Hey, sorry I'm not updating more, but I haven't got much to say lately. Nothing much positive, anyway, and just getting negative on it isn't really helping anyone is it? So, I've got my nose to the grindstone here, working shit out and hoping it all comes together. Making sure it all comes together, is more appropriate :).
Anyway, thanks for continuing to read, and for continuing to visit www.previewsreview.com every week. We're up over a thousand new visitors this month, and that really makes me happy.
January turns to February in 22.5 hours, hope you got your rent cheques in on time.
I think I've got enough time invested in 2003 to see where it's headed. Now, you have to understand that (as always) this is from my specific perspective, and certainly other people are going to have different experiences, but here's where I stand on the matter:
2003 is going to have to be fought for, tooth and nail.
The undesirable aspects of comics have become the most prevelant again, the worst aspects of our happy little medium and industry receiving all the attention, blocking out (or actively trampling) the smaller and more important bits. Comics 'news' journalism is a joke, and feature journalism is sorely lacking with the occasional bright spot. On the industry side, the corporations are now agressively and obviously moving towards corporate ownership, and not even bothering to pay lip service to the wacky fucking notion that people who create an idea from scratch should own that idea. And everybody is, despite the obvious arguments against it and despite the fact that the rest of the world is moving in the opposite direction... everybody is returning to the safe, warm, hollowed-out corpse of superhero fiction. With Vigor.
SPIN MAGAZINE is set to run an article on Peter Milligan and Phillip Bond's VERTIGO POP: LONDON, a four issue creator-owned mini-series that is, quite possibly, one of the best things they've both done in a while (and one of the best things on the stands). A complimentary article, too. VERTIGO POP: LONDON is ordered by retailers lower than every superhero book that Marvel prints, including the Bill Jemas atrocity MARVILLE. So, the real world thinks Z is great, but retailers don't order Z because they've got to make sure their stock is high on Superhero A through Superhero Y because there's no overprint, despite the fact that even their customers are starting to not care about A through Y...
...and aside from being clever, the reason I used placeholder variables as opposed to book names? Because, Z isn't just VERTIGO POP: LONDON, Z is every very good, very acclaimed title with an audience outside of comics that could make everyone a lot of money but just doesn't get the orders. Z is a book like POUNDED was ordered abysmally despite a similar SPIN magazine promotion and a hell of a lot of hype surrounding it's launch. Z is the near-entirety of the Time Magazine BEST GRAPHIC NOVELS OF 2002 list, which was actually quite good this year, and yet I'd say 8 of the 10 books combined (discounting the 9-11 and SPX anthologies) were probably ordered at less than 20,000 copies total through the DM.
Z is the entirety of manga, which on a monthly basis accounts for less than %5 of Diamond Comics Distributor's totall business, but accounts for better than %90 of all graphic novels sold through bookstores, week-in and week-out.
This isn't an anti-retail rant, the entire industry is designed to sell mediocre superhero books as hard as posslbe. DC, arguably the publisher of the finest 'mainstream' mature readers books, the things aimed at the smart 20-something market with cash to burn, books like VERTIGO POP: LONDON and THE FILTH and Y - THE LAST MAN and all that, they hide the these books at the back of their listings every month, after they've run through the 50 superhero titles they publish, and then the other universe's 15 superhero titles. Hell, I'm looking at the solicitation for the new printing of ROAD TO PERDITION, the graphic novel that the movie was based on, and it was the last comic that they solicited, even after the Vertigo books. Of course, this is the same company who decided that this month, action figures based on their superhero characters were more important to promote to comic book retailers than any single comic book they were printing...
To sum up: The entire industry is fucked.
Now, back up to the top. "2003 is going to have to be fought for, tooth and nail."
There are opportunities here. Increased visibility of comics as a medium is a reality, even if the sales to support show that visibility aren't (yet). That visibility and watchful eye translates to opportunities. For everyone. For you as a reader, for creative people and retailers and even the plodding, mammoth publishers are slow to do anything but retreat. There is the ability to do brilliant things, if you're willing to put the time and energy into accomplishing them. The opportunity will come easily, the pay-off will require a great deal of work, of effort on the parts of the right people. I'm telling you here, do not let this race go to the slow and the dim, simply because of a lack of effort on your part. If you're reading this, chances are you should know better.
It's time to stop trying to change or save the comics industry. Sincerely, fuck the comics industry. It's time to be so good and so effective and so (dare I say it?) FABULOUS that the rest of them can't help but catch up and follow down the road you've created. Nothing succeeds (at changing people's minds) like success. So this year, I'm telling you to stop writing articles or columns or whatever imploring folks to... well, stop writing articles like it was 1999. Stop writing anything like it was 1999, it's over. Activism, of that sort, is over. Now it's the time to act on all the intelligent things that folks have said, and to shine.
2003 is going to have to be fought for tooth and nail, but it can be won.
Christopher
Butcher: Is 29 years old and lives in Toronto Canada. In addition to the manager of
world-famous comic book store The Beguiling, he is a freelance writer
and comics production artist and the co-founder of the Toronto Comic Arts Festival. He can be contacted at chris at beguiling dot
com , though chances are it will get caught in the spam filter. You're better
off posting in the comments field.
Comics Blogs
I Read & Like: Bags & Boards: Tom McLean's media-focused comics blog. The Beat: Heidi MacDonald, dishing and digging up dirt (now at PW). Beaucoup Kevin: Kevin talks about all of the comic books. Big Sexy Arune: Comic journalist Arune Singh's blog. Brill Building: Ian Brill's blog. The Comics Reporter: Tom Spurgeon's all-in-one website featuring newsblogging, interviews, reviews, and more. A great site. Comics Worth Reading: Johanna Draper-Carlson reviews and recaps with a unique eye for comics. Completely Futile: Excellent commentary on manga. The Cultural Gutter: Toronto blog about video games, comics, and all manner of low-culture. Drawn.ca: Lots of Canadian Illustrators and artists linkblogging the best art of the internet. Neat. Egon: Grand-daddy of art-comix coverage. Forbidden Planet Blog: Brit Comic Retailer Forbidden Planet. Galleycat: About publishing, including comics. Gumpop:
Sophie Yanow runs a very cool blog about comics, that I enjoy reading. Jog The Blog: Like the similarly singley-named Cher, Jog contributes something precious and unique to the world. Johnny Bacardi: Comics coverage, and the promise of alcohol. Journalista!: Dirk Deppey sacrifices martyrs his social life for comics. Bless. Kelly Sue's Pro Blog: Kelly ends up re-writing manga I love. Also, she has a personal blog. Kochalkaholic: Alan David Doane's living tribute to cartoonist James Kochalka. Love Manga: Exceptionally thorough manga blog. The Low Road: My buddies Ed and John talk about comics and stuff. Manga Blog: Accurately named! Considered manga commentary. MangaCast: More manga than you can shake a stick at. Mystifying Oracle: Jeff Parker's very cool blog. NeilAlien Has been blogging longer than I have. Blog @ Newsarama Graeme and Kevin Melrose live here now. Panels and Pixels: Dude, it's comics and video games all in one. I find this excellent. Peiratikos: Rose and Steven's unique, contrary views on comics. Polite Dissent: Unique comics criticism and examination, through the eyes of an MD. Precocious Curmedgeon: Manga, North American Comics, and the industry. A fabulous read. Postmodern Barney: Dorian blogs about comics, homosexuals. Progressive Ruin: Mike Sterling's chronicle of funny superhero nonsense and working in a comic store. Read About Comics: Greg McElhatton's new reviews website. Riot! Blog: Blog for a new indy-friendly comic book store. Rocketship Comics: Blog for an indy-friendly Brooklyn-based comic book store. Royal Academy of Illustration and Design Blog: A fabulously talented studio of comics and illustration peeps. Savage Critics: From sunny California... Splash Panel: Comics reviews and discussion from a talented artist. Sporadic Sequential: Huzzah! It's John Jakala blogging again! When Will the Hurting
Stop: Tim O'Neil, man of action. When Fangirls Attack: A big 'ole round-up of women's issues as they relate to comics. Yet Another Comics Blog: Even with its strange preoccupation with superhero books, I still find myself enjoying this one.
Comics Artists and Friends: Radiomaru: Bryan Lee O'Malley, creator of Scott Pilgrim and etc. HopeLarson.com: Hope Larson, creator of Salamander Dream and Gray Horses. KeanerDotNet: Kean Soo, creator of Jellaby. The Rey: Corey Lewis, creator of Sharknife and etc. Gobukan: J. Bone's G-Rated Illustration Blog. Bone's Men: J. Bone's much naughtier Illustration Blog. Vera's Sketchblog: My friend Vera's awesome sketch blog. Salgood Sam: Sketch blog and work diary. Ink Skratch: Eric Kim, artist of Love as a Foreign Language. lowbright.com: Derek Kirk Kim's site, with lots of great comics. Bolt City: Kazu Kibuishi, creator of Copper and Amulet. NeilComics.com:
Neil B.'s site, with lots of great comics. Matt Forsythe, words and pictures. Mike Weiringo's Sketch Blog: Self-explaintory. FSC Wasteland: Singapore cartoonist FSC, artist on all kinds of things I like. Local: Frequently-updated blog for Oni Press' LOCAL. StreetAngelComics: Jim Rugg's web presence, dedicated to his first great comic. Atomic Toy: The online home of Andy Helms, soon the be known for his awesome graphic novel FEARLESS GRIGGS.
Online Comics: Young
Bottoms in Love: Great gay webcomix archive. Achewood: My favourite webcomic. Penny Arcade: Thrice-weekly comic strip about video game culture. Diesel Sweeties: Pixel-based hipster soap opera, with death robots. Dinosaur Comics! OMGWTF! In a just world, Ryan North would rule us all. Comic Strip: Chip Zdarsky's print/online comic for the National Post. Secret Friend Society: Online comics including Jellaby, Salamander Dream, and more! A Softer World Comics made of photos. Also, check out OverQualified by the same author, which are humourously deranged cover letters for resumes. House of Sugar: Rebecca Kraatz' daily online comic strip. Makeshift Miracle Complete online graphic novel, available via Bitpass. Moresukine Updated weekly from Tokyo, experience Japan through the wonder of comics. Perry Bible Fellowship Very funny short comic strips, very well drawn too. Click on the man with the hat to get to the archives. Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles Awesome/creepy weekly comic strip. Superslackers Toronto's Steve Manale presents humourous superheroes for children of all ages. The tonic to 'Infinite Crisis'. ButternutSquash Ramon and Rob do an autobiographical comic that people think is farace. It is not. They're just like that. Jay's Days You will not be able to tear yourself away. Serializer.net: Awesome online alternative pay-comics site, worth your support with money. ModernTales.com:
The original, filled to the brim with great comics. PVP: I generally enjoy PVP, but Scott Kurtz is a pretty horrible person.
For more, click
the Resources tab up top.
Non-Comics Blogs: Andrew's Blog: Andrew talks about entertaining things. Andrew's Other Blog: Andrew talks about serious things. David&Kiko.com: My friends in Japan, with a blog. Dahlberg Central: Gus Dahlberg and his adorable family. Booklust: Toronto Illustrator commenting on books and illustration. Interesting stuff. The Torontoist: The Torontoist is a Toronto-culture blog, covering some of the more interesting goings on in the city (and doing it well). Sort of like a freebie-weekly paper, but it pays less and comes out more. Blog T.O.: Another great Toronto-centric blog.
Retired: All Ages: Scott Robins's blog about comics for young readers. A Bear In The City: Gay-comics linkblog, semi-retired. GutterNinja:
Steve Pheley's awesomely-named blog, full of snark.
For corrections or additions to this page, please contact me at cro2 at
212 dot net. All sites linked on this page are the copyright of their
respective owners, and no malice was intended in linking from this page.
Weblog courtesy of Blogger. Hosting
courtesy of 212.net. Comments courtesy
of Haloscan. Christopher Butcher appears courtesy of his parents, and
The Beguiling.