the great correspondent Eric Sevareid said with resignation in 1945, sure he had failed the test of bringing back to his readers the essence of the fighting, “…and that is why, i...

  • Children’s Books: Week of 8/20/2007

  • Nonfiction Reviews: Week of 8/20/2007

  • Wars of the Moment…

    At home, the war in Iraq has been increasingly divisive. Public support for the president has eroded; voices on both sides of the aisle are calling for various forms of withdrawal. Recently, books by politicians and journalists have detailed the war’s mismanagement, but this fall, several publishers have books that relate what the combatants have to say about their experience.

  • Web-Exclusive Reviews: Week of 8/20/2007

  • Not the End of the World

    Blogger and freelance writer Diane Vadino captures the premillennial hopes and fears of a single New York City editor in her debut novel, Smart Girls Like Me.

  • Not Just for Vegetarians

    The prolific—and omnivorous—author of the New York Times’ “Minimalist” column has written How to Cook Everything Vegetarian, a follow-up to his classic book, How to Cook Everything.

  • Wars of Memory….

    On September 23, PBS will air the first of Ken Burns's seven-part documentary on WWII, The War. Knopf, as it has with other Burns film projects (The Civil War; Baseball) has the tie-in, written by Burns and Geoffrey Ward. Subtitled An Intimate History, The War will no doubt bring to life first-hand accounts of the war experience from a generation that is dying off at a rate of a thousand a day.

  • Movies Still Woo Graphic Novels

    As evidenced by the recent San Diego Comic-Con, 300 won't be the only graphic novel storming the hot gates at the box office. While famed franchises such as Spider-Man, Batman and the Fantastic Four continue to rake it in, studios are increasingly turning to quirkier comics for inspiration, and a variety of publishers are hoping to ring up their own sales.

  • Gordon Lee Case Delayed Again

    The trial of comics dealer Gordon Lee, set to begin yesterday, was delayed due to the illness of the presiding judge. The case will not likely be heard until November.

  • A Riches-to-Riches Story

    Not many picture books are 50 years in the making. But a new version of a very old tale can make that claim: Walt Disney’s Cinderella, retold by Cynthia Rylant (Disney Press, Aug.), has its origins in design work done by artist Mary Blair in the 1940s.

  • Big-Shouldered Discounts at Wizard World Chicago

    While there was a lack of bigpublishing news coming out of Wizard World Chicago, there were large crowds of superhero fans and DC announced several new kids comics series.

X
Stay ahead with
Tip Sheet!
Free newsletter: the hottest new books, features and more
X
X
Email Address

Password

Log In Forgot Password

Premium online access is only available to PW subscribers. If you have an active subscription and need to set up or change your password, please click here.

New to PW? To set up immediate access, click here.

NOTE: If you had a previous PW subscription, click here to reactivate your immediate access. PW site license members have access to PW’s subscriber-only website content. If working at an office location and you are not "logged in", simply close and relaunch your preferred browser. For off-site access, click here. To find out more about PW’s site license subscription options, please email Mike Popalardo at: mike@nextstepsmarketing.com.

To subscribe: click here.